A critical appraisal of review articles on the effectiveness of conservative treatment for neck pain

Citation
Jl. Hoving et al., A critical appraisal of review articles on the effectiveness of conservative treatment for neck pain, SPINE, 26(2), 2001, pp. 196-205
Citations number
52
Categorie Soggetti
Neurology
Journal title
SPINE
ISSN journal
03622436 → ACNP
Volume
26
Issue
2
Year of publication
2001
Pages
196 - 205
Database
ISI
SICI code
0362-2436(20010115)26:2<196:ACAORA>2.0.ZU;2-L
Abstract
Study Design. A criteria-based appraisal of review articles on neck pain. Objectives. To assess the methodologic quality, conclusions, and extent of concordance among reviews on the conservative treatment of neck disorders. Summary of Background Data. During the past decades there has been an incre asing interest in summarizing and analyzing the available evidence on the e ffectiveness of conservative management of neck pain. Considering the growi ng number and quality of reviews, consumers may question which reviews to r ead and believe. Methods. Computerized bibliographic databases were searched without languag e restriction. The reviews assessed had been published before January 1998, included neck pain and evaluated conservative therapies, and reported at l east one controlled clinical trial. Identification, selection, and quality assessment were performed independently by two investigators. Results. Of the 108 identified articles, 25 review articles were selected, of which 12 were systematic reviews. The reviews differed in their reportin g of study population, interventions, and outcomes. Statistical pooling was performed in two high-quality systematic reviews, whereas in other reviews , the investigators explicitly decided not to pool data. The results of the current study show that the concordance among reviews varied. Regarding ma nipulation and traction, there is inconclusive evidence among reviews. Conc ordance regarding the effectiveness of other conservative interventions was absent. Many of the reviews displayed major methodologic flaws. Conclusions. Consumers should consider reports of reviews both carefully an d critically, given the wide variety of review methodology, descriptive inf ormation, and final conclusions. There is a paucity of evidence from primar y studies on neck pain. Therefore, more research is needed to allow systema tic reviews to formulate stronger conclusions.