The Songdo consensus: Development of minimum reporting standards for studies of intervention in idiopathic anal fistula using a modified nominal group technique
Shivani Joshi, Luke Hanna, Dong Ho Cho, Pankaj Garg, Tamara Glyn, Brooke Gurland, Do-Yeon Hwang, Kiduk Kim, Paulo Gustavo Kotze, Jong Kyun Lee, Amy L. Lightner, Klaus E. Matzel, Kapil Sahnan, Francis Seow-Choen, Ali Shafik, Daeyoun Won, David D. E. Zimmerman, Phil J. Tozer
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Aim
Cryptoglandular anal fistulas carry a substantial burden to quality of life. Surgery is the only effective curative treatment but requires balancing fistula healing against pain, wounds and continence impairment. Sphincter-preserving procedures do exist but demonstrate variable rates of success. A lack of consistency and precision in outcome reporting and methodological quality hinders effective evidence-based decision-making. We aimed to establish a series of minimum reporting standards for interventional studies in idiopathic anal fistula, to eradicate low-quality studies, thus providing a consistent baseline of useful evidence.
Methods
An international group of 16 experts participated in a modified nominal group technique consensus. The nominal question was: ‘What should be the minimum set of reporting standards for studies of intervention in idiopathic anal fistula?’ The process was conducted between May and June 2023, culminating in a hybrid in-person/virtual meeting that took place at the Songdo International Proctology Symposium in June 2023.
Results
Initial idea generation resulted in 37 statements within the first round. Themes included variable reporting of follow-up and incontinence. Participants indicated their agreement via a 9-point Likert scale. Any statement achieving >70% consensus was retained. Subsequent group discussion condensed the list to 11 statements for further voting and a final minimum set of 12 reporting standards was created.
Conclusion
To date, this is the first study dedicated to developing minimum reporting standards for interventional studies in idiopathic anal fistula using a modified nominal group technique. These standards will instruct researchers in producing meticulous, high-quality studies that are accurate, transparent and reproducible.
期刊介绍:
Diseases of the colon and rectum are common and offer a number of exciting challenges. Clinical, diagnostic and basic science research is expanding rapidly. There is increasing demand from purchasers of health care and patients for clinicians to keep abreast of the latest research and developments, and to translate these into routine practice. Technological advances in diagnosis, surgical technique, new pharmaceuticals, molecular genetics and other basic sciences have transformed many aspects of how these diseases are managed. Such progress will accelerate.
Colorectal Disease offers a real benefit to subscribers and authors. It is first and foremost a vehicle for publishing original research relating to the demanding, rapidly expanding field of colorectal diseases.
Essential for surgeons, pathologists, oncologists, gastroenterologists and health professionals caring for patients with a disease of the lower GI tract, Colorectal Disease furthers education and inter-professional development by including regular review articles and discussions of current controversies.
Note that the journal does not usually accept paediatric surgical papers.