Nonblanchable erythema for predicting pressure ulcer development: a systematic review with an individual participant data meta-analysis.
Chunhu ShiL J BonnettJ C DumvilleN CullumPublished in: The British journal of dermatology (2019)
This first prognostic factor review with individual-level data analysis in patients with pressure ulcers suggests that people with nonblanchable erythema are more likely to develop new pressure ulcers of stage 2 or above within 28 days than people without nonblanchable erythema. It is important to identify nonblanchable erythema in practice and to intervene appropriately to prevent pressure ulceration. What's already known about this topic? Pressure ulcer reduction is a high priority for healthcare systems. Regularly inspecting skin to identify skin abnormalities is one key practice for preventing ulceration. Nonblanchable erythema - discoloration of the skin that does not turn white when pressed - is one clinically important skin abnormality. Empirical evidence synthesized using conventional meta-analysis is uncertain regarding the value of nonblanchable erythema for predicting open pressure ulcer incidence; this is partly because the conventional technique has weakness in terms of pooling prognostic effects of different multivariable analyses across studies. What does this study add? This prognostic factor review used individual-level data analysis to overcome the limitations of the conventional meta-analysis technique. For the first time there is confirmatory and moderate-certainty evidence on the association of nonblanchable erythema with pressure ulcer incidence. People with nonblanchable erythema are more likely to develop new pressure ulcers of stage 2 or more severe within 28 days than people without nonblanchable erythema, regardless of their age, baseline pressure ulcer risk or received support surfaces.