BMC Medical Research Methodology | |
Inconsistency in the items included in tools used in general health research and physical therapy to evaluate the methodological quality of randomized controlled trials: a descriptive analysis | |
Lisa Hartling1  Humam Saltaji2  Maria Ospina3  Jorge Fuentes5  Susan Armijo-Olivo4  | |
[1] Alberta Research Centre for Health Evidence, Department of Pediatrics, Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada;School of Dentistry, Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada;School of Public Health, University of Alberta, Institute of Health Economics, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada;Faculty of Rehabilitation Medicine, Department of Physical Therapy, University of Alberta, 3-48 Corbett Hall, Edmonton T6G 2G4, Canada;Department of Physical Therapy, Catholic University of Maule, Talca, Chile | |
关键词: Quality of reporting; Risk of bias; Critical appraisal; Quality assessment; Methodological quality; Bias; | |
Others : 1091699 DOI : 10.1186/1471-2288-13-116 |
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received in 2012-12-26, accepted in 2013-09-12, 发布年份 2013 | |
【 摘 要 】
Background
Assessing the risk of bias of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) is crucial to understand how biases affect treatment effect estimates. A number of tools have been developed to evaluate risk of bias of RCTs; however, it is unknown how these tools compare to each other in the items included. The main objective of this study was to describe which individual items are included in RCT quality tools used in general health and physical therapy (PT) research, and how these items compare to those of the Cochrane Risk of Bias (RoB) tool.
Methods
We used comprehensive literature searches and a systematic approach to identify tools that evaluated the methodological quality or risk of bias of RCTs in general health and PT research. We extracted individual items from all quality tools. We calculated the frequency of quality items used across tools and compared them to those in the RoB tool. Comparisons were made between general health and PT quality tools using Chi-squared tests.
Results
In addition to the RoB tool, 26 quality tools were identified, with 19 being used in general health and seven in PT research. The total number of quality items included in general health research tools was 130, compared with 48 items across PT tools and seven items in the RoB tool. The most frequently included items in general health research tools (14/19, 74%) were inclusion and exclusion criteria, and appropriate statistical analysis. In contrast, the most frequent items included in PT tools (86%, 6/7) were: baseline comparability, blinding of investigator/assessor, and use of intention-to-treat analysis. Key items of the RoB tool (sequence generation and allocation concealment) were included in 71% (5/7) of PT tools, and 63% (12/19) and 37% (7/19) of general health research tools, respectively.
Conclusions
There is extensive item variation across tools that evaluate the risk of bias of RCTs in health research. Results call for an in-depth analysis of items that should be used to assess risk of bias of RCTs. Further empirical evidence on the use of individual items and the psychometric properties of risk of bias tools is needed.
【 授权许可】
2013 Armijo-Olivo et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
【 预 览 】
Files | Size | Format | View |
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20150128173738193.pdf | 546KB | download | |
Figure 4. | 48KB | Image | download |
Figure 3. | 62KB | Image | download |
Figure 2. | 64KB | Image | download |
Figure 1. | 57KB | Image | download |
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