A systematic review highlights the need to improve the quality and applicability of trials of physical therapy interventions for low back pain
Aidan G Cashin
1, 2
,
Hopin Lee
3, 4
,
Matthew K. Bagg
1, 5, 6
,
Edel O’Hagan
1, 2
,
Adrian Traeger
7
,
Steven J. Kamper
8, 9
,
Thiago Folly
10
,
Matthew Jones
11
,
John Booth
12
,
James H. McAuley
11
9
Centre for Pain, Health and Lifestyle, New Lambton Heights, Australia.
|
11
Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2020-10-01
scimago Q1
wos Q1
SJR: 3.149
CiteScore: 13.0
Impact factor: 5.2
ISSN: 08954356, 18785921
PubMed ID:
32603685
Epidemiology
Abstract
Objectives The objective of this study was to review and assess the methodological quality of randomized controlled trials that test physical therapy interventions for low back pain. Study Design and Setting This is a systematic review of trials of physical therapy interventions to prevent or treat low back pain (of any duration or type) in participants of any age indexed on the Physiotherapy Evidence Database (PEDro). Existing PEDro scale ratings were used to evaluate methodological quality. Results This review identified 2,215 trials. The majority of trials were for adults (n = 2136, 96.4%), low back pain without specific etiology (n = 1,863, 84.1%), and chronic duration (n = 947, 42.8%). The quality of trials improved over time; however, most were at risk of bias. Less than half of the trials concealed allocation to intervention (n = 813, 36.7%), used intention-to-treat principles (n = 778, 35.1%), and blinded assessors (n = 810, 36.6%), participants (n = 174, 7.9%), and therapists (n = 39, 1.8%). These findings did not vary by the type of therapy. Conclusion Most trials that test physical therapy interventions for low back pain have methodological limitations that could bias treatment effect estimates. Greater attention to methodological features, such as allocation concealment and the reporting of intention-to-treat effects, would improve the quality of trials testing physical therapy interventions for low back pain.
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Cashin A. G. et al. A systematic review highlights the need to improve the quality and applicability of trials of physical therapy interventions for low back pain // Journal of Clinical Epidemiology. 2020. Vol. 126. pp. 106-115.
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Cashin A. G., Lee H., Bagg M. K., O’Hagan E., Traeger A., Kamper S. J., Folly T., Jones M., Booth J., McAuley J. H. A systematic review highlights the need to improve the quality and applicability of trials of physical therapy interventions for low back pain // Journal of Clinical Epidemiology. 2020. Vol. 126. pp. 106-115.
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TY - JOUR
DO - 10.1016/j.jclinepi.2020.06.025
UR - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jclinepi.2020.06.025
TI - A systematic review highlights the need to improve the quality and applicability of trials of physical therapy interventions for low back pain
T2 - Journal of Clinical Epidemiology
AU - Cashin, Aidan G
AU - Lee, Hopin
AU - Bagg, Matthew K.
AU - O’Hagan, Edel
AU - Traeger, Adrian
AU - Kamper, Steven J.
AU - Folly, Thiago
AU - Jones, Matthew
AU - Booth, John
AU - McAuley, James H.
PY - 2020
DA - 2020/10/01
PB - Elsevier
SP - 106-115
VL - 126
PMID - 32603685
SN - 0895-4356
SN - 1878-5921
ER -
Cite this
BibTex (up to 50 authors)
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@article{2020_Cashin,
author = {Aidan G Cashin and Hopin Lee and Matthew K. Bagg and Edel O’Hagan and Adrian Traeger and Steven J. Kamper and Thiago Folly and Matthew Jones and John Booth and James H. McAuley},
title = {A systematic review highlights the need to improve the quality and applicability of trials of physical therapy interventions for low back pain},
journal = {Journal of Clinical Epidemiology},
year = {2020},
volume = {126},
publisher = {Elsevier},
month = {oct},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jclinepi.2020.06.025},
pages = {106--115},
doi = {10.1016/j.jclinepi.2020.06.025}
}