Evidence-based recommendations for paediatric orthopaedic practice.
Mulpuri K, Schaeffer EK, Graham K, Kocher MS, Sanders J, Zaltz I. Evidence-based recommendations for paediatric orthopaedic practice. J Pediatr Orthop. April 2018. DOI: 10.1097/BPO.0000000000000876
Abstract
Background:
Evidence-based medicine has become the cornerstone to guide clinical practice decision-making. Evidence-based medicine integrates the strongest available evidence with clinical expertise to make decisions about clinical care. The quality of the evidence depends upon the soundness of the study methodology to allow for meaningful interpretation of the clinical results. The purpose of this review is to analyze the methodological design and clinical findings of published pediatric orthopaedic studies to determine their ability to change or influence clinical practice.
Methods:
This is the first in a series of evidence-based reviews in pediatric orthopaedics. The pediatric orthopaedic literature was reviewed for randomized controlled trials (RCTs) published in 2013 to 2014. Two RCTs were selected from the Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery for in depth methodological review and analysis. Methodological reviews were performed by 2 orthopaedic surgeons with advanced research degrees. Following this, 2 clinical experts reviewed the articles to rate the clinical impact or value of each study. Methodological and clinical reviews were compiled, and a final recommendation on impact to change clinical practice was made based on both review components at the consensus of the panel.
Results:
The first study reviewed investigated the impact of physical therapy on function following supracondylar humeral fractures in children. The reviewers deemed the superiority study to of sound design, and conclusions appropriate for the methodology used and clinical findings. The results do not compel a recommendation to change clinical practice. The second study investigated the impact of Botulinum Toxin A with casting for the treatment of idiopathic toe-walking in children. Although of relatively sound design, the sample size was too small to appropriately perform some statistical comparisons. No recommendation to change clinical practice could be made.
Conclusion:
Both RCTs reviewed were superiority studies with a negative result. No recommendation to change clinical practice could be made.
Significance:
Interpretation of superiority studies with nonsignificant findings must be done with caution. The findings of both of these RCTs highlight the need for more noninferiority trials in the pediatric orthopaedic literature in order to appropriately demonstrate no difference between 2 treatment options.