Clinical Epidemiology Program, Ottawa Hospital Research Institute, Ottawa, ON, Canada.
Spine J. 2010 Jul;10(7):639-51. doi: 10.1016/j.spinee.2010.04.028. Epub 2010 May 26.
Low back pain (LBP) is a common musculoskeletal disorder associated with a considerable social and economic burden within the working-age population. Despite an unclear etiology, numerous physical activities are suspected of leading to LBP. Declaring a causal relationship between occupational activities and LBP remains challenging and requires a methodologically rigorous approach.
To conduct a systematic review focused on assessing the potentially causal relationship between workplace manual handling or assisting patients and LBP.
Systematic review of the literature.
Studies reporting an association between workplace manual handling or assisting patients and LBP.
Numerical association between different levels of exposure to manual handling or assisting patients, and the presence or severity of LBP.
A systematic review was conducted using Medline, EMBASE, CINAHL, Cochrane Library, and Occupational Safety and Health database, gray literature, hand-searching occupational health journals, reference lists of included studies, and content experts. The methodological quality of each study was assessed using a modified Newcastle-Ottawa Scale (NOS) for observational studies. The overall level of evidence supporting various Bradford-Hill criteria for causality for each category of manual handling or assisting patients and type of LBP was then evaluated. Studies were deemed of higher quality if they received a score of five or more on the modified NOS and used appropriate statistical analysis methods.
This search yielded 2,766 citations, and 32 studies met the eligibility criteria. Three high-quality studies reported on manual handling and LBP, including two prospective cohorts and one cross-sectional design. None demonstrated a significant association in most of their multivariate risk estimates. One study was able to assess dose-response and temporality, but its results did not support these criteria. Only one study discussed the biological plausibility of this association. Four high-quality studies evaluated assisting patients and LBP, including two case-controls, one cross-sectional, and one prospective cohort design. These studies were consistent in reporting no significant association. Two studies demonstrated a nonsignificant dose-response trend, and two studies discussed the biological plausibility of this association. No studies were able to demonstrate the temporality or experiment criteria.
The studies reviewed did not support a causal association between workplace manual handling or assisting patients and LBP in a Bradford-Hill framework. Conflicting evidence in specific subcategories of assisting patients was identified, suggesting that tasks such as assisting patients with ambulation may possibly contribute to LBP. It appears unlikely that workplace manual handling or assisting patients is independently causative of LBP in the populations of workers studied.
下腰痛(LBP)是一种常见的肌肉骨骼疾病,在工作年龄段人群中与相当大的社会和经济负担有关。尽管病因尚不清楚,但许多体力活动被怀疑会导致 LBP。在职业活动与 LBP 之间宣布因果关系仍然具有挑战性,需要采用方法严谨的方法。
进行系统评价,重点评估工作场所手动搬运或协助患者与 LBP 之间可能存在的因果关系。
文献系统评价。
报告工作场所手动搬运或协助患者与 LBP 之间存在关联的研究。
不同水平的暴露于手动搬运或协助患者之间的数值关联,以及 LBP 的存在或严重程度。
使用 Medline、EMBASE、CINAHL、Cochrane 图书馆、职业安全与健康数据库、灰色文献、职业健康杂志的手工检索、纳入研究的参考文献列表和内容专家进行系统评价。使用改良的 Newcastle-Ottawa 量表(NOS)对每项研究的方法质量进行评估。然后,根据各种 Bradford-Hill 因果关系标准评估针对各种手动搬运或协助患者类别的证据水平,并评估每种类型的 LBP。如果研究获得改良 NOS 的五分或五分以上的评分并使用适当的统计分析方法,则被认为具有更高的质量。
该搜索产生了 2766 条引文,有 32 项研究符合入选标准。三项高质量研究报告了手动搬运和 LBP,包括两项前瞻性队列研究和一项横断面设计。在大多数多变量风险估计中,没有一项研究显示出显著关联。一项研究能够评估剂量反应和时间性,但结果不支持这些标准。只有一项研究讨论了这种关联的生物学可能性。四项高质量研究评估了协助患者和 LBP,包括两项病例对照研究、一项横断面研究和一项前瞻性队列设计。这些研究在报告无显著关联方面一致。两项研究显示出非显著的剂量反应趋势,两项研究讨论了这种关联的生物学可能性。没有研究能够证明时间性或实验标准。
在 Bradford-Hill 框架下,综述的研究并未支持工作场所手动搬运或协助患者与 LBP 之间存在因果关系。在协助患者的特定亚类中发现了相互矛盾的证据,这表明协助患者行走等任务可能会导致 LBP。在研究的工人人群中,似乎不太可能是工作场所手动搬运或协助患者独立导致 LBP。