The methodological quality was low and conclusions discordant for meta-analyses comparing proximal humerus fracture treatments: a meta-epidemiological study

To investigate the association between methodological quality and reported conclusions of meta-analyses comparing operative with non-operative treatments for proximal humerus fractures. Cross-sectional meta-epidemiological study. We searched EMBASE, PubMed, The Cochrane Library, and Web of Science f...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of clinical epidemiology 2022-02, Vol.142, p.100-109
Hauptverfasser: Sandau, Nicolai, Buxbom, Peter, Hróbjartsson, Asbjørn, Harris, Ian A, Brorson, Stig
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container_start_page 100
container_title Journal of clinical epidemiology
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creator Sandau, Nicolai
Buxbom, Peter
Hróbjartsson, Asbjørn
Harris, Ian A
Brorson, Stig
description To investigate the association between methodological quality and reported conclusions of meta-analyses comparing operative with non-operative treatments for proximal humerus fractures. Cross-sectional meta-epidemiological study. We searched EMBASE, PubMed, The Cochrane Library, and Web of Science for systematic reviews with meta-analyses comparing non-operative with operative treatments for proximal humerus fractures. Methodological quality was assessed using AMSTAR2 and the reported conclusions were scored for three outcome domains (functional outcome, quality of life, and harm) on a scale from 1 to 6. The Mann-Whitney and Kruskal-Wallis tests were used to investigate the association between methodological quality and reported conclusions. We included 21 systematic reviews: 19 pairwise meta-analyses and 2 network meta-analyses, although there are only 8 published randomized controlled trials. Most (n = 18) of the meta-analyses were rated as critically low quality, while the remaining 1 was rated as high quality. The conclusions were discordant for all three outcome domains, even for meta-analyses reporting similar inclusion criteria. We could not perform most of the statistical tests due to the predominantly critically low quality. The methodological quality was so predominantly critically low that it was not possible to evaluate the association between methodological quality and reported conclusions.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.jclinepi.2021.10.014
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subjects Age
AMSTAR
Clinical trials
Cross-Sectional Studies
Discordant conclusions
Domains
Epidemiology
Fractures
Funding
Humans
Humerus
Intervention
Meta-analysis
Meta-Analysis as Topic
Meta-epidemiology
Methodological quality
Proximal humerus fractures
Quality assessment
Quality of Life
Research Report
Statistical analysis
Statistical tests
Systematic Reviews as Topic
title The methodological quality was low and conclusions discordant for meta-analyses comparing proximal humerus fracture treatments: a meta-epidemiological study
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