Pollock Alex, Hazelton Christine, Rowe Fiona J, Jonuscheit Sven, Kernohan Ashleigh, Angilley Jayne, Henderson Clair A, Langhorne Peter, Campbell Pauline
Nursing, Midwifery and Allied Health Professions Research Unit, Glasgow Caledonian University, 6th Floor, Govan Mbeki Building, Cowcaddens Road, Glasgow, UK, G4 0BA.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2019 May 23;5(5):CD008388. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD008388.pub3.
Visual field defects are estimated to affect 20% to 57% of people who have had a stroke. Visual field defects can affect functional ability in activities of daily living (commonly affecting mobility, reading and driving), quality of life, ability to participate in rehabilitation, and depression and anxiety following stroke. There are many interventions for visual field defects, which are proposed to work by restoring the visual field (restitution); compensating for the visual field defect by changing behaviour or activity (compensation); substituting for the visual field defect by using a device or extraneous modification (substitution); or ensuring appropriate diagnosis, referral and treatment prescription through standardised assessment or screening, or both.
To determine the effects of interventions for people with visual field defects after stroke.
We searched the Cochrane Stroke Group Trials Register, the Cochrane Eyes and Vision Group Trials Register, CENTRAL, MEDLINE, Embase, CINAHL, AMED, PsycINFO, and PDQT Databse, and clinical trials databases, including ClinicalTrials.gov and WHO Clinical Trials Registry, to May 2018. We also searched reference lists and trials registers, handsearched journals and conference proceedings, and contacted experts.
Randomised trials in adults after stroke, where the intervention was specifically targeted at improving the visual field defect or improving the ability of the participant to cope with the visual field loss. The primary outcome was functional ability in activities of daily living and secondary outcomes included functional ability in extended activities of daily living, reading ability, visual field measures, balance, falls, depression and anxiety, discharge destination or residence after stroke, quality of life and social isolation, visual scanning, adverse events, and death.
Two review authors independently screened abstracts, extracted data and appraised trials. We undertook an assessment of methodological quality for allocation concealment, blinding of outcome assessors, method of dealing with missing data, and other potential sources of bias. We assessed the quality of evidence for each outcome using the GRADE approach.
Twenty studies (732 randomised participants, with data for 547 participants with stroke) met the inclusion criteria for this review. However, only 10 of these studies compared the effect of an intervention with a placebo, control, or no treatment group, and eight had data which could be included in meta-analyses. Only two of these eight studies presented data relating to our primary outcome of functional abilities in activities of daily living. One study reported evidence relating to adverse events.Three studies (88 participants) compared a restitutive intervention with a control, but data were only available for one study (19 participants). There was very low-quality evidence that visual restitution therapy had no effect on visual field outcomes, and a statistically significant effect on quality of life, but limitations with these data mean that there is insufficient evidence to draw any conclusions about the effectiveness of restitutive interventions as compared to control.Four studies (193 participants) compared the effect of scanning (compensatory) training with a control or placebo intervention. There was low-quality evidence that scanning training was more beneficial than control or placebo on quality of life, measured using the Visual Function Questionnaire (VFQ-25) (two studies, 96 participants, mean difference (MD) 9.36, 95% confidence interval (CI) 3.10 to 15.62). However, there was low or very-low quality evidence of no effect on measures of visual field, extended activities of daily living, reading, and scanning ability. There was low-quality evidence of no significant increase in adverse events in people doing scanning training, as compared to no treatment.Three studies (166 participants) compared a substitutive intervention (a type of prism) with a control. There was low or very-low quality evidence that prisms did not have an effect on measures of activities of daily living, extended activities of daily living, reading, falls, or quality of life, and very low-quality evidence that they may have an effect on scanning ability (one study, 39 participants, MD 9.80, 95% CI 1.91 to 17.69). There was low-quality evidence of an increased odds of an adverse event (primarily headache) in people wearing prisms, as compared to no treatment.One study (39 participants) compared the effect of assessment by an orthoptist to standard care (no assessment) and found very low-quality evidence that there was no effect on measures of activities of daily living.Due to the quality and quantity of evidence, we remain uncertain about the benefits of assessment interventions.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: There is a lack of evidence relating to the effect of interventions on our primary outcome of functional ability in activities of daily living. There is limited low-quality evidence that compensatory scanning training may be more beneficial than placebo or control at improving quality of life, but not other outcomes. There is insufficient evidence to reach any generalised conclusions about the effect of restitutive interventions or substitutive interventions (prisms) as compared to placebo, control, or no treatment. There is low-quality evidence that prisms may cause minor adverse events.
