Journal of Anaesthesiology Clinical Pharmacology (Jan 2022)

Evaluation of quality of abstracts of randomized controlled trials on procedural sedation in children after publication of CONSORT guidelines for abstracts: A systematic review

  • Meenakshi Bothra,
  • Poonam Motiani,
  • Zainab Ahmad

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4103/joacp.JOACP_514_20
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 38, no. 3
pp. 384 – 390

Abstract

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The extension of the Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials (CONSORT) statement provides guidelines for abstracts of randomized controlled trials (RCTs). This study was done to assess the reporting quality of abstracts of RCTs, on procedural sedation in children and identify factors associated with better quality. A PubMed search was conducted from inception of database till July 2017 to identify RCTs on procedural sedation in children. Search terms used were (procedural [All Fields] AND sedation [All Fields]) AND (“child” [MeSH Terms] OR “child” [All Fields] OR “children” [All Fields]) were included in the analysis, while primary RCTs, published in the English language unstructured abstracts, secondary analysis of primary RCTs and studies not exclusively on children we excluded. Our search strategy initially yielded 582 abstracts. Out of these, 535 abstracts were excluded. 47 articles were included in the final analysis. We extracted basic information and data on CONSORT items from abstracts. Each abstract was assessed using a 16-item composite abstract score (CAS) based on the CONSORT guidelines. This abstract quality was further explored by Method Score and by Result Score. Regression analysis was conducted to analyze factors associated with reporting quality. In majority of the abstracts, only objectives and conclusion were adequately reported. Inadequately reported items in >90% of abstracts included randomization, trial status, registration & funding. There was no significant difference in the CAS of abstracts (mean ± SD) published in & before 2008 (12.63 ± 4.0), to those published after 2009 (12.48 ± 4.23). Similarly, there was no significant difference in Result Score and Method Score of the abstracts. After the publication of 'CONSORT for abstracts' guideline, the quality of abstracts of RCTs on procedural sedation has shown suboptimal improvement. We suggest stricter adherence to guidelines by editors and reviewers. A checklist for adherence to CONSORT guidelines could be introduced during submission for the same.

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