Generación de Nuevo Conocimiento: Artículos publicados en revistas especializadas - Electrónicos
Reporting of IMMPACT-recommended core outcome domains among trials assessing opioids for chronic non-cancer pain
Fecha
2015-09Autor
Mulla, Sohail M.
Maqbool, Amna
Sivananthan, Laxsanaa
Lopes, Luciane C.
Schandelmaier, Stefan
Kamaleldin, Mostafa
Hsu, Sandy
Riva, John
Vandvik, Per Olav
Tsoi, Ludwig
Lam, Tommy
Ebrahim, Shanil
Johnston, Bradley C.
Olivieri, Lori
Montoya, Luis
Kunz, Regina
Scheidecker, Anne
Buckley, D. Norman
Sessler, Daniel I.
Guyatt, Gordon H.
Busse, Jason W.
Institución
Resumen
The Initiative on Methods, Measurement, and Pain Assessment in Clinical Trials (IMMPACT) has recommended that trialists
evaluating treatments for chronic pain should consider reporting 9 patient-important outcome domains. We examined the extent to
which clinical trials evaluating the effect of opioids for chronic non-cancer pain (CNCP) report outcome domains recommended by
IMMPACT. We systematically searched electronic databases for English-language studies that randomized patients with CNCP to
receive an opioid or a non-opioid control. In duplicate and independently, reviewers established the eligibility of each identified study and recorded all reported outcome domains from eligible trials. We conducted a priori regression analyses to explore factors that may be associated with IMMPACT-recommended outcome domains. Among 156 eligible trials, reporting of IMMPACT-recommended
outcome domains was highly variable, ranging from 99% for pain to 7% for interpersonal functioning. Recently published trials were
more likely to report the effect of treatment on physical functioning, emotional functioning, role functioning, sleep and fatigue, and
participant disposition. Trials for which the corresponding author was from North America were more likely to report treatment effects
on physical functioning and participant ratings of improvement and satisfaction with treatment. Trials published in higher impact journals
were more likely to report treatment effects on emotional function, but less likely to report participant ratings of improvement and
satisfaction with treatment. Most IMMPACT domains showed an increased rate of reporting over time, although many patient-important
outcome domains remained unreported by over half of all trials evaluating the effects of opioids for CNCP