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Infant skin-cleansing product versus water: a pilot randomized, assessor-blinded controlled trial

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Infant skin-cleansing product versus water: a pilot randomized, assessor-blinded controlled trial. / Lavender, T.; Bedwell, Carol; O'Brien, E et al.
In: BMC Pediatrics, Vol. 11, 35, 13.05.2011.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Lavender, T, Bedwell, C, O'Brien, E, Cook, M, Turner, M & Hart, A 2011, 'Infant skin-cleansing product versus water: a pilot randomized, assessor-blinded controlled trial', BMC Pediatrics, vol. 11, 35. https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2431-11-35

APA

Lavender, T., Bedwell, C., O'Brien, E., Cook, M., Turner, M., & Hart, A. (2011). Infant skin-cleansing product versus water: a pilot randomized, assessor-blinded controlled trial. BMC Pediatrics, 11, Article 35. https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2431-11-35

Vancouver

Lavender T, Bedwell C, O'Brien E, Cook M, Turner M, Hart A. Infant skin-cleansing product versus water: a pilot randomized, assessor-blinded controlled trial. BMC Pediatrics. 2011 May 13;11:35. doi: 10.1186/1471-2431-11-35

Author

Lavender, T. ; Bedwell, Carol ; O'Brien, E et al. / Infant skin-cleansing product versus water : a pilot randomized, assessor-blinded controlled trial. In: BMC Pediatrics. 2011 ; Vol. 11.

Bibtex

@article{5a44fb3dc93f44c8be49459fef909980,
title = "Infant skin-cleansing product versus water: a pilot randomized, assessor-blinded controlled trial",
abstract = "BackgroundThe vulnerability of newborn babies' skin creates the potential for a number of skin problems. Despite this, there remains a dearth of good quality evidence to inform practice. Published studies comparing water with a skin-cleansing product have not provided adequate data to inform an adequately powered trial. Nor have they distinguished between babies with and without a predisposition to atopic eczema. We conducted a pilot study as a prequel to designing an optimum trial to investigate whether bathing with a specific cleansing product is superior to bathing with water alone. The aims were to produce baseline data which would inform decisions for the main trial design (i.e. population, primary outcome, sample size calculation) and to optimize the robustness of trial processes within the study setting.Methods100 healthy, full term neonates aged <24 hours were randomly assigned to bathing with water and cotton wool (W) or with a cleaning product (CP). A minimum of bathing 3 times per week was advocated. Groups were stratified according to family history of atopic eczema. Transepidermal water loss (TEWL), stratum corneum hydration and skin surface pH were measured within 24 hours of birth and at 4 and 8 weeks post birth. Measurements were taken on the thigh, forearm and abdomen. Women also completed questionnaires and diaries to record bathing practices and medical treatments.ResultsForty nine babies were randomized to cleansing product, 51 to water. The 95% confidence intervals (CI) for the average TEWL measurement at each time point were: whole sample at baseline: 10.8 g/m2/h to 11.7 g/m2/h; CP group 4 weeks: 10.9 g/m2/h to 13.3 g/m2/h; 8 weeks: 11.4 g/m2/h to 12.9 g/m2/h; W group 4 weeks:10.9 g/m2/h to 12.2 g/m2/h; 8 weeks: 11.4 g/m2/h to 12.9 g/m2/h.ConclusionThis pilot study provided valuable baseline data and important information on trial processes. The decision to proceed with a superiority trial, for example, was inconsistent with our data; therefore a non-inferiority trial is recommended.",
author = "T. Lavender and Carol Bedwell and E O'Brien and M Cook and Mark Turner and Anna Hart",
year = "2011",
month = may,
day = "13",
doi = "10.1186/1471-2431-11-35",
language = "English",
volume = "11",
journal = "BMC Pediatrics",
publisher = "BioMed Central",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Infant skin-cleansing product versus water

T2 - a pilot randomized, assessor-blinded controlled trial

AU - Lavender, T.

