Sjaus Ana, Fakhory Nicole
Department of Anesthesia, Pain Management and Perioperative Medicine, Dalhousie University, IWK Health Centre, 5850 University Avenue, Halifax, NS, Canada.
Department of Women's and Obstetric Anesthesia, IWK Health Centre, Halifax, NS, Canada.
Syst Rev. 2025 Jan 8;14(1):6. doi: 10.1186/s13643-024-02716-9.
The inadequate inclusion of sex and gender in medical research has resulted in biased clinical guidance and disparities in knowledge and patient outcomes. Despite efforts by regulatory and funding agencies, opportunities to generate sex-specific knowledge are frequently overlooked. While certain disciplines in cardiovascular medicine have made notable progress, these advances have yet to permeate the literature on perioperative cardiovascular complications in non-cardiac surgery. Prompted by the recent findings on sex-specific perioperative cardiovascular outcomes, this review aims to scope the literature in this field and categorize methodological approaches used to incorporate sex and gender in studies of this patient population.
Joanna Briggs Institute (JBI) methodology for scoping reviews will be followed in stages elaborated by Levac (2010). A comprehensive search strategy will be used to identify relevant primary research published since 2010. Screening will be performed by independent reviewers using predefined inclusion and exclusion criteria. Data will be extracted from full text and supplementary materials of selected articles. Results will be presented as proportions of studies reporting sex and gender, the assigned purpose of these variables in analysis, and where they are reported in the article. In addition, articles will be mapped to the source, country of origin, and year of publication. Narrative summaries will be provided to outline key findings and assess the depth of the literature within each of the major topics (risk assessment/prediction, diagnosis, treatment, prognosis, and outcomes).
Increasing recognition of the profound and complex implications of sex and gender in medicine has fuelled calls for greater attention to participation equity, sex-specific analysis and reporting. Focusing on perioperative cardiovascular complications, this review has the potential to identify knowledge gaps for future research, as well as areas of strength that could support formal knowledge synthesis or secondary analysis of data from past research.
Submitted on August 15th, 2023 (Web of Science osf.io/u25sf).
医学研究中对性别因素的纳入不足,导致了有偏差的临床指南以及知识和患者预后方面的差异。尽管监管机构和资助机构做出了努力,但生成针对性别的知识的机会仍经常被忽视。虽然心血管医学的某些学科已取得显著进展,但这些进展尚未渗透到非心脏手术围手术期心血管并发症的文献中。受近期针对性别的围手术期心血管结局研究结果的启发,本综述旨在梳理该领域的文献,并对在该患者群体研究中纳入性别因素的方法进行分类。
将遵循乔安娜·布里格斯研究所(JBI)的综述方法,按照莱瓦克(2010年)阐述的阶段进行。将采用全面的检索策略来识别自2010年以来发表的相关原始研究。筛选工作将由独立评审员根据预先确定的纳入和排除标准进行。数据将从所选文章的全文和补充材料中提取。结果将以报告性别因素的研究比例、这些变量在分析中的既定目的以及它们在文章中的报告位置呈现。此外,文章将按照来源、原产国和出版年份进行归类。将提供叙述性总结,以概述关键发现,并评估每个主要主题(风险评估/预测、诊断、治疗、预后和结局)内文献的深度。
对性别因素在医学中深刻而复杂的影响的认识不断提高,促使人们呼吁更加关注参与公平性、针对性别的分析和报告。本综述聚焦于围手术期心血管并发症,有可能识别未来研究的知识空白,以及可支持对过去研究数据进行正式知识综合或二次分析的优势领域。
于2023年8月15日提交(科学网osf.io/u25sf)