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The study will compare Padd, a non-invasive automated optical device which uses a functional test to assess peripheral arterial disease (PAD), and Ankle brachial pressure index (ABPI) in the detection of PAD using as a gold standard, colour duplex ultrasound, in participants drawn from general practice, a hospital diabetic clinic and a tertiary vascular disease referral centre. The study hypothesis is that Padd performs at least as well as ABPI in detecting PAD.
Full description
400 participants, with a minimum of 200 participants per site, will be recruited from two centres. At the Royal Free Hospital, London, the inclusion criterion is simply attendance at the vascular clinic; in Leicester patients >70 years or 50-69 years with a history of diabetes, smoking, known PAD or at least 2 risk factors (previous ischaemic event, hyperlipidaemia, hypertension, family history of cardiovascular disease) will be recruited from both primary care and the hospital diabetes clinic. The anticipated peripheral arterial disease detection rates are approximately 75% in London and 25% in Leicester.
In addition to standard questionnaires, participants will undergo bilateral Padd and resting ABPI. CDU will be performed by an accredited vascular technologist who will employ a scoring method consistent between both sites. The vascular technologist will be blind to the Padd and ABPI results. The results obtained with Padd and ABPI will be compared with CDU as the gold standard for this study.
The primary objectives are:
The secondary objectives are:
There are no treatments or interventions determined exclusively from the Padd readings.
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Inclusion criteria
Royal Free Hospital - patients >50 years old referred to the vascular clinic for suspected peripheral arterial disease
Leicester
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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