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☐ ☆ ✇ BMJ Open

Predicting outcomes in selective fetal growth restriction of monoChOrioNic Twins: an inteRnAtional observational cohort STudy protocol (CONTRAST study)

Por: Noll · A. · Javinani · A. · Slaghekke · F. · Haak · M. C. · van Klink · J. · Van der Meeren · L. · Lopriore · E. · Russo · F. · Aertsen · M. · Shamshirsaz · A. · Shinar · S. · Bennasar · M. · Tiblad · E. · Herling · L. · Lewi · L. · Verweij · E. · CONTRAST Study Group · Keizer · Steggerd — Febrero 24th 2026 at 16:52
Introduction

Selective fetal growth restriction (sFGR) is a major cause of perinatal morbidity and mortality in monochorionic diamniotic (MCDA) twin pregnancies. Current management relies on umbilical artery Doppler patterns in the smaller twin. These patterns are, however, inconsistent and do not represent a reliable severity scale, complicating clinical decision-making and parental counselling. This study aims to improve risk stratification by identifying predictors of adverse outcomes, while also evaluating the pathophysiology and multi-organ impact of sFGR in early childhood.

Methods and analysis

This is a prospective, international, multicentre cohort study conducted in six tertiary fetal medicine centres with expertise in complicated twin pregnancies. Recruitment began in March 2023 and will continue until December 2026, targeting 274 MCDA twin pairs with complete follow-up to develop a prediction model for adverse perinatal outcomes in sFGR at the time of diagnosis. Standardised data collection includes serial ultrasound examinations, advanced fetal imaging (cardiac, cerebral and 3D volumetric), fetal brain MRI and detailed placental phenotyping. Maternal and parental well-being are assessed during pregnancy and after birth. Neurodevelopmental outcome is evaluated up to 2 years after birth using validated tools. The statistical analysis plan includes predictive modelling with internal validation.

Ethics and dissemination

The study has been approved by the ethical review boards of all participating centres. Findings will be disseminated through peer-reviewed publications, international conferences and engagement with clinical guideline committees.

Trial registration number

NCT05952583.

☐ ☆ ✇ BMJ Open

Multicentre international observational study on airway management for anaesthesia: the STARGATE study protocol

Por: Russotto · V. · Sansovini · C. · Muraccini · M. · Collino · F. · Myatra · S. N. · Higgs · A. · Brewster · D. · Curic Radivojevic · R. · Parotto · M. · Karamchandani · K. · Landoni · G. · Sorbello · M. · Monfroglio · M. · Rovescala · G. · Martinelli · P. · Tinelli · O. · Meessen · J. · Be — Febrero 6th 2026 at 14:29
Introduction

More than 300 million major surgical procedures are carried out under general anaesthesia each year worldwide, and advanced airway management remains one of the leading daily challenges for clinicians. Data from large international prospective cohort studies on adverse events such as cardiovascular collapse, cardiac arrest and severe hypoxaemia during advanced airway management to facilitate anaesthesia are lacking.

Methods and analysis

The International obServational sTudy on AiRway manaGement in operAting room and non-operaTing room anaEsthesia (STARGATE) study will be an international prospective observational cohort study describing the incidence of major adverse events associated with advanced airway management (tracheal intubation or supraglottic airway device placement) for general anaesthesia in the operating and non-operating room for surgery and medical procedures. The secondary aim will be to describe the practice of airway management in a large international cohort. Critically ill patients will be excluded from this study. Data on patients’ characteristics, type of procedure and the adopted airway management strategy, post-procedure adverse events, operator characteristics and in-hospital mortality will be prospectively collected. The study aims to enrol 10 500 patients.

Ethics and dissemination

The study has been approved by the Ethics Committee of the coordinating centre (Comitato Etico Interaziendale AOU San Luigi Gonzaga, N° 25/2023). Each of the participating centres will then seek approval of their local Ethics Committee before enrolment. Data will be disseminated to the scientific community by original articles submitted to international peer-reviewed journals.

Trial registration number

NCT05759299.

☐ ☆ ✇ BMJ Open

Patient experience and preference while waiting for elective cardiac surgery: a mixed-methods cross-sectional survey across four major National Health Service hospitals in London

Por: Russo · M. · Richards · K. L. · Kumar · R. · Burridge · J. · Chaplin · H. · Chua · K.-C. · Hardy · D. · Avlonitis · V. S. · Baig · K. · Bhudia · S. · Noorani · A. · Khan · H. · Petrou · M. — Enero 21st 2026 at 14:38
Objectives

Waiting for cardiac surgery is a stressful life event for most patients. Exploring what people experience while waiting and understanding their preferences and views on how waiting time could be improved will help to inform new strategies for more efficacious waiting list management. In this study, we explored experiences and views of people waiting for elective cardiac surgery across four major London hospitals.

Design

Mixed-methods cross-sectional survey, with explanatory concurrent design.

Setting

Four cardiac surgery services across two National Health Service Trusts in London.

Participants

Patients on waiting lists for elective cardiac surgery at Royal Brompton, Harefield, St Thomas and King’s College hospitals between October 2023 and March 2024.

Outcome measures

Experience of waiting for surgery, and preferences about how waiting time could be improved.

Results

554 out of 1041 invited participants agreed to participate (recruitment rate 53.2%). Among them, 274 fully completed the survey (completion rate 49.5%). Most participants (from 52.2% to 70.9%) reported their daily and social activities were impacted by their cardiac condition, and worrying was an ubiquitous feeling (reported by 86%). Psychological distress was reported differently across women and men (higher in women). Eight themes were identified: worrying, daily activities, family/friends and social activities, sexual life, waiting list experience and feelings, communication, most important factors for surgery and suggested improvements. Communication with the surgeon and clinical team, and regular updates on waiting list progress are suggested as crucial factors to alleviate stress, thus potentially improving the experience of waiting for the surgery.

