Sii S, Barton K, Pasquale LR, Yamamoto T, King AJ, Azuara-Blanco A. Reporting Harm in Glaucoma Surgical Trials: Systematic Review and a Consensus-Derived New Classification System.
Am J Ophthalmol 2018;
194:153-162. [PMID:
30053474 DOI:
10.1016/j.ajo.2018.07.014]
[Citation(s) in RCA: 20] [Impact Index Per Article: 3.3] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 03/30/2018] [Revised: 06/18/2018] [Accepted: 07/15/2018] [Indexed: 11/28/2022]
Abstract
PURPOSE
To evaluate the standards of harm reporting for glaucoma surgical trials and to develop a classification system for reporting surgical complication severity.
DESIGN
Systematic review and Delphi consensus method.
METHODS
Systematic review of glaucoma surgical trials published from January 2010 until July 2017 with a quality assessment against the CONSORT checklist for harm. A Delphi method was employed to generate consensus grading (interquartile range ≤ 2) among international glaucoma experts (n = 43) on severity of glaucoma surgical complications, and specifically for trabeculectomy and aqueous shunt complications, from 1 (no clinical significance) to 10 (most severe complication).
RESULTS
Forty-seven studies were eligible. The items of the CONSORT checklist for harm that were most frequently missing were use of a validated instrument to report severity (0%), withdrawals due to harm, and subgroup analyses, both reported in 3 publications (6.4%). Most glaucoma experts participating in the Delphi process (80%) completed the second round, and consensus was achieved for all but 1 complication. The least severe complications (graded 2) were "transient loss of vision," "early low intraocular pressure," "choroidal detachment anterior to equator," "small layered hyphema < 1 mm," and "increased lens opacity not clinically significant." The most severe complications (graded 10) were "endophthalmitis" and "permanent severe loss of vision (hand movements or worse)."
CONCLUSIONS
Glaucoma surgical randomized controlled trials report frequency of complications, but their severity is rarely reported. The quality of harm reporting is poor. We propose the use of a newly developed system of classification for assessing the severity of surgical complications based on consensus.
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