Cargando…

Randomized Clinical Trials and Observational Tribulations: Providing Clinical Evidence for Personalized Surgical Pain Management Care Models

Proving clinical superiority of personalized care models in interventional and surgical pain management is challenging. The apparent difficulties may arise from the inability to standardize complex surgical procedures that often involve multiple steps. Ensuring the surgery is performed the same way...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Abraham, Ivo, Lewandrowski, Kai-Uwe, Elfar, John C., Li, Zong-Ming, Fiorelli, Rossano Kepler Alvim, Pereira, Mauricio G., Lorio, Morgan P., Burkhardt, Benedikt W., Oertel, Joachim M., Winkler, Peter A., Yang, Huilin, León, Jorge Felipe Ramírez, Telfeian, Albert E., Dowling, Álvaro, Vargas, Roth A. A., Ramina, Ricardo, Asefi, Marjan, de Carvalho, Paulo Sérgio Teixeira, Defino, Helton, Moyano, Jaime, Montemurro, Nicola, Yeung, Anthony, Novellino, Pietro
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10381640/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37511657
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jpm13071044
_version_ 1785080493911310336
author Abraham, Ivo
Lewandrowski, Kai-Uwe
Elfar, John C.
Li, Zong-Ming
Fiorelli, Rossano Kepler Alvim
Pereira, Mauricio G.
Lorio, Morgan P.
Burkhardt, Benedikt W.
Oertel, Joachim M.
Winkler, Peter A.
Yang, Huilin
León, Jorge Felipe Ramírez
Telfeian, Albert E.
Dowling, Álvaro
Vargas, Roth A. A.
Ramina, Ricardo
Asefi, Marjan
de Carvalho, Paulo Sérgio Teixeira
Defino, Helton
Moyano, Jaime
Montemurro, Nicola
Yeung, Anthony
Novellino, Pietro
author_facet Abraham, Ivo
Lewandrowski, Kai-Uwe
Elfar, John C.
Li, Zong-Ming
Fiorelli, Rossano Kepler Alvim
Pereira, Mauricio G.
Lorio, Morgan P.
Burkhardt, Benedikt W.
Oertel, Joachim M.
Winkler, Peter A.
Yang, Huilin
León, Jorge Felipe Ramírez
Telfeian, Albert E.
Dowling, Álvaro
Vargas, Roth A. A.
Ramina, Ricardo
Asefi, Marjan
de Carvalho, Paulo Sérgio Teixeira
Defino, Helton
Moyano, Jaime
Montemurro, Nicola
Yeung, Anthony
Novellino, Pietro
author_sort Abraham, Ivo
collection PubMed
description Proving clinical superiority of personalized care models in interventional and surgical pain management is challenging. The apparent difficulties may arise from the inability to standardize complex surgical procedures that often involve multiple steps. Ensuring the surgery is performed the same way every time is nearly impossible. Confounding factors, such as the variability of the patient population and selection bias regarding comorbidities and anatomical variations are also difficult to control for. Small sample sizes in study groups comparing iterations of a surgical protocol may amplify bias. It is essentially impossible to conceal the surgical treatment from the surgeon and the operating team. Restrictive inclusion and exclusion criteria may distort the study population to no longer reflect patients seen in daily practice. Hindsight bias is introduced by the inability to effectively blind patient group allocation, which affects clinical result interpretation, particularly if the outcome is already known to the investigators when the outcome analysis is performed (often a long time after the intervention). Randomization is equally problematic, as many patients want to avoid being randomly assigned to a study group, particularly if they perceive their surgeon to be unsure of which treatment will likely render the best clinical outcome for them. Ethical concerns may also exist if the study involves additional and unnecessary risks. Lastly, surgical trials are costly, especially if the tested interventions are complex and require long-term follow-up to assess their benefit. Traditional clinical testing of personalized surgical pain management treatments may be more challenging because individualized solutions tailored to each patient’s pain generator can vary extensively. However, high-grade evidence is needed to prompt a protocol change and break with traditional image-based criteria for treatment. In this article, the authors review issues in surgical trials and offer practical solutions.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10381640
