Luksameearunothai Kitchai, Chaudhry Yash, Thamyongkit Sorawut, Jia Xiaofeng, Hasenboehler Erik A
1Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center, 4940 Eastern Ave, Baltimore, 21224 MD USA.
2Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Faculty of Medicine Vajira Hospital, Navamindradhiraj University, Bangkok, Thailand.
Patient Saf Surg. 2020 May 16;14:23. doi: 10.1186/s13037-020-00246-6. eCollection 2020.
In biomedical research, level of evidence (LOE) indicates the quality of a study. Recent studies evaluating orthopaedic trauma literature between 1998 and 2013 have indicated that LOE in this field has improved. The objective of this study was to determine the validity of one such study by 1) comparing our results and how they relate to more recent years of publications; and 2) assessing how our findings may be used to estimate future changes.
A total of 3449 articles published from 2013 to 2018 in (JOT); (JBJS-Am); and (CORR) were evaluated for their LOE. Articles published in JBJS-Am or CORR were classified as trauma or nontrauma studies; articles published in JOT were considered trauma studies. Articles were assigned a LOE using guidance published by JBJS-Am in 2015.
The percentage of total high-level (level I or II) trauma and nontrauma articles published in JOT, JBJS-Am, and CORR decreased from 2013 to 2018 (trauma 23.1 to 19.2%, = 0.190; nontrauma 28.8 to 24.9%, = 0.037). JBJS-Am published the highest percentage of level-I trauma studies, and CORR published the lowest percentage of level-IV studies. JBJS-Am and CORR published higher percentages of level-I trauma studies and lower percentages of level-IV nontrauma studies than all trauma studies.
Based on our results we cannot validate the findings of previous studies as we found the overall LOE of both trauma and nontrauma orthopaedic literature has decreased in recent years. JBJS-Am published a greater percentage of high-level studies than did JOT and CORR. Although the number and percentage of high-level studies published in JOT increased during the study period, it still lagged behind JBJS-Am and CORR.
在生物医学研究中,证据水平(LOE)表明一项研究的质量。最近评估1998年至2013年骨科创伤文献的研究表明,该领域的证据水平有所提高。本研究的目的是通过以下方式确定一项此类研究的有效性:1)比较我们的结果以及它们与近年来出版物的关系;2)评估我们的发现如何用于估计未来的变化。
对2013年至2018年发表在《骨与关节杂志》(JOT)、《美国骨与关节外科杂志》(JBJS-Am)和《临床骨科与相关研究》(CORR)上的总共3449篇文章进行证据水平评估。发表在JBJS-Am或CORR上的文章被分类为创伤或非创伤研究;发表在JOT上的文章被视为创伤研究。根据JBJS-Am在2015年发布的指南为文章分配证据水平。
2013年至2018年,发表在JOT、JBJS-Am和CORR上的高水平(I级或II级)创伤和非创伤文章的百分比有所下降(创伤从23.1%降至19.2%,P = 0.190;非创伤从28.8%降至24.9%,P = 0.037)。JBJS-Am发表的I级创伤研究百分比最高,CORR发表的IV级研究百分比最低。与所有创伤研究相比,JBJS-Am和CORR发表的I级创伤研究百分比更高,IV级非创伤研究百分比更低。
根据我们的结果,我们无法验证先前研究的结果,因为我们发现近年来创伤和非创伤骨科文献的总体证据水平有所下降。JBJS-Am发表的高水平研究百分比高于JOT和CORR。尽管在研究期间发表在JOT上的高水平研究数量和百分比有所增加,但仍落后于JBJS-Am和CORR。