Background: Randomization, concealment of treatment allocation, and
blinding are all known to limit bias in clinical research. Nonsurgical studies
that fail to meet these standards have been reported to inflate the
differences between treatment and control groups. While surgical trials can
rarely blind surgeons or patients, they can often blind outcome assessors. The
aim of this systematic review was threefold: (1) to examine the reporting of
outcome measures in orthopaedic trials, (2) to determine the feasibility of
blinding in published orthopaedic trials, and (3) to examine the association
between the magnitude of treatment differences and the blinding of outcome
assessors.
Methods: We identified and reviewed thirty-two randomized,
controlled trials published in The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery
(American Volume) in 2003 and 2004 for the appropriate use of outcome
measures. These trials represented 3.4% of all 938 studies published during
that time-period. All thirty-two trials were reviewed by two authors for (1)
the outcome measures used and (2) the blinding of outcomes assessors. We
calculated the magnitude of the treatment effect of the use of blinded
compared with unblinded outcome assessors.
Results: Ten (31%) of the thirty-two randomized controlled trials
used a modified outcome instrument. Of the ten trials, four failed to describe
how the outcome instrument was modified. Nine of the ten articles did not
describe how the modified instrument was validated and retested. Sixteen of
the thirty-two randomized controlled trials did not report blinding of outcome
assessors when blinding would have been possible. Among the studies with
continuous outcome measure, unblinded outcomes assessment was associated with
significantly larger treatment effects than blinded outcomes assessment
(standardized mean difference, 0.76 compared with 0.25; p = 0.01). Similarly,
in the studies with dichotomous outcomes, unblinded outcomes assessments were
associated with significantly greater treatment effects than blinded outcomes
assessments (odds ratio, 0.13 compared with 0.42; p < 0.001). The ratio of
odds ratios (unblinded to blinded outcomes assessment) was 0.31, suggesting
that unblinded outcomes assessment was associated with a potential for
exaggeration of the benefit of the effectiveness of a treatment in our cohort
of studies.
Conclusions: In future orthopaedic randomized controlled trials,
emphasis should be placed on detailed reporting of outcome measures to
facilitate generalization and the outcome assessors should be blinded, when
possible, to limit bias.