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儿科泌尿外科学文献中报告飞行员随机对照试验的质量:系统评价。

Quality of reporting for pilot randomized controlled trials in the pediatric urology literature-A systematic review.

机构信息

McMaster University/Department of Surgery/Urology, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada; McMaster Pediatric Surgery Research Collaborative, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada; Clinical Urology Research Enterprise (CURE) Program, McMaster Children's Hospital, Canada.

McMaster Pediatric Surgery Research Collaborative, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.

出版信息

J Pediatr Urol. 2021 Dec;17(6):846-854. doi: 10.1016/j.jpurol.2021.09.012. Epub 2021 Sep 24.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

The conduct and reporting of pilot studies is important to assess the feasibility of future randomized controlled trials (RCT). The Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials (CONSORT) statement extension to pilot/feasibility studies addresses the reporting quality of the pilot studies (Summary Table 1). The aims of this systematic review are (1) to assess the reporting quality of pilot studies in pediatric urology and (2) to explore the factors that are associated with the reporting quality of these studies.

METHODS

A comprehensive search was conducted through MEDLINE® and EMBASE® to identify pilot RCTs from 2005 to 2018. Two reviewers independently performed title and abstract screening and full text review, with discrepancies resolved by consensus. CONSORT extension reported items were summarized and overall proportion of reported items for each article was estimated. A linear regression model was conducted to determine factors associated with higher reporting quality. Publication year, biostatistician/epidemiologist support, sample size justification and journal impact factor were collected.

RESULTS

Of the 1463 titles duplicates were removed and 1347 were screened, 36 studies were included. Overall, 36 pilot studies reported about 8-9 of 17 items [51% (95% CI: 46 - 56%)]. The most reported items were contact details for the corresponding author (97%), title identification of study as randomised pilot or feasibility trial (95%), eligibility criteria and setting (81%), both interventions (78%), and specific objectives of the pilot trial (75%). Less fulfilled items were blinding (11%), registration of the trial (11%), randomization details (28%), detailing recruitment status in the pilot study (19%), trial design (31%), and source of funding for pilot trial (34%). Interpretation of the results of pilot trial and their implications for the future definitive trial was reported by 34% of the studies. Factors associated with higher reporting quality were the presence of biostatistician or epidemiologist (P = 0.004), and if the sample size for the pilot study was justified (P = 0.002).

DISCUSSION

Overall reporting quality of pilot studies in pediatric urology literature from 2005-2018 was suboptimal. The quality of pilot RCTs included in the present review were lower than that observed in the orthopedic literature, however, it appears to be consistent with the trends regarding OQS in chronic kidney disease and allopathic medicine. While we endeavoured to maintain utmost rigidity of this systematic review, there are inherent limitations. The CONSORT 2010 extension for pilot RCTs was published in 2016. Clinical trials can take several years, many pilot studies published pre-2016 would not have had the guidance of the extension during designing phases. Not all pilot RCTs are published, so this could potentially reduce the generalizability of the findings from this review. Only studies in English, published in full peer-reviewed journals were included, and this review only addressed the reporting quality of pilot studies in pediatric urology.

CONCLUSION

This review demonstrated that reporting quality of pilot studies in pediatric urology is currently suboptimal. Including biostatistician and/or epidemiologist, can ameliorate the quality of future pilot studies. Implementing CONSORT 2010 extension by journals as a prerequisite for submission of pilot or feasibility trials is recommended to improve the robustness and transparency of future pilot studies.

摘要

背景

评估未来随机对照试验 (RCT) 的可行性,开展和报告初步研究至关重要。扩展后的 CONSORT 报告规范适用于初步/可行性研究,旨在提高初步研究的报告质量(汇总表 1)。本系统评价的目的是:(1) 评估儿科泌尿科初步研究的报告质量;(2) 探讨与这些研究报告质量相关的因素。

方法

通过 MEDLINE®和 EMBASE® 进行全面检索,以确定 2005 年至 2018 年的初步 RCT。两名评审员独立进行标题和摘要筛选以及全文审查,如有分歧则通过共识解决。总结了 CONSORT 扩展报告的项目,并估计了每篇文章报告项目的总体比例。采用线性回归模型确定与更高报告质量相关的因素。收集了出版年份、生物统计学家/流行病学家的支持、样本量依据和期刊影响因子。

结果

1463 篇标题中有 1347 篇进行了重复筛选,共纳入 36 项研究。总体而言,36 项初步研究报告了 17 项中的 8-9 项内容[51%(95%可信区间:46%-56%)]。报告最多的项目是:通讯作者的联系方式(97%)、作为随机初步或可行性试验的研究标题标识(95%)、资格标准和研究场所(81%)、两种干预措施(78%),以及初步试验的具体目标(75%)。较少满足的项目包括盲法(11%)、试验注册(11%)、随机化细节(28%)、详细报告初步研究的招募情况(19%)、试验设计(31%),以及初步试验的资金来源(34%)。34%的研究报告了初步试验结果的解释及其对未来确定性试验的影响。与更高报告质量相关的因素包括有生物统计学家或流行病学家的存在(P=0.004),以及初步研究的样本量是否合理(P=0.002)。

讨论

2005-2018 年儿科泌尿科文献中初步研究的总体报告质量欠佳。本综述中纳入的初步 RCT 质量低于骨科文献中的质量,但似乎与慢性肾脏病和全医学领域的 OQS 趋势一致。虽然我们努力保持本系统评价的最大严谨性,但仍存在固有局限性。CONSORT 2010 扩展版适用于初步 RCT,于 2016 年发布。临床试验可能需要数年时间,许多发表于 2016 年之前的初步研究在设计阶段可能没有扩展版的指导。并非所有的初步 RCT 都发表,因此这可能会降低本综述结果的普遍性。本综述仅纳入了发表在同行评审期刊上的英语研究,仅涉及儿科泌尿科初步研究的报告质量。

结论

本研究表明,目前儿科泌尿科初步研究的报告质量欠佳。包括生物统计学家和/或流行病学家,可以提高未来初步研究的质量。建议期刊实施 CONSORT 2010 扩展版作为提交初步或可行性试验的前提条件,以提高未来初步研究的稳健性和透明度。

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