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. 2006 Jul 19;2006(3):CD005657. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD005657.pub2

Bolt 2008.

Methods Block randomisation 
 Baseline comparability documented. Patients, treating clinicians and outcome assessors were all unaware of treatment assignment 
 ITT analysis
Participants Australia 
 Children aged between 3 and 17 years who presented to an emergency department with ear pain of less than 3 days duration and evidence of AOM
Interventions Treatment: anaesthetic ear drops (2% aqueous lignocaine drops) 
 Control: normal saline drops (aqueous solution) 
 Duration: 30 minutes 
 If the patient had not received analgesia in the preceding 4 hours, they were offered 15 mg/kg paracetamol. Further oral analgesia was offered between 10 (T10) and 30 minutes (T30) of the study period at the discretion of the treating doctor
Outcomes Ear pain was assessed by means of 2 visual analogue scales at baseline, 10, 20, 30 minutes after instillation, and an average ear pain score was determined 
 Four measures were used: 
 1) proportion of subjects who showed 50% reduction; 
 2) proportion of subjects who showed 25% reduction; and 
 3) proportion of participants showing a 2‐point reduction in pain score
Notes  
Risk of bias
Bias Authors' judgement Support for judgement
Random sequence generation (selection bias) Low risk "The drops were randomised in blocks of 10"
Allocation concealment (selection bias) Unclear risk No mention of sequentially numbered, opaque, sealed envelopes or of central randomisation by a third party
Blinding (performance bias and detection bias) 
 All outcomes Low risk "Patients and parents, those administering ear drops and those assessing ear pain were blinded to group assignment."
Incomplete outcome data (attrition bias) 
 All outcomes Low risk "On the basis of an intention to treat analysis, two patients were retained in the study and analysed despite pain resolution subsequent to enrolment with a pain score of zero at T0". Numbers in Table 2 indicate all participants were included in the analyses