Lozano-Calderón Santiago, Anthony Shawn, Ring David
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Hand and Upper Extremity Service, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA, USA.
J Hand Surg Am. 2008 Apr;33(4):525-38. doi: 10.1016/j.jhsa.2008.01.004.
The purpose of this investigation was to evaluate the quality and strength of scientific evidence supporting an etiologic relationship between a disease and a proposed risk factor using a scoring system based on the Bradford Hill criteria for causal association.
A quantitative score based on the Bradford Hill criteria (qBHs) was used to evaluate 117 articles presenting original data regarding the etiology of carpal tunnel syndrome: 33 (28%) that evaluated biological (structural or genetic) risk factors, 51 (44%) that evaluated occupational (environment or activity-related) risk factors, and 33 (28%) that evaluated both types of risk factors.
The quantitative Bradford Hill scores of 2 independent observers showed very good agreement, supporting the reliability of the instrument. The average qBHs was 12.2 points (moderate association) among biological risk factors compared with 5.2 points (poor association) for occupational risk factors. The highest average qBHs was observed for genetic factors (14.2), race (11.7), and anthropometric measures of the wrist (11.3 points) with all studies finding a moderate causal association. The highest average qBHs among occupational risk factors was observed for activities requiring repetitive hand use (6.5 points among the 30 of 45 articles that reported a causal association), substantial exposure to vibration (6.3 points; 14 of 20 articles), and type of occupation (5.6 points; 38 of 53 articles), with the findings being much less consistent.
According to a quantitative analysis of published scientific evidence, the etiology of carpal tunnel syndrome is largely structural, genetic, and biological, with environmental and occupational factors such as repetitive hand use playing a minor and more debatable role. Speculative causal theories should be analyzed through a rigorous approach prior to wide adoption.
本研究旨在使用基于布拉德福德·希尔因果关联标准的评分系统,评估支持疾病与拟议风险因素之间病因关系的科学证据的质量和强度。
基于布拉德福德·希尔标准(qBHs)的定量评分用于评估117篇呈现腕管综合征病因原始数据的文章:33篇(28%)评估生物学(结构或遗传)风险因素,51篇(44%)评估职业(环境或活动相关)风险因素,33篇(28%)评估两种类型的风险因素。
两名独立观察者的定量布拉德福德·希尔评分显示出非常好的一致性,支持该工具的可靠性。生物学风险因素的平均qBHs为12.2分(中等关联),而职业风险因素为5.2分(弱关联)。遗传因素(14.2)、种族(11.7)和手腕人体测量指标(11.3分)的平均qBHs最高,所有研究均发现存在中等因果关联。职业风险因素中,需要重复手部使用的活动(在报告因果关联的45篇文章中的30篇中为6.5分)、大量接触振动(6.3分;20篇文章中的14篇)和职业类型(5.6分;53篇文章中的38篇)的平均qBHs最高,但其研究结果的一致性要低得多。
根据对已发表科学证据的定量分析,腕管综合征的病因在很大程度上是结构性、遗传性和生物学性的,环境和职业因素如重复手部使用起的作用较小且更具争议性。在广泛采用之前,应通过严格的方法对推测性因果理论进行分析。