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

Hoberman 1997.

Methods Randomisation claimed, but method not described
Baseline comparability documented. Investigators were unaware of treatment assignment 
 ITT analysis
Participants USA 
 54 children in primary care or emergency department aged 5 to 19 years with ear pain and eardrum findings indicative of AOM
Interventions Treatment: anaesthetic ear drops (antipyrine, benzocaine, glycerine) 
 Control: olive oil drops 
 Duration: 30 minutes 
 All children were also given acetaminophen (15 mg/kg in a single dose)
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; 
 3) proportion of subjects who showed a 1 or more point reduction; 
 4) mean score over time
Notes  
Risk of bias
Bias Authors' judgement Support for judgement
Random sequence generation (selection bias) Unclear risk Children were "randomly assigned". No further information provided
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 "Investigators were unaware of the study drug assignment"
Incomplete outcome data (attrition bias) 
 All outcomes Unclear risk "One patient in the Auralgan group did not receive a T20 evaluation". However the difference between the 2 groups was not statistically significant at this time point and even if treatment failure was assumed the missing value is not likely to have a significant impact