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JBJS welcomes reader comments on published articles. Letters to the Editor are reviewed by JBJS editors but are not peer-reviewed. To submit your letter, please follow the "submit a response" link that appears in the content box at the upper right of the full text of the article.
Letters to the Editor to:
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- Scientific Articles:
Kenneth A. Egol, Nader Paksima, Steven Puopolo, Jeffrey Klugman, Rudi Hiebert, and Kenneth J. Koval
- Treatment of External Fixation Pins About the Wrist: A Prospective, Randomized Trial
J Bone Joint Surg Am 2006; 88: 349-354
[Abstract]
[Full text]
[PDF]
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Electronic letters published:
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Dr. Egol and colleagues respond to Mr. Nayagam
- Kenneth A. Egol, M.D., Rudi Hiebert, ScM, Nader Paksima, DO, and Kenneth J. Koval, M.D.
(10 April 2006)
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External fixator pin infections - the need for a different approach to studying after-care protocols
- Selvadurai Nayagam, BSc, MB ChB, MCh (Orth), FRCS (Orth), Rosemary Davies, B.Sc. (Hons), RGN, and Norma Holt, RGN
(10 April 2006)
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Dr. Egol and colleagues respond to Mr. Nayagam |
10 April 2006 |
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Kenneth A. Egol, M.D., Physician NYU-Hospital for Joint Diseases, New York, NY, Rudi Hiebert, ScM, Nader Paksima, DO, and Kenneth J. Koval, M.D.
Send letter to journal:
Re: Dr. Egol and colleagues respond to Mr. Nayagam
egolk01{at}nyumc.org Kenneth A. Egol, M.D., et al.
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We appreciate the interest in our paper expressed by Mr. Nayagam and Ms.Davies. The method used in our
paper is only a problem if the procedures used to identify infection
differed among the three groups; however, the procedures used to screen for pin
infection were exactly the same among the three groups. There may be
different ways to classify pin infections, but so long as the procedures
are the same across the study arms, then the study maintains its internal
validity.
We agree that some readers may mistakenly attach importance to the number of p-
values reported in a paper. The reader must be aware that the sheer
number of p-values reported in a paper conveys no special meaning about the
quality or importance of a study or its conclusions.
The third point is about the use of the word “moderate” with respect
to correlations. Although some statisticians have offered guidelines for
the use of the word “moderate” we doubt that there is a strong consensus
on the meaning and use of the term in the orthopaedic community, nor do we
think that much effort should be expended on standardizing the use of this
term. Critical consumers of scientific information form opinions by
examining data rather than relying on interpretative or descriptive words. |
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External fixator pin infections - the need for a different approach to studying after-care protocols |
10 April 2006 |
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Selvadurai Nayagam, BSc, MB ChB, MCh (Orth), FRCS (Orth), Consultant Orthopaedic Surgeon Royal Liverpool Children's Hospital & Royal Liverpool & Broadgreen University Hospital, UK, Rosemary Davies, B.Sc. (Hons), RGN, and Norma Holt, RGN
Send letter to journal:
Re: External fixator pin infections - the need for a different approach to studying after-care protocols
durainayagam{at}blueyonder.co.uk Selvadurai Nayagam, BSc, MB ChB, MCh (Orth), FRCS (Orth), et al.
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To The Editor:
We thank the authors for contributing to the subject of pin site-related
problems in external fixation but we wish to draw attention to several points
which may adversely influence their conclusions.
Whilst the authors are to be congratulated for conducting a
randomised controlled trial, issues over the sample size and power(1) and
the absence of matching during randomisation need to be raised. The latter
has resulted in covariate imbalance as exemplified by a greater number of
patients needing open surgery in the Biopatch and hydrogen peroxide
groups. The need for open surgery may have been for a variety of reasons
but suggest the cases in the samples were not truly comparable.
The definition of what constitutes a clinically relevant pin site
infection has also been raised(1). The use of prevalence in the data
analysis by the authors asks the question of whether the categories of
erythema, cellulitis, drainage, pin or radiographic loosening were
mutually exclusive. If not, and pin sites displayed several of these
characteristics (as they often do), which criterion defined placement in
the various categories of pin complications? Furthermore, if patients
experienced more than one episode of infection in the six weeks of external
fixation, either in the same group or separate group of pins, were the data
recorded as discrete events or grouped? The absence of standardisation in
counting episodes of pin site complications may underlie the widely
different reported rates. This may occur between different published
studies and even between different observers in the same study. We have
found the method of data collection traditionally carried out in this
field of research to be limiting.
In a study we published in 2005, we
offered a different approach which we feel reduces some of the problems of
‘counting’ the event of a pin site infection(2). It avoids classifying
degrees of pin site problems until a valid and reliable system has been
produced. Whilst it may be argued that this can be artificial, the same has been said of randomized controlled trials(3).
We believe it may be a
reasonable way of answering questions around pin site sepsis and
accommodates the variable of time, which is often ‘hidden’ in more
standard analyses.
There are many p values cited in this study. This may lead the casual
reader to attach much importance to statistical significance from
hypothesis testing. An example is the Spearman rho value quoted for
association between co-morbid factors and the categories of pin site
complications. These values ranged from r=0.21 to r=0.17, with statistical
significance cited for cellulitis and the ASA classification as well as
the number of co-morbidities and cellulitis. Both were described as
‘moderate’ correlations. It may be of interest that in each case only 4.4%
and 2.9% of the variability in the data respectively could be explained by
this association. This belies the description of moderate correlation.
Many professionals (both medical and allied) scan abstracts when
searching for evidence in online databases. The firm conclusions expressed
in the abstract of this article may lead many to adopt the view reached by
the authors, and to hold this as Level 2 evidence. Sadly this misses the
methodological problems raised here and elsewhere(1) about this study; it is
a case of one step forward but two backwards in the field of pin site
related research.
References:
1. Commentary & Perspective by Alexander Y. Shin, MD, and Dirk R.
Larson
eJBJS
http://www.ejbjs.org/cgi/content/full/88/2/349/DC1
2. Davies R, Holt N, Nayagam S. The care of pin sites with external
fixation.
J Bone Joint Surg Br. 2005;87:716-9.
3. A. Maynard
Evidence-based medicine: an incomplete method for informing treatment
choices.
The Lancet 1997; Volume 349 (Issue 9045): 126-128 |
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