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Critical care medicine. 2023 Sep 1;51(9):e179-e183. doi: 10.1097/CCM.0000000000005937 Q17.72024

Randomized Controlled Trials in ICU in the Four Highest-Impact General Medicine Journals

四大综合性医学期刊中的ICU随机对照试验 翻译改进

Jasper M Kampman  1  2, Nicolaas H Sperna Weiland  1, Jeroen Hermanides  1, Markus W Hollmann  1, Sjoerd Repping  3  4, Janneke Horn  2

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作者单位

  • 1 Department of Anesthesiology, Amsterdam UMC, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
  • 2 Department of Intensive Care Medicine, Amsterdam UMC, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
  • 3 Department of Health Evaluation and Appropriate Use, Amsterdam UMC, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
  • 4 National Healthcare Institute, Diemen, The Netherlands.
  • DOI: 10.1097/CCM.0000000000005937 PMID: 37199541

    摘要 Ai翻译

    Objective: To study ICU trials published in the four highest-impact general medicine journals by comparing them with concurrently published non-ICU trials in the same journals.

    Data sources: PubMed was searched for randomized controlled trials (RCTs) published between January 2014 and October 2021 in the New England Journal of Medicine , The Lancet , the Journal of the American Medical Association , and the British Medical Journal.

    Study selection: Original RCT publications investigating any type of intervention in any patient population.

    Data extraction: ICU RCTs were defined as RCTs exclusively including patients admitted to the ICU. Year and journal of publication, sample size, study design, funding source, study outcome, type of intervention, Fragility Index (FI), and Fragility Quotient were collected.

    Data synthesis: A total of 2,770 publications were screened. Of 2,431 original RCTs, 132 (5.4%) were ICU RCTs, gradually rising from 4% in 2014 to 7.5% in 2021. ICU RCTs and non-ICU RCTs included a comparable number of patients (634 vs 584, p = 0.528). Notable differences for ICU RCTs were the low occurrence of commercial funding (5% vs 36%, p < 0.001), the low number of RCTs that reached statistical significance (29% vs 65%, p < 0.001), and the low FI when they did reach significance (3 vs 12, p = 0.008).

    Conclusions: In the last 8 years, RCTs in ICU medicine made up a meaningful, and growing, portion of RCTs published in high-impact general medicine journals. In comparison with concurrently published RCTs in non-ICU disciplines, statistical significance was rare and often hinged on the outcome events of just a few patients. Increased attention should be paid to realistic expectations of treatment effects when designing ICU RCTs to detect differences in treatment effects that are reliable and clinically relevant.

    Keywords:randomized controlled trials; intensive care unit; general medicine journals

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    期刊名:Critical care medicine

    缩写:CRIT CARE MED

    ISSN:0090-3493

    e-ISSN:1530-0293

    IF/分区:7.7/Q1

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    Randomized Controlled Trials in ICU in the Four Highest-Impact General Medicine Journals