| Literature DB >> 21781327 |
Bart G Pijls1, Olaf M Dekkers, Saskia Middeldorp, Edward R Valstar, Huub J L van der Heide, Henrica M J Van der Linden-Van der Zwaag, Rob G H H Nelissen.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In the light of both the importance and large numbers of case series and cohort studies (observational studies) in orthopaedic literature, it is remarkable that there is currently no validated measurement tool to appraise their quality. A Delphi approach was used to develop a checklist for reporting quality, methodological quality and generalizability of case series and cohorts in total hip and total knee arthroplasty with a focus on aseptic loosening.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21781327 PMCID: PMC3155910 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2474-12-173
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Musculoskelet Disord ISSN: 1471-2474 Impact factor: 2.362
Figure 1Flowchart. Overview of the Delphi flow and the number of experts involved in each round.
Characteristics of the experts (n = 37) who completed the external rounds
| Count | |
|---|---|
| Area of expertisea | |
| • Hip surgery | 24 |
| • Knee surgery | 20 |
| • Evidence Based Medicine | 11 |
| • Otherb | 7 |
| Background* | |
| • Academic | 27 |
| • Public | 9 |
| • Private | 6 |
| • Otherc | 2 |
a Multiple answers for each expert are possible. Therefore the total is more than 37.
b One expert indicated "Implant Biology" in the other field. The remaining 6 answers in the other field were in addition to "Hip surgery", "Knee surgery" or "EBM"
c One expert indicated "Private Research Center" in the other field. The remaining answer in the other field was in addition to "Private Hospital".
The final AQUILA checklist for use by authors
| Reportinbg Quality Item |
|---|
| 1. Are the inclusion and exclusion criteria clearly reported? |
| 2. Is information regarding the number of patients who did not gave informed consent and who were not willing to participate adequately reported? |
| 3. Are the baseline characteristics of included patients reported? |
| 4. Is the surgical technique adequately reported? |
| 5. Are the prosthesis brand and fixation reported with enough detail? |
| 6. Are the reasons or definitions for revision adequately reported? |
| 7. Are the number of revisions (N) and revision rates regarding aseptic loosening (either Kaplan-Meier or life table or revisions per 100 observed component years) adequately reported? |
| 8. Is the number of deaths, lost-to-follow up (e.g. no show at clinic or emigration), amputations, and revisions other than the primary endpoint adequately reported? |
| 1. Is there a clear primary research question/hypothesis?* |
| 2. How were the cohorts constructed? |
| a. Consecutivelya |
| b. Non-consecutively |
| c. Unknown |
| 3. How adequate was the follow-up (FU)? |
| a. Fully completed FU |
| b. 5% or less lost-to-FU or FU quotientb is 1 or less |
| c. More than 5% lost-to-FU or FU quotient is more than 1 |
| d. Unknown |
| 4. How was the FU performed? |
| a. Predefined e.g. yearly |
| b. When patients had complaints or chart review (of non-predefined FU) |
| c. Unknown |
| 5. How many arthroplasties are at risk at the FU of interest? |
| a. 20 or more |
| b. Less than 20 |
| b. Unknown |
| 6. Has a worst case analysis or competing risk analysis for competing endpoints [ |
* In cases of aseptic loosening: Does the research question or hypothesis include revision of the component due to aseptic loosening?
a Consecutively is defined as all patients receiving an arthroplasty (TKA or THA) in a defined period of time have also received the arthroplasty of interest. The following situation is therefore non-consecutive: patients receiving prosthesis X while prosthesis Y has also been used for the same indication during the specified period.
b FU quotient = Number lost to follow up/Number of failures [26].
Final list of generalizability items
| Generalizability item | Modea | NMode of NTotal (%)b | Preference for mode valuec | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patient demographics | ||||
| Age | 5 years | 22 of 31 (71) | M | |
| Gender | 10% | 20 of 30 (67) | M | |
| Diagnosis | 10% | 17 of 31(55) | L | |
| BMI | 5 points | 16 of 29 (55) | L | |
| Component positioning | ||||
| TKA | Hip Knee Angle | 5 degrees | 13 of 24 (54) | L |
| Varus/valgus tibial component | 3 degrees | 17 of 25 (68) | M | |
| Slope of tibial component | 3 degrees | 15 of 24 (63) | L | |
| THA | Inclination of acetabular cup | 10 degrees | 19 of 28 (68) | M |
| Varus/valgus femoral stem | 5 degrees | 16 of 27 (60) | L | |
| Post-operative functioning | ||||
| TKA | Knee Society Score | 10 points | 18 of 23 (78) | M |
| Knee Society Function Score | 10 points | 20 of 24 (83) | H | |
| Range of Motion | 10 degrees | 18 of 24 (75) | M | |
| KOOS | 10 points | 11 of 17 (65) | L | |
| WOMAC Knee | 10 points | 11 of 19 (58) | L | |
| Oxford Knee Score | 5 points | 18 of 24 (82) | H | |
| THA | Harris Hip Score | 10 points | 17 of 21 (81) | H |
| HOOS | 10 points | 12 of 17 (71) | M | |
| WOMAC Hip | 10 points | 12 of 20 (60) | M | |
| Oxford Hip Score | 5 points | 16 of 22 (73) | M | |
| Regional influences | ||||
| Are the studies from the same region (developing country or western countries//continents)? | ||||
| Are the studies similar in type en experience of the surgeon (academic; high volume; consultant; trainee)? | ||||
| Are two studies similar regarding hospital type (developer hospital/special institute/regular hospital)? | ||||
A Mode: the value that was chosen most frequently (e.g. 5 years)
b NMode = the number of experts who chose the mode value
NTotal = the total number of experts who considered the generalizability item relevant
c H = High preference, 80% or more of the experts chose the mode value
M = Moderate preference, between 67% and 80% of experts chose the mode value
L = Low preference, less than 67% of experts chose the mode value
Example: the preference for the mode value "5 years" is moderate.