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-103816402023-07-29 Randomized Clinical Trials and Observational Tribulations: Providing Clinical Evidence for Personalized Surgical Pain Management Care Models Abraham, Ivo Lewandrowski, Kai-Uwe Elfar, John C. Li, Zong-Ming Fiorelli, Rossano Kepler Alvim Pereira, Mauricio G. Lorio, Morgan P. Burkhardt, Benedikt W. Oertel, Joachim M. Winkler, Peter A. Yang, Huilin León, Jorge Felipe Ramírez Telfeian, Albert E. Dowling, Álvaro Vargas, Roth A. A. Ramina, Ricardo Asefi, Marjan de Carvalho, Paulo Sérgio Teixeira Defino, Helton Moyano, Jaime Montemurro, Nicola Yeung, Anthony Novellino, Pietro J Pers Med Perspective Proving clinical superiority of personalized care models in interventional and surgical pain management is challenging. The apparent difficulties may arise from the inability to standardize complex surgical procedures that often involve multiple steps. Ensuring the surgery is performed the same way every time is nearly impossible. Confounding factors, such as the variability of the patient population and selection bias regarding comorbidities and anatomical variations are also difficult to control for. Small sample sizes in study groups comparing iterations of a surgical protocol may amplify bias. It is essentially impossible to conceal the surgical treatment from the surgeon and the operating team. Restrictive inclusion and exclusion criteria may distort the study population to no longer reflect patients seen in daily practice. Hindsight bias is introduced by the inability to effectively blind patient group allocation, which affects clinical result interpretation, particularly if the outcome is already known to the investigators when the outcome analysis is performed (often a long time after the intervention). Randomization is equally problematic, as many patients want to avoid being randomly assigned to a study group, particularly if they perceive their surgeon to be unsure of which treatment will likely render the best clinical outcome for them. Ethical concerns may also exist if the study involves additional and unnecessary risks. Lastly, surgical trials are costly, especially if the tested interventions are complex and require long-term follow-up to assess their benefit. Traditional clinical testing of personalized surgical pain management treatments may be more challenging because individualized solutions tailored to each patient’s pain generator can vary extensively. However, high-grade evidence is needed to prompt a protocol change and break with traditional image-based criteria for treatment. In this article, the authors review issues in surgical trials and offer practical solutions. MDPI 2023-06-25 /pmc/articles/PMC10381640/ /pubmed/37511657 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jpm13071044 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Perspective
Abraham, Ivo
Lewandrowski, Kai-Uwe
Elfar, John C.
Li, Zong-Ming
Fiorelli, Rossano Kepler Alvim
Pereira, Mauricio G.
Lorio, Morgan P.
Burkhardt, Benedikt W.
Oertel, Joachim M.
Winkler, Peter A.
Yang, Huilin
León, Jorge Felipe Ramírez
Telfeian, Albert E.
Dowling, Álvaro
Vargas, Roth A. A.
