AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study aimed to evaluate the internal validity of hand surgical randomized controlled trials (RCTs) by examining their reporting and methods, highlighting that poor practices can lead to inaccurate estimations of treatment benefits or risks.
  • - A comprehensive review of 207 RCTs revealed significant issues, with high or unclear risks of bias in various domains like selection (72%), performance (93%), and detection (88%), which could affect the reliability of their findings.
  • - Notably, studies with a high or unclear risk of selection bias showed larger effect sizes, but overall, there was an observable improvement in reducing selection bias over time, suggesting that adherence to better methodologies could enhance the quality of future trials.

Article Abstract

Purpose: Inappropriately reported or conducted studies may decrease the quality of care due to under- or overestimation of the benefits or harms of interventions. Our aim was to evaluate how often hand surgical randomized controlled trials (RCTs) use and report adequate methods to ensure internal validity, and whether inadequate reporting or methods are associated with the magnitude of treatment effect estimates.

Methods: Data Sources were the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, MEDLINE, and Embase databases until November 2020. We included published RCTs investigating the effects of any surgical intervention in the hand and wrist region. We assessed internal validity using the Cochrane Risk of Bias (RoB) tool for 6 domains: selection, performance, detection, attrition, selective reporting, and "other" bias. We extracted the primary outcome and calculated the effect size for each study. We used mixed-effect meta-regression to assess whether the RoB modified the magnitude of the effects.

Results: For 207 assessed trials, the RoB was unclear or high for 72% in selection, 93% in performance, 88% in detection, 25% in attrition, 22% in selective reporting, and 34% in the "other" bias domain. Trials with a high or unclear risk of selection bias yielded 0.28 standardized mean difference (95% confidence interval, 0.02-0.55) larger effect sizes compared to studies with a low risk. Risks of bias for other domains did not modify the intervention effects. The risk for selection bias declined over time: the odds ratio for a high or unclear RoB was 0.90 (95% confidence interval, 0.85-0.95) per additional year of publication CONCLUSIONS: The internal validity and credibility of hand surgical RCTs can be improved by using established methods to achieve true randomization, blinding of the participants and study personnel, publishing the trial protocol and avoiding selective reporting of the outcomes, and reporting the trial as recommended in the Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials statement.

Clinical Relevance: Clinicians should be aware that RCTs that do not use or report proper randomization and allocation concealment may overestimate the treatment effects.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jhsa.2022.01.027DOI Listing

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