Neurosurgical Randomized Trials in Low- and Middle-Income Countries.

dc.contributor.author

Griswold, Dylan P

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Khan, Ahsan A

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Chao, Tiffany E

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Clark, David J

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Budohoski, Karol

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Devi, B Indira

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Azad, Tej D

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Grant, Gerald A

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Trivedi, Rikin A

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Rubiano, Andres M

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Johnson, Walter D

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Park, Kee B

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Broekman, Marike

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Servadei, Franco

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Hutchinson, Peter J

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Kolias, Angelos G

dc.date.accessioned

2022-09-30T17:49:53Z

dc.date.available

2022-09-30T17:49:53Z

dc.date.issued

2020-09

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2022-09-30T17:49:53Z

dc.description.abstract

Background

The setting of a randomized trial can determine whether its findings are generalizable and can therefore apply to different settings. The contribution of low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) to neurosurgical randomized trials has not been systematically described before.

Objective

To perform a systematic analysis of design characteristics and methodology, funding source, and interventions studied between trials led by and/or conducted in high-income countries (HICs) vs LMICs.

Methods

From January 2003 to July 2016, English-language trials with >5 patients assessing any one neurosurgical procedure against another procedure, nonsurgical treatment, or no treatment were retrieved from MEDLINE, Scopus, and Cochrane Library. Income classification for each country was assessed using the World Bank Atlas method.

Results

A total of 73.3% of the 397 studies that met inclusion criteria were led by HICs, whereas 26.7% were led by LMICs. Of the 106 LMIC-led studies, 71 were led by China. If China is excluded, only 8.8% were led by LMICs. HIC-led trials enrolled a median of 92 patients vs a median of 65 patients in LMIC-led trials. HIC-led trials enrolled from 7.6 sites vs 1.8 sites in LMIC-led studies. Over half of LMIC-led trials were institutionally funded (54.7%). The majority of both HIC- and LMIC-led trials evaluated spinal neurosurgery, 68% and 71.7%, respectively.

Conclusion

We have established that there is a substantial disparity between HICs and LMICs in the number of published neurosurgical trials. A concerted effort to invest in research capacity building in LMICs is an essential step towards ensuring context- and resource-specific high-quality evidence is generated.
dc.identifier

5805461

dc.identifier.issn

0148-396X

dc.identifier.issn

1524-4040

dc.identifier.uri

https://hdl.handle.net/10161/25889

dc.language

eng

dc.publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

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Neurosurgery

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10.1093/neuros/nyaa049

dc.subject

Humans

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Neurosurgical Procedures

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Developing Countries

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Bibliometrics

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Female

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Male

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Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic

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Neurosurgical Randomized Trials in Low- and Middle-Income Countries.

dc.type

Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

Grant, Gerald A|0000-0002-2651-4603

pubs.begin-page

476

pubs.end-page

483

pubs.issue

3

pubs.organisational-group

Duke

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School of Medicine

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Clinical Science Departments

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Institutes and Centers

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Duke Cancer Institute

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Neurosurgery

pubs.publication-status

Published

pubs.volume

87

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