Ramina, Ricardo
Asefi, Marjan
de Carvalho, Paulo Sérgio Teixeira
Defino, Helton
Moyano, Jaime
Montemurro, Nicola
Yeung, Anthony
Novellino, Pietro
Randomized Clinical Trials and Observational Tribulations: Providing Clinical Evidence for Personalized Surgical Pain Management Care Models
title Randomized Clinical Trials and Observational Tribulations: Providing Clinical Evidence for Personalized Surgical Pain Management Care Models
title_full Randomized Clinical Trials and Observational Tribulations: Providing Clinical Evidence for Personalized Surgical Pain Management Care Models
title_fullStr Randomized Clinical Trials and Observational Tribulations: Providing Clinical Evidence for Personalized Surgical Pain Management Care Models
title_full_unstemmed Randomized Clinical Trials and Observational Tribulations: Providing Clinical Evidence for Personalized Surgical Pain Management Care Models
title_short Randomized Clinical Trials and Observational Tribulations: Providing Clinical Evidence for Personalized Surgical Pain Management Care Models
title_sort randomized clinical trials and observational tribulations: providing clinical evidence for personalized surgical pain management care models
topic Perspective
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10381640/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37511657
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jpm13071044
work_keys_str_mv AT abrahamivo randomizedclinicaltrialsandobservationaltribulationsprovidingclinicalevidenceforpersonalizedsurgicalpainmanagementcaremodels
AT lewandrowskikaiuwe randomizedclinicaltrialsandobservationaltribulationsprovidingclinicalevidenceforpersonalizedsurgicalpainmanagementcaremodels
AT elfarjohnc randomizedclinicaltrialsandobservationaltribulationsprovidingclinicalevidenceforpersonalizedsurgicalpainmanagementcaremodels
AT lizongming randomizedclinicaltrialsandobservationaltribulationsprovidingclinicalevidenceforpersonalizedsurgicalpainmanagementcaremodels
AT fiorellirossanokepleralvim randomizedclinicaltrialsandobservationaltribulationsprovidingclinicalevidenceforpersonalizedsurgicalpainmanagementcaremodels
AT pereiramauriciog randomizedclinicaltrialsandobservationaltribulationsprovidingclinicalevidenceforpersonalizedsurgicalpainmanagementcaremodels
AT loriomorganp randomizedclinicaltrialsandobservationaltribulationsprovidingclinicalevidenceforpersonalizedsurgicalpainmanagementcaremodels
AT burkhardtbenediktw randomizedclinicaltrialsandobservationaltribulationsprovidingclinicalevidenceforpersonalizedsurgicalpainmanagementcaremodels
AT oerteljoachimm randomizedclinicaltrialsandobservationaltribulationsprovidingclinicalevidenceforpersonalizedsurgicalpainmanagementcaremodels
AT winklerpetera randomizedclinicaltrialsandobservationaltribulationsprovidingclinicalevidenceforpersonalizedsurgicalpainmanagementcaremodels
AT yanghuilin randomizedclinicaltrialsandobservationaltribulationsprovidingclinicalevidenceforpersonalizedsurgicalpainmanagementcaremodels
AT leonjorgefeliperamirez randomizedclinicaltrialsandobservationaltribulationsprovidingclinicalevidenceforpersonalizedsurgicalpainmanagementcaremodels
AT telfeianalberte randomizedclinicaltrialsandobservationaltribulationsprovidingclinicalevidenceforpersonalizedsurgicalpainmanagementcaremodels
AT dowlingalvaro randomizedclinicaltrialsandobservationaltribulationsprovidingclinicalevidenceforpersonalizedsurgicalpainmanagementcaremodels
AT vargasrothaa randomizedclinicaltrialsandobservationaltribulationsprovidingclinicalevidenceforpersonalizedsurgicalpainmanagementcaremodels
AT raminaricardo randomizedclinicaltrialsandobservationaltribulationsprovidingclinicalevidenceforpersonalizedsurgicalpainmanagementcaremodels
AT asefimarjan randomizedclinicaltrialsandobservationaltribulationsprovidingclinicalevidenceforpersonalizedsurgicalpainmanagementcaremodels
AT decarvalhopaulosergioteixeira randomizedclinicaltrialsandobservationaltribulationsprovidingclinicalevidenceforpersonalizedsurgicalpainmanagementcaremodels
AT definohelton randomizedclinicaltrialsandobservationaltribulationsprovidingclinicalevidenceforpersonalizedsurgicalpainmanagementcaremodels
AT moyanojaime randomizedclinicaltrialsandobservationaltribulationsprovidingclinicalevidenceforpersonalizedsurgicalpainmanagementcaremodels
AT montemurronicola randomizedclinicaltrialsandobservationaltribulationsprovidingclinicalevidenceforpersonalizedsurgicalpainmanagementcaremodels
AT yeunganthony randomizedclinicaltrialsandobservationaltribulationsprovidingclinicalevidenceforpersonalizedsurgicalpainmanagementcaremodels
AT novellinopietro randomizedclinicaltrialsandobservationaltribulationsprovidingclinicalevidenceforpersonalizedsurgicalpainmanagementcaremodels
AT randomizedclinicaltrialsandobservationaltribulationsprovidingclinicalevidenceforpersonalizedsurgicalpainmanagementcaremodels