http://aim.bmj.com/content/early/2016/08/17/acupmed-2016-011062.abstract
+ Author Affiliations
- Correspondence to Professor Guohua Lin, Department of Acupuncture, First Affiliated Hospital, Guangzhou University of Chinese Medicine, Guangzhou 510405, China; tcmlin-801@163.com
- Accepted 23 July 2016
- Published Online First 17 August 2016
Abstract
Objectives
To evaluate the completeness of reporting of randomised controlled
trials (RCTs) of acupuncture for post-stroke rehabilitation
in order to provide information to
facilitate transparent and more complete reporting of acupuncture RCTs
in this field.
Methods
Multiple databases were searched from their inception through September
2015. Quality of reporting for included papers was
assessed against a subset of
criteria adapted from the Consolidated Standards for Reporting Trials
(CONSORT) 2010 statement
and the Standards for Reporting
Interventions in Controlled Trials of Acupuncture (STRICTA) guidelines.
Each item was scored
1 if it was reported, or 0 if it was
not clearly stated. Descriptive statistical analysis was performed.
Cohen's κ-statistics
were calculated to assess agreement
between the two reviewers.
Results A
total of 87 RCTs were included in the full text. Based on CONSORT, good
reporting was evident for items ‘‘Randomised’ in
the title or abstract’,
‘Participants’, ‘Statistical methods’, ‘Recruitment’, ‘Baseline data’,
and ‘Outcomes and estimation’,
with positive rates >80%.
However, the quality of reporting for the items ‘Trial design’,
‘Outcomes’, ‘Sample size’, ‘Allocation
concealment’, ‘Implementation’,
‘Blinding’, ‘Flow chart’, ‘Intent-to-treat analysis’, and ‘Ancillary
analyses’ was very poor
with positive rates <10%. Based
on STRICTA, the items ‘Number of needle insertions per subject per
session’, ‘Responses sought’,
and ‘Needle type’ had poor reporting
with positive rates <50%. Substantial agreement was observed for
most items and good
agreement was observed for some
items.
Conclusions The reporting quality of RCTs in acupuncture for post-stroke rehabilitation is unsatisfactory and needs improvement.
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