Methodological and statistical characteristics of meta-analyses on spinal cord stimulation for chronic pain: a systematic review

BackgroundA growing number of meta-analyses (MA) have investigated the use of spinal cord stimulation (SCS) as a treatment modality for chronic pain. The quality of these MAs has not been assessed by validated appraisal tools.ObjectiveTo examine the methodological characteristics and quality of MAs...

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Published inRegional anesthesia and pain medicine p. rapm-2023-105249
Main Authors Kleppel, Donald J, Copeland, Royce, Hussain, Nasir, Karri, Jay, Wang, Eric, D'Souza, Ryan S
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England BMJ Publishing Group Ltd 21.02.2024
BMJ Publishing Group LTD
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Summary:BackgroundA growing number of meta-analyses (MA) have investigated the use of spinal cord stimulation (SCS) as a treatment modality for chronic pain. The quality of these MAs has not been assessed by validated appraisal tools.ObjectiveTo examine the methodological characteristics and quality of MAs related to the use of SCS for chronic pain syndromes.Evidence reviewAn online literature search was conducted in Ovid MEDLINE(R), Ovid EMBASE, Ovid Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, and Scopus databases (January 1, 2000 through June 30, 2023) to identify MAs that investigated changes in pain intensity, opioid consumption, and/or physical function after SCS for the treatment of chronic pain. MA quality was assessed using A Measurement Tool to Assess Systematic Reviews (AMSTAR-2) critical appraisal tool.FindingsTwenty-five MAs were appraised in the final analysis. Three were considered “high” quality, three “low” quality, and 19 “critically low” quality, per the AMSTAR-2 criteria. There was no association between the publication year and AMSTAR-2 overall quality (β 0.043; 95% CI −0.008 to 0.095; p=0.097). There was an association between the impact factor and AMSTAR-2 overall quality (β 0.108; 95% CI 0.044 to 0.172; p=0.002), such that studies published in journals with higher impact factors were associated with higher overall quality. There was no association between the effect size and AMSTAR-2 overall quality (β −0.168; 95% CI −0.518 to 0.183; p=0.320).According to our power analysis, three studies were adequately powered (>80%) to reject the null hypothesis, while the remaining studies were underpowered (<80%).ConclusionsThe study demonstrates a critically low AMSTAR-2 quality for most MAs published on the use of SCS for treating chronic pain. Future MAs should improve study quality by implementing the AMSTAR-2 checklist items.PROSPERO registration numberCRD42023431155.
ISSN:1098-7339
1532-8651
DOI:10.1136/rapm-2023-105249