AU - Bedwell, Carol

AU - O'Brien, E

AU - Cook, M

AU - Turner, Mark

AU - Hart, Anna

PY - 2011/5/13

Y1 - 2011/5/13

N2 - BackgroundThe vulnerability of newborn babies' skin creates the potential for a number of skin problems. Despite this, there remains a dearth of good quality evidence to inform practice. Published studies comparing water with a skin-cleansing product have not provided adequate data to inform an adequately powered trial. Nor have they distinguished between babies with and without a predisposition to atopic eczema. We conducted a pilot study as a prequel to designing an optimum trial to investigate whether bathing with a specific cleansing product is superior to bathing with water alone. The aims were to produce baseline data which would inform decisions for the main trial design (i.e. population, primary outcome, sample size calculation) and to optimize the robustness of trial processes within the study setting.Methods100 healthy, full term neonates aged <24 hours were randomly assigned to bathing with water and cotton wool (W) or with a cleaning product (CP). A minimum of bathing 3 times per week was advocated. Groups were stratified according to family history of atopic eczema. Transepidermal water loss (TEWL), stratum corneum hydration and skin surface pH were measured within 24 hours of birth and at 4 and 8 weeks post birth. Measurements were taken on the thigh, forearm and abdomen. Women also completed questionnaires and diaries to record bathing practices and medical treatments.ResultsForty nine babies were randomized to cleansing product, 51 to water. The 95% confidence intervals (CI) for the average TEWL measurement at each time point were: whole sample at baseline: 10.8 g/m2/h to 11.7 g/m2/h; CP group 4 weeks: 10.9 g/m2/h to 13.3 g/m2/h; 8 weeks: 11.4 g/m2/h to 12.9 g/m2/h; W group 4 weeks:10.9 g/m2/h to 12.2 g/m2/h; 8 weeks: 11.4 g/m2/h to 12.9 g/m2/h.ConclusionThis pilot study provided valuable baseline data and important information on trial processes. The decision to proceed with a superiority trial, for example, was inconsistent with our data; therefore a non-inferiority trial is recommended.

AB - BackgroundThe vulnerability of newborn babies' skin creates the potential for a number of skin problems. Despite this, there remains a dearth of good quality evidence to inform practice. Published studies comparing water with a skin-cleansing product have not provided adequate data to inform an adequately powered trial. Nor have they distinguished between babies with and without a predisposition to atopic eczema. We conducted a pilot study as a prequel to designing an optimum trial to investigate whether bathing with a specific cleansing product is superior to bathing with water alone. The aims were to produce baseline data which would inform decisions for the main trial design (i.e. population, primary outcome, sample size calculation) and to optimize the robustness of trial processes within the study setting.Methods100 healthy, full term neonates aged <24 hours were randomly assigned to bathing with water and cotton wool (W) or with a cleaning product (CP). A minimum of bathing 3 times per week was advocated. Groups were stratified according to family history of atopic eczema. Transepidermal water loss (TEWL), stratum corneum hydration and skin surface pH were measured within 24 hours of birth and at 4 and 8 weeks post birth. Measurements were taken on the thigh, forearm and abdomen. Women also completed questionnaires and diaries to record bathing practices and medical treatments.ResultsForty nine babies were randomized to cleansing product, 51 to water. The 95% confidence intervals (CI) for the average TEWL measurement at each time point were: whole sample at baseline: 10.8 g/m2/h to 11.7 g/m2/h; CP group 4 weeks: 10.9 g/m2/h to 13.3 g/m2/h; 8 weeks: 11.4 g/m2/h to 12.9 g/m2/h; W group 4 weeks:10.9 g/m2/h to 12.2 g/m2/h; 8 weeks: 11.4 g/m2/h to 12.9 g/m2/h.ConclusionThis pilot study provided valuable baseline data and important information on trial processes. The decision to proceed with a superiority trial, for example, was inconsistent with our data; therefore a non-inferiority trial is recommended.

U2 - 10.1186/1471-2431-11-35

DO - 10.1186/1471-2431-11-35

M3 - Journal article

VL - 11

JO - BMC Pediatrics

JF - BMC Pediatrics

M1 - 35

ER -