据估计,20%至57%的中风患者存在视野缺损。视野缺损会影响日常生活活动中的功能能力(通常影响行动、阅读和驾驶)、生活质量、参与康复的能力以及中风后的抑郁和焦虑。针对视野缺损有多种干预措施,这些措施旨在通过恢复视野(恢复)、通过改变行为或活动来补偿视野缺损(补偿)、使用设备或外部调整来替代视野缺损(替代),或通过标准化评估或筛查(或两者兼具)确保适当的诊断、转诊和治疗处方来发挥作用。
确定中风后视野缺损患者干预措施的效果。
我们检索了Cochrane中风组试验注册库、Cochrane眼科和视力组试验注册库、CENTRAL、MEDLINE、Embase、CINAHL、AMED、PsycINFO和PDQT数据库,以及临床试验数据库,包括ClinicalTrials.gov和世界卫生组织临床试验注册库,检索截至2018年5月。我们还检索了参考文献列表和试验注册库,手工检索了期刊和会议论文集,并联系了专家。
针对中风后成年人的随机试验,其中干预措施专门针对改善视野缺损或提高参与者应对视野丧失的能力。主要结局是日常生活活动中的功能能力,次要结局包括扩展日常生活活动中的功能能力、阅读能力、视野测量、平衡、跌倒、抑郁和焦虑、中风后的出院目的地或居住情况、生活质量和社会隔离、视觉扫描、不良事件和死亡。
两位综述作者独立筛选摘要、提取数据并评估试验。我们对分配隐藏、结局评估者的盲法、处理缺失数据的方法以及其他潜在偏倚来源进行了方法学质量评估。我们使用GRADE方法评估每个结局的证据质量。
20项研究(732名随机参与者,其中547名中风参与者有数据)符合本综述的纳入标准。然而,这些研究中只有10项将干预措施的效果与安慰剂、对照组或未治疗组进行了比较,其中8项有可纳入荟萃分析的数据。这8项研究中只有2项呈现了与我们的主要结局——日常生活活动功能能力相关的数据。一项研究报告了与不良事件相关的证据。三项研究(88名参与者)将恢复性干预措施与对照组进行了比较,但仅有一项研究(19名参与者)有数据。有非常低质量的证据表明视觉恢复疗法对视野结局无影响,对生活质量有统计学显著影响,但这些数据存在局限性,意味着与对照组相比,没有足够的证据就恢复性干预措施的有效性得出任何结论。四项研究(193名参与者)将扫描(补偿性)训练的效果与对照组或安慰剂干预措施进行了比较。有低质量的证据表明,使用视觉功能问卷(VFQ - 25)测量,扫描训练在生活质量方面比对照组或安慰剂更有益(两项研究,96名参与者,平均差异(MD)9.36,95%置信区间(CI)3.10至15.62)。然而,对于视野、扩展日常生活活动、阅读和扫描能力的测量,有低质量或非常低质量的证据表明无影响。与未治疗相比,有低质量的证据表明进行扫描训练的人不良事件没有显著增加。三项研究(166名参与者)将一种替代干预措施(一种棱镜)与对照组进行了比较。有低质量或非常低质量的证据表明棱镜对日常生活活动、扩展日常生活活动、阅读、跌倒或生活质量的测量没有影响,有非常低质量的证据表明它们可能对扫描能力有影响(一项研究,39名参与者,MD 9.80,95% CI 1.91至17.69)。与未治疗相比,有低质量的证据表明佩戴棱镜的人不良事件(主要是头痛)的几率增加。一项研究(39名参与者)将眼科医生的评估效果与标准护理(无评估)进行了比较,发现有非常低质量的证据表明对日常生活活动的测量没有影响。由于证据的质量和数量,我们对评估干预措施的益处仍不确定。
关于干预措施对我们的主要结局——日常生活活动功能能力的影响,缺乏证据。有有限的低质量证据表明,补偿性扫描训练在改善生活质量方面可能比安慰剂或对照组更有益,但对其他结局并非如此。与安慰剂、对照组或未治疗相比,没有足够的证据就恢复性干预措施或替代干预措施(棱镜)的效果得出任何一般性结论。有低质量的证据表明棱镜可能会引起轻微不良事件。