Kettle 2002.
Methods | RCT. Factorial ‐ 2 x 2 design. | |
Participants | Setting: UK district general hospital. 1542 women needing perineal repair following delivery (second‐degree tears and episiotomies included). Method of delivery: spontaneous vaginal deliveries. Parity: primiparous and multiparous. Mean age: continuous (group A) 27.2 years; interrupted (group B) 27.2 years. Operators: midwives (N = 150), 29 women sutured by doctor. |
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Interventions | Method of repair: described as below. Women divided into 2 groups. Group A (N = 771) vaginal trauma, perineal muscle and skin repaired with a continuous non‐locking suture technique. 50% were repaired with undyed Vicryl Rapide 2/0 on a 35‐mm tapercut needle and 50% were repaired with undyed standard Vicryl on a 35‐mm tapercut needle. Group B (N = 771) vaginal trauma repaired with a locking continuous stitch; perineal muscle and skin sutured using the interrupted method. 50% were repaired with undyed Vicryl Rapide 2/0 on a 35‐mm tapercut needle and 50% were repaired with undyed standard Vicryl on a 35‐mm tapercut needle. | |
Outcomes | Included in analysis:
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Notes | Method of repair: described. Training period: described Concealed interim analysis after 400 women entered the trial. Ethics Committee Approval. 1 envelope unaccounted for. | |
Risk of bias | ||
Bias | Authors' judgement | Support for judgement |
Random sequence generation (selection bias) | Low risk | Allocated randomly by remote clinical trials unit. Random permuted block design. |
Allocation concealment (selection bias) | Low risk | Concealed treatment allocation ‐ serially numbered, sealed opaque envelopes, (envelopes contained 2 packets of masked suture material and instructions for method of repair on different coloured cards). |
Blinding (performance bias and detection bias) Clinical staff | High risk | Differences in suture techniques. |
Blinding (performance bias and detection bias) Women | High risk | Women may have been aware of suturing technique. |
Blinding (performance bias and detection bias) Outcome assessors | High risk | Fully blind assessment was not possible owing to obvious differences in suture techniques. |
Incomplete outcome data (attrition bias) All outcomes | Low risk | 1542 women randomised and primary analysis was by ITT. High response rate at day 10 and at 3 and 12 months' follow‐up (96.7% response rate at 3 months and 90% at 12 months). |
Selective reporting (reporting bias) | Unclear risk | Not apparent. |
Other bias | Unclear risk | No baseline imbalance apparent. There were some protocol deviations (less experienced staff were more likely to use interrupted sutures). |