Conclusions

This study highlights the importance of emotional support, clear communication, regular updates on waiting list progress and building trust with the clinical team to improve patient-centred care while waiting for elective cardiac surgery. This finding can offer valuable insights for managing waiting lists in other surgery waiting list contexts.

Trial registration

NCT05996640.

☐ ☆ ✇ International Wound Journal

Reliability and Validity of the Italian Translation of the Updated Version of the Pressure Ulcer Knowledge Assessment Tool (PUKAT 2.0)

ABSTRACT

The study aimed to translate the PUKAT 2.0 tool from English to Italian. This was an adaptation and validation study; the validity of the Italian version was determined through content validity, item validity and construct validity. The reliability of the instrument was assessed by conducting a test–retest analysis on a sample of 62 nurses. The I-CVI indices were above the threshold of 0.78 for 91% of the questions, and according to the S-CVI index, 96% of the evaluators agreed that the questionnaire was highly relevant. The overall values for item difficulty were good, with two items being too difficult and none being too easy. The item discriminant index was overall good and reasonable, low for four items. The overall ICC was poor to moderate with a value of 0.48 (95% CI 0.26–0.65). The instrument has proven to be a good starting point although not yet completely reliable, as it clearly requires more basic preparation on the part of the staff, further modifications regarding the reliability and clarity of the questions and more training of the nursing staff if it is to be used in the Italian context.

☐ ☆ ✇ BMJ Open

VReeze: an open-source virtual reality for the examination of freezing of gait in Parkinsons disease - a study design of a crossover repeated measures study for validation

Por: Siragy · T. · Russo · Y. · Hirschbichler · S. · Nantel · J. · Wegscheider · P. · Schweiger · H. · Simonlehner · M. · Kisiel · M. · Horsak · B. — Noviembre 10th 2025 at 05:24
Introduction

Parkinson’s disease is the second most prevalent neurodegenerative disease worldwide, with up to 70% of patients exhibiting freezing of gait (FOG). FOG is defined as transient episodes when one is unable to effectively engage in the stepping process (despite the intention to walk), which decreases or completely ceases forward movement. Although several FOG triggers have been identified, eliciting FOG remains challenging in research, hindering progress in research and therapy. Virtual reality (VR) offers a promising approach to evoke FOG during overground walking by combining environmental and neuropsychological triggers. This project aims to validate an existing open-source VR-FOG toolbox that integrates multiple triggers.

Methods

A within-subject repeated measures crossover study design with a 1-hour washout period will be used for this project to validate the VR-FOG toolbox. This will consist of three blocks (baseline non-VR, VR non-FOG and VR-FOG). All participants will first complete a baseline walking trial without VR, then be randomised to either the VR non-FOG environment—a virtual replica of the laboratory—or the VR-FOG environment containing multiple virtual FOG triggers. After a 1-hour washout period, they will complete the remaining VR condition. A crossover design will minimise ordering effects of VR conditions on FOG frequency and duration. Twenty participants with Parkinson’s disease with FOG will be tested at St. Pölten University of Applied Sciences (Austria) and 20 at the University of Exeter (UK) and will be recruited from local communities. Multisite testing will verify that the VR-FOG environment triggers FOG regardless of testing location.

Ethics and dissemination

Ethical approval was obtained from the Lower Austrian Ethics Commission and the University of Exeter review boards. All data will be anonymised, used solely for this project and securely stored in General Data Protection Regulation-compliant repositories. Study results will be presented at scientific conferences and published in peer-reviewed journals.

☐ ☆ ✇ Journal of Advanced Nursing

Advancing evidence‐based practice through the Knowledge Translation Challenge: Nurses’ important roles in research, implementation science and practice change

Por: Amanda Chisholm · Angela Russolillo · Michelle Carter · Marla Steinberg · Leah Lambert · Andrea Knox · Agnes Black — Octubre 18th 2025 at 19:05

Abstract

Aim

To describe a knowledge translation capacity-building initiative and illustrate the roles of nurses in practice change using an exemplar case study.

Design

The report uses observational methods and reflection.

Methods

The Knowledge Translation Challenge program involves a multi-component intervention across several sites. The advisory committee invited eligible teams to attend capacity-building workshops. Implementation plans were developed, and successful teams receive funding for a 2 year period. Evaluation involved collecting data on program uptake and impact on practice change. Data has been collected from five cohorts. The exemplar case study employed an action-research framework.

Results

Four nurse-led teams have demonstrated successful implementation of their practice change. The case study on implementing a clinical toolkit for clozapine management further illustrates a thoughtful planning process, and implementation journey and learnings by a team of nurses.

Conclusion

The Knowledge Translation Challenge program empowers nurses to use implementation science practices to enhance the quality and effectiveness of healthcare services. Success of this initiative serves as a model for addressing the persistent gap between knowledge and practice in clinical settings and the value of activating nurses to help close this gap.

Implications

As the most trusted and numerous profession, it is vital that nurses contribute to efforts to translate research evidence into clinical practice. The Knowledge Translation Challenge program supports nurses to lead practice change.

Impact

The Knowledge Translation Challenge program successfully equips nurses and other health care providers with the knowledge, skills and resources to implement practice improvements which enhance the quality and effectiveness of healthcare services and nursing practice.

Patient or Public Contribution

The Knowledge Translation Challenge advisory committee has three patient-public partners that support teams to develop a patient-oriented approach for their projects by providing feedback on the implementation plans. Each team was also supported to include patient-public partners on their project.

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