AI Article Synopsis

  • Traumatic dental injuries (TDI) are a significant public health issue, and this study aimed to evaluate the quality of clinical practice guidelines (CPGs) for diagnosing and managing these injuries.
  • A systematic search across multiple databases identified ten CPGs published between 2010 and 2020, primarily from Europe, with reviewers achieving a high agreement level on their assessments.
  • The overall quality of these guidelines was found to be suboptimal, highlighting the need for CPG developers to improve the synthesis of evidence and recommendation formulation through better methodologies.

Article Abstract

Background: The prevalence and consequences of traumatic dental injuries (TDI) make them a public health problem. Trustworthy TDI clinical practice guidelines (CPGs) assist clinicians in determining a diagnosis and guide them to the most appropriate therapy. The aim of this systematic survey was to identify and evaluate the quality of CPGs for the diagnosis, emergency management, and follow-up of TDIs.

Materials And Methods: A systematic search was carried out in MEDLINE, EMBASE, Epistemonikos, Trip database, CPG websites, and dental societies to identify documents providing recommendations for the emergency and sequelae management of TDIs. Reviewers assessed the included guidelines independently and in duplicate, using the AGREE II instrument. ANOVA or Student's t-tests were used to determine the attributes of CPGs associated with the total score in AGREE II.

Results: Ten CPGs published between 2010 and 2020 were included, mostly from Europe (n = 6). The overall agreement between reviewers was very good (0.94; 95%CI 0.91-0.97). The mean scores (the higher the score, the better the domain assessment) per domain were as follows: Scope and purpose 78.0 ± 18.9%; stakeholder involvement 46.9 ± 29.6%; rigour of development 41.8 ± 26.7%; clarity of presentation 75.8 ± 17.6%; applicability 15.3 ± 18.8%; and editorial independence 41.7 ± 41.7%. The overall mean rate was 4 ± 1.3 out of a maximum score of 7. Two guidelines were recommended by the reviewers for use in practice and rated as high quality. CPGs developed by government organizations showed a significantly higher overall score.

Conclusions: The overall quality of CPGs on TDI was suboptimal. CPG developers should synthesize the evidence and formulate recommendations using high-quality methodologies and standards in a structured, transparent, and explicit way.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10543333PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12903-023-03409-wDOI Listing

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