The Journal of bone and joint surgery. American volume
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J Bone Joint Surg Am · Dec 2015
ReviewIs There Truly "No Significant Difference"? Underpowered Randomized Controlled Trials in the Orthopaedic Literature.
Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) are considered the gold standard in evidence-based medicine. Underpowered RCTs that describe comparative outcomes without significance are of questionable benefit. The present study hypothesizes that a substantial proportion of RCTs in the orthopaedic literature that do not note significant differences between groups are inadequately powered. ⋯ If an RCT lacks adequate statistical power to identify a clinically meaningful absence of a difference between groups, there is an unacceptable risk of inappropriately failing to reject the null hypothesis. The present study found that a sizable proportion of RCTs in orthopaedic surgery in which the null hypothesis is rejected are inadequately powered. Researchers should consider this when designing clinical trials, and journal editors and reviewers should be wary of underpowered RCTs when considering manuscripts for publication.
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J Bone Joint Surg Am · Dec 2015
Multicenter Study Clinical TrialA Clinical Prediction Rule for Functional Outcomes in Patients Undergoing Surgery for Degenerative Cervical Myelopathy: Analysis of an International Prospective Multicenter Data Set of 757 Subjects.
Cervical spondylotic myelopathy (CSM) is a progressive spinal condition that is often managed surgically. Knowledge of important predictors of surgical outcome can provide decision support to surgeons and enable them to effectively manage their patients' expectations. The purpose of this study was to identify the most important clinical predictors of surgical outcome in patients with CSM using data from two multinational prospective studies. ⋯ Patients were more likely to achieve a score of ≥16 (indicating minimal impairment) if they were younger, had milder preoperative myelopathy, did not smoke, had fewer and less severe comorbidities, did not present with impaired gait, and had shorter symptom duration.
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J Bone Joint Surg Am · Dec 2015
Multicenter StudyAn Independent Evaluation of the Validity of a DNA-Based Prognostic Test for Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis.
ScoliScore is a DNA-based prognostic test, designed and used to help to predict the risk of curve progression in patients with adolescent idiopathic scoliosis. The role of this test in clinical practice remains unclear as the published results of the ScoliScore have not been validated independently. The purpose of this study was to determine if the ScoliScore effectively predicted the risk of curve progression in patients with mild and moderate adolescent idiopathic scoliosis in two urban academic medical centers. ⋯ ScoliScores did not differ between patients with and without curve progression, and the negative and positive predictive values were lower in our study than in the previously published validation study by the developers of the test. This may be due to differences in our test population, genetic variability, or failure of patients in the non-progression group to follow up.
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J Bone Joint Surg Am · Dec 2015
Psychological Distress Is Associated with Greater Perceived Disability and Pain in Patients Presenting to a Shoulder Clinic.
Shoulder disorders are a common cause of disability and pain. The Shoulder Pain and Disability Index (SPADI) is a frequently employed and previously validated measure of shoulder pain and disability. Although the SPADI has high reliability and construct validity, greater differences between individual patients are often observed than would be expected on the basis of diagnosis and pathophysiology alone. This study aims to determine how psychological factors (namely depression, catastrophic thinking, and self-efficacy) affect pain and perceived disability in the shoulder. ⋯ Catastrophic thinking and decreased self-efficacy are associated with greater shoulder pain and disability. Our data support the notion that patient-to-patient variation in symptom intensity and magnitude of disability is more strongly related to psychological distress than to the specific shoulder diagnosis.
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J Bone Joint Surg Am · Dec 2015
Competency-Based Medical Education: Can Both Junior Residents and Senior Residents Achieve Competence After a Sports Medicine Training Module?
Competency-based medical education as a resident-training format will move postgraduate training away from time-based training, to a model based on observable outcomes. The purpose of this study was to determine whether junior residents and senior residents could demonstrate clinical skills to a similar level, after a sports medicine rotation. ⋯ Despite intensive teaching within a competency-based medical education model, junior residents were not able to demonstrate knowledge as well as senior residents, suggesting that overall clinical experience is critically important for achieving competency as measured by the Objective Structured Clinical Examination.