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How have research questions and methods used in clinical trials published in Clinical Rehabilitation changed over the last 30 years?

Research in rehabilitation has grown from a rare phenomenon to a mature science and clinical trials are now common. The purpose of this study is to estimate the extent to which questions posed and methods applied in clinical trials published in Clinical Rehabilitation have evolved over three decades...

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Autores principales: Mayo, Nancy E, Kaur, Navaldeep, Barbic, Skye P, Fiore, Julio, Barclay, Ruth, Finch, Lois, Kuspinar, Ayse, Asano, Miho, Figueiredo, Sabrina, Aburub, Ala’ Sami, Alzoubi, Fadi, Arafah, Alaa, Askari, Sorayya, Bakhshi, Behtash, Bouchard, Vanessa, Higgins, Johanne, Hum, Stanley, Inceer, Mehmet, Letellier, Marie Eve, Lourenco, Christiane, Mate, Kedar, Salbach, Nancy M, Moriello, Carolina
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: SAGE Publications 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4976657/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27496695
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0269215516658939
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author Mayo, Nancy E
Kaur, Navaldeep
Barbic, Skye P
Fiore, Julio
Barclay, Ruth
Finch, Lois
Kuspinar, Ayse
Asano, Miho
Figueiredo, Sabrina
Aburub, Ala’ Sami
Alzoubi, Fadi
Arafah, Alaa
Askari, Sorayya
Bakhshi, Behtash
Bouchard, Vanessa
Higgins, Johanne
Hum, Stanley
Inceer, Mehmet
Letellier, Marie Eve
Lourenco, Christiane
Mate, Kedar
Salbach, Nancy M
Moriello, Carolina
author_facet Mayo, Nancy E
Kaur, Navaldeep
Barbic, Skye P
Fiore, Julio
Barclay, Ruth
Finch, Lois
Kuspinar, Ayse
Asano, Miho
Figueiredo, Sabrina
Aburub, Ala’ Sami
Alzoubi, Fadi
Arafah, Alaa
Askari, Sorayya
Bakhshi, Behtash
Bouchard, Vanessa
Higgins, Johanne
Hum, Stanley
Inceer, Mehmet
Letellier, Marie Eve
Lourenco, Christiane
Mate, Kedar
Salbach, Nancy M
Moriello, Carolina
author_sort Mayo, Nancy E
collection PubMed
description Research in rehabilitation has grown from a rare phenomenon to a mature science and clinical trials are now common. The purpose of this study is to estimate the extent to which questions posed and methods applied in clinical trials published in Clinical Rehabilitation have evolved over three decades with respect to accepted standards of scientific rigour. Studies were identified by journal, database, and hand searching for the years 1986 to 2016. A total of 390 articles whose titles suggested a clinical trial of an intervention, with or without randomization to form groups, were reviewed. Questions often still focused on methods to be used (57%) rather than what knowledge was to be gained. Less than half (43%) of the studies delineated between primary and secondary outcomes; multiple outcomes were common; and sample sizes were relatively small (mean 83, range 5 to 3312). Blinding of assessors was common (72%); blinding of study subjects was rare (19%). In less than one-third of studies was intention-to-treat analysis done correctly; power was reported in 43%. There is evidence of publication bias as 83% of studies reported either a between-group or a within-group effect. Over time, there was an increase in the use of parameter estimation rather than hypothesis testing and there was evidence that methodological rigour improved. Rehabilitation trialists are answering important questions about their interventions. Outcomes need to be more patient-centred and a measurement framework needs to be explicit. More advanced statistical methods are needed as interventions are complex. Suggestions for moving forward over the next decades are given.
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spelling pubmed-49766572016-08-17 How have research questions and methods used in clinical trials published in Clinical Rehabilitation changed over the last 30 years? Mayo, Nancy E Kaur, Navaldeep Barbic, Skye P Fiore, Julio Barclay, Ruth Finch, Lois Kuspinar, Ayse Asano, Miho Figueiredo, Sabrina Aburub, Ala’ Sami Alzoubi, Fadi Arafah, Alaa Askari, Sorayya Bakhshi, Behtash Bouchard, Vanessa Higgins, Johanne Hum, Stanley Inceer, Mehmet Letellier, Marie Eve Lourenco, Christiane Mate, Kedar Salbach, Nancy M Moriello, Carolina Clin Rehabil Articles Research in rehabilitation has grown from a rare phenomenon to a mature science and clinical trials are now common. The purpose of this study is to estimate the extent to which questions posed and methods applied in clinical trials published in Clinical Rehabilitation have evolved over three decades with respect to accepted standards of scientific rigour. Studies were identified by journal, database, and hand searching for the years 1986 to 2016. A total of 390 articles whose titles suggested a clinical trial of an intervention, with or without randomization to form groups, were reviewed. Questions often still focused on methods to be used (57%) rather than what knowledge was to be gained. Less than half (43%) of the studies delineated between primary and secondary outcomes; multiple outcomes were common; and sample sizes were relatively small (mean 83, range 5 to 3312). Blinding of assessors was common (72%); blinding of study subjects was rare (19%). In less than one-third of studies was intention-to-treat analysis done correctly; power was reported in 43%. There is evidence of publication bias as 83% of studies reported either a between-group or a within-group effect. Over time, there was an increase in the use of parameter estimation rather than hypothesis testing and there was evidence that methodological rigour improved. Rehabilitation trialists are answering important questions about their interventions. Outcomes need to be more patient-centred and a measurement framework needs to be explicit. More advanced statistical methods are needed as interventions are complex. Suggestions for moving forward over the next decades are given. SAGE Publications 2016-08-04 2016-09 /pmc/articles/PMC4976657/ /pubmed/27496695 http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0269215516658939 Text en © The Author(s) 2016 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/ This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 License (http://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/) which permits non-commercial use, reproduction and distribution of the work without further permission provided the original work is attributed as specified on the SAGE and Open Access page (https://us.sagepub.com/en-us/nam/open-access-at-sage).
spellingShingle Articles
Mayo, Nancy E
Kaur, Navaldeep
Barbic, Skye P
Fiore, Julio
Barclay, Ruth
Finch, Lois
Kuspinar, Ayse
Asano, Miho
Figueiredo, Sabrina
Aburub, Ala’ Sami
Alzoubi, Fadi
Arafah, Alaa
Askari, Sorayya
Bakhshi, Behtash
Bouchard, Vanessa
Higgins, Johanne
Hum, Stanley
Inceer, Mehmet
Letellier, Marie Eve
Lourenco, Christiane
Mate, Kedar
Salbach, Nancy M
Moriello, Carolina
How have research questions and methods used in clinical trials published in Clinical Rehabilitation changed over the last 30 years?
title How have research questions and methods used in clinical trials published in Clinical Rehabilitation changed over the last 30 years?
title_full How have research questions and methods used in clinical trials published in Clinical Rehabilitation changed over the last 30 years?
title_fullStr How have research questions and methods used in clinical trials published in Clinical Rehabilitation changed over the last 30 years?
title_full_unstemmed How have research questions and methods used in clinical trials published in Clinical Rehabilitation changed over the last 30 years?
title_short How have research questions and methods used in clinical trials published in Clinical Rehabilitation changed over the last 30 years?
title_sort how have research questions and methods used in clinical trials published in clinical rehabilitation changed over the last 30 years?
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4976657/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27496695
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0269215516658939
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