Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT03344874

Comparison of Stethee® to the Conventional Stethoscope for Auscultation of Simulated Heart Sounds

Comparison of Stethee® to the Conventional Stethoscope for Auscultation of Simulated Heart Sounds: A Randomised, Crossover, Non-Inferiority Trial (STELIT)

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
104 (actual)
Sponsor
Clinical Research Centre, Malaysia · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The objective of this study is to compare the relative capability of Stethee® (new wireless digital stethoscope) and 3M™ Littmann® Classic III™ (conventional stethoscope) in the identification of manikin-simulated heart sounds by medical doctors. A randomised, non-blinded, two-period crossover, non-inferiority design will be used to compare the acoustic performance of the two stethoscopes. We aim to determine if Stethee® is as effective as 3M™ Littmann® Classic III™ for auscultation of simulated heart sounds, and whether Stethee® could be recommended for use in clinical practice based on a non-inferior comparison with 3M™ Littmann® Classic III™.

Detailed description

This is a randomised, non-blinded, two-period crossover, non-inferiority study. Stethee®, a new wireless digital stethoscope, is designed to minimise ambient noise associated with electronic stethoscopes. To date, its acoustic capability in comparison to the conventional stethoscope in the auscultation of heart sounds is not known. Therefore, it is important that Stethee®'s capability as a stethoscope with sound amplification be evaluated alongside the conventional stethoscope prior to its use in the clinical setting. As acoustic performance is the primary endpoint, a non-inferiority design is proposed to enable the comparison of the mutual functionalities of the two stethoscopes. The rationale for a non-inferiority design is that: (a) electronic stethoscopes have shown a marginal benefit over conventional stethoscopes in terms of acoustic performance; (b) electronic stethoscopes have several functional advantages over conventional stethoscopes: the ability to analyse heart sounds and record heart sounds, the availability of a database for storage of heart sounds for remote analysis; and (c) electronic stethoscopes were rated better than conventional stethoscopes in terms of the overall quality of auscultation. The relative capability of Stethee® is compared to that of 3M™ Littmann® Classic III™ by the identification of heart sounds simulated by a manikin, which functions as a surrogate patient. A random sample of non-specialist doctors stratified by health centres in Perak, Malaysia, who meet eligibility criteria and provide written consent to participate, will be randomised to initial testing with Stethee® or 3M™ Littmann® Classic III™ to perform cardiac auscultation on a manikin and identify a set of 10 heart sounds. After a 10-minute break, they will repeat the auscultation of the same 10 simulated heart sounds but played in a different sequence with the alternate stethoscope. Following the completion of both tests, the doctors will be asked to complete a questionnaire that asks about their preference for either Stethee® or 3M™ Littmann® Classic III™ with respect to ease of use, audio clarity, and diagnostic accuracy. At the end of the study, answer sheets and preference questionnaires will be collected for grading and analysis.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICEStethee®Stethee® is a new wireless digital stethoscope.
DEVICE3MTM Littmann® Classic IIITM3MTM Littmann® Classic IIITM is the conventional stethoscope.

Timeline

Start date
2018-04-26
Primary completion
2019-02-01
Completion
2019-02-01
First posted
2017-11-17
Last updated
2019-02-18

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Malaysia

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03344874. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.