Describing randomization in trials included in systematic reviews in orthopaedic surgery.

IF 2.8 Q1 ORTHOPEDICS
Matthew Tang, Kimberley K Lun, Adriane M Lewin, Ian A Harris
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Aims: Systematic reviews of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) are the highest level of evidence used to inform patient care. However, it has been suggested that the quality of randomization in RCTs in orthopaedic surgery may be low. This study aims to describe the quality of randomization in trials included in systematic reviews in orthopaedic surgery.

Methods: Systematic reviews of RCTs testing orthopaedic procedures published in 2022 were extracted from PubMed, Embase, and the Cochrane Library. A random sample of 100 systematic reviews was selected, and all included RCTs were retrieved. To be eligible for inclusion, systematic reviews must have tested an orthopaedic procedure as the primary intervention, included at least one study identified as a RCT, been published in 2022 in English, and included human clinical trials. The Cochrane Risk of Bias-2 Tool was used to assess random sequence generation as 'adequate', 'inadequate', or 'no information'; we then calculated the proportion of trials in each category. We also collected data to test the association between these categories and characteristics of the RCTs and systematic reviews.

Results: We included 917 unique RCTs. We found that 374 RCTs (40.8%) reported adequate sequence generation, 61 (6.7%) were inadequate, 410 (44.7%) lacked information, and 72 (7.9%) were observational studies incorrectly included as RCTs within the systematic review. Publication year, an author with statistical or epidemiological qualifications, and journal impact factor were each associated with adequate randomization. We found that 45 systematic reviews (45%) included at least one inadequately randomized RCT or an observational study incorrectly treated as a RCT.

Conclusion: There is evidence of a lack of random allocation in RCTs included in systematic reviews in orthopaedic surgery. The conduct of RCTs and systematic reviews should be improved to minimize the risk of bias from inadequate randomization in RCTs and mislabelling of non-randomized studies as RCTs.

描述骨科手术系统评价中试验的随机化。
目的:随机对照试验(rct)的系统评价是用于告知患者护理的最高水平的证据。然而,有研究表明,骨科外科随机对照试验的随机化质量可能较低。本研究旨在描述骨科外科系统评价中随机化试验的质量。方法:从PubMed、Embase和Cochrane图书馆中提取2022年发表的骨科手术随机对照试验的系统综述。随机抽取100篇系统评价,检索所有纳入的随机对照试验。为了符合纳入条件,系统评价必须测试了骨科手术作为主要干预措施,包括至少一项被确定为RCT的研究,于2022年用英语发表,并包括人体临床试验。使用Cochrane偏倚风险-2工具将随机序列生成评估为“充分”、“不充分”或“无信息”;然后我们计算每个类别中试验的比例。我们还收集了数据来检验这些类别与随机对照试验和系统评价的特征之间的关联。结果:我们纳入了917项独特的随机对照试验。我们发现374项rct(40.8%)报告了足够的序列生成,61项(6.7%)报告了不充分的序列生成,410项(44.7%)缺乏信息,72项(7.9%)观察性研究被错误地纳入了系统评价中的rct。出版年份、具有统计学或流行病学资格的作者和期刊影响因子均与充分的随机化相关联。我们发现45篇系统综述(45%)至少包含一项不充分的随机RCT或一项被错误地当作RCT对待的观察性研究。结论:有证据表明,在骨科外科系统评价中纳入的随机对照试验缺乏随机分配。应改进随机对照试验和系统评价的实施,以尽量减少因随机对照试验随机化不足和将非随机研究误标为随机对照试验而产生的偏倚风险。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Bone & Joint Open
Bone & Joint Open ORTHOPEDICS-
CiteScore
5.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
审稿时长
8 weeks
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