AI Article Synopsis

  • Exercise therapy is crucial for treating intermittent claudication, and proper reporting of these interventions in randomized controlled trials (RCTs) is vital for translating research into practice.
  • A systematic review of RCTs up to May 2020 found that out of 1489 records, only 73 trials providing 107 exercise interventions were included, with an overall average reporting score of 10 out of 19.
  • Key components like exercise equipment and supervision were often reported, while motivational strategies, adherence, and fidelity were frequently overlooked, hindering the ability to replicate studies and apply findings in clinical settings.

Article Abstract

Background: Exercise therapy is an important treatment option for people with intermittent claudication (IC). Appropriate reporting of exercise interventions in populations with IC within randomised controlled trials (RCTs) is important to ensure that research can be translated into clinical practice. Therefore, the purpose of our review is to evaluate the reporting of exercise interventions in RCTs of exercise therapy in patients with IC.

Methods: A systematic search was performed to identify relevant trials in patients with IC published until May 2020. Studies including only participants with critical limb ischaemia or asymptomatic peripheral artery disease were excluded. Each trial was scored using the recently developed 'Consensus on Exercise Reporting Template' (CERT) which has a maximum obtainable score of 19.

Results: Of 1489 unique records identified from the search, 73 trials were included, reporting 107 exercise interventions. Overall, the average CERT score was 10/19. The exercise equipment used, the use of supervision and a description of whether the exercise prescription was tailored or generic were the most frequently reported intervention components. The motivational strategies used, intervention adherence and intervention fidelity were the most underreported CERT components. There was no trend indicating that CERT scores were higher in more recent publications.

Conclusions: We have identified that important details about exercise interventions are frequently missing from the published literature. These missing data hinder replication of research findings and limit the translation of evidence into clinical practice.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10233510PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/17085381211070700DOI Listing

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