A systematic review of sample representativeness and homogeneity in exercise trials using group designs for people with cerebral palsy

S.M. Tweedy , I.M. Dutia , L. Caughey , B. Demetriou , E.M. Beckman , J. Cairney
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Abstract

Background

Evidence quality from exercise trials which use group designs is partly dependent on whether study samples represent the population and acceptable sample homogeneity is achieved. This study aimed to review studies evaluating exercise training for people with cerebral palsy (CP) and appraise to what extent i) participants were representative of people with CP; and ii) internal validity was threatened by sample heterogeneity.

Methods

A search of 5 major databases was conducted to identify exercise trials which use group designs for people with CP. Participant characteristics were extracted and used to divide participants into sub-populations. Indicative Participant Prevalence Ratio (iPPR) was calculated to assess representativeness. Sample homogeneity was appraised for each study.

Results

Fifty-one studies evaluating 836 participants were appraised. Adults comprise 60 ​% of the CP population but were grossly underrepresented (iPPR<0.4). Older adults, people with dyskinetic and ataxic CP and wheelchair users were also grossly underrepresented. The number of studies that accounted for key prognostic variables was: age - 26 studies (51 ​%); sex - 0 studies (0 ​%); neurological subtype - 21 studies (41 ​%); functional effects - 14 studies (27 ​%) and comorbidities - 1 study (2 ​%).

Conclusion

Adults with CP and people with high support needs are underrepresented, and future research should prioritise this subpopulation. Trials using group designs require researchers to reconcile two competing interests – adequate sample size and sample homogeneity and to date, sample homogeneity has received insufficient priority. This threatens internal validity and, consequently, the overall quality of evidence underpinning clinical exercise prescription is likely to be lower than previously thought.
脑性麻痹患者组设计运动试验中样本代表性和同质性的系统评价
使用组设计的运动试验的证据质量部分取决于研究样本是否代表总体,以及样本是否达到可接受的均匀性。本研究旨在回顾评估脑瘫患者运动训练的研究,并评估i)参与者在多大程度上代表脑瘫患者;ii)内部效度受到样本异质性的威胁。方法对5个主要数据库进行检索,找出采用分组设计的CP患者运动试验,提取参与者特征并将参与者划分为亚群。计算指示性参与者患病率(iPPR)以评估代表性。对每项研究进行样本均匀性评价。结果共对51项研究836名参与者进行了评价。成人占CP人群的60%,但代表性严重不足(iPPR<0.4)。老年人、运动障碍和共济失调CP患者以及轮椅使用者的比例也严重不足。考虑关键预后变量的研究数量为:年龄- 26项研究(51%);性别- 0项研究(0%);神经学亚型:21项研究(41%);功能效应:14项研究(27%),合并症:1项研究(2%)。结论成年CP患者和高支持需求人群的代表性不足,未来的研究应优先考虑这一人群。使用组设计的试验要求研究人员调和两个相互竞争的利益——足够的样本量和样本同质性,而到目前为止,样本同质性还没有得到足够的重视。这威胁到内部有效性,因此,支持临床运动处方的证据的整体质量可能比以前认为的要低。
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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