Study protocol for a multicentre comparative diagnostic accuracy study of tools to establish the presence and severity of peripheral arterial disease in people with diabetes mellitus: the DM PAD study
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BMJ
Fecha
2022-11-03Referencia bibliográfica
Normahani P... [et al.]. Study protocol for a multicentre comparative diagnostic accuracy study of tools to establish the presence and severity of peripheral arterial disease in people with diabetes mellitus: the DM PAD study. BMJ Open 2022;12:e066950. doi:[10.1136/bmjopen-2022-066950]
Patrocinador
National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) NIHR131855; NIHR Clinical Lectureship NIHR Imperial Biomedical Research Centre (BRC)Resumen
Introduction Peripheral arterial disease (PAD) is a key risk
factor for cardiovascular disease, foot ulceration and lower
limb amputation in people with diabetes. Early diagnosis of
PAD can enable optimisation of therapies to manage these
risks. Its diagnosis is fundamental, though challenging in
the context of diabetes. Although a variety of diagnostic
bedside tests are available, there is no agreement as to
which is the most accurate in routine clinical practice.
The aim of this study is to determine the diagnostic
performance of a variety of tests (audible waveform
assessment, visual waveform assessment, ankle brachial
pressure index (ABPI), exercise ABPI and toe brachial
pressure index (TBPI)) for the diagnosis of PAD in people
with diabetes as determined by a reference test (CT
angiography (CTA) or magnetic resonance angiography
(MRA)). In selected centres, we also aim to evaluate the
performance of a new point-of-
care
duplex ultrasound
scan (PAD-scan).
Methods and analysis A prospective multicentre
diagnostic accuracy study ( ClinicalTrials. gov Identifier
NCT05009602). We aim to recruit 730 people with
diabetes from 18 centres across the UK, covering primary
and secondary healthcare. Consenting participants will
undergo the tests under investigation. Reference tests
(CTA or MRA) will be performed within 6 weeks of the
index tests. Imaging will be reported by blinded consultant
radiologists at a core imaging lab, using a validated
scoring system, which will also be used to categorise PAD
severity. The presence of one or more arterial lesions of
≥50% stenosis, or tandem lesions with a combined value
of ≥50%, will be used as the threshold for the diagnosis
of PAD. The primary outcome measure of diagnostic
performance will be test sensitivity.
Ethics and dissemination The study has received
approval from the National Research Ethics Service (NRES)
(REC reference 21/PR/1221). Results will be disseminated
through research presentations and papers.