4.7 Review

Evidence-Based Surgery: What Can Intra-Operative Images Contribute?

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MEDICINE
Volume 12, Issue 21, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/jcm12216809

Keywords

randomized control trials; meta-analysis; guideline; evidence-based medicine; Evidence-Based Surgery; intra-operative technical performance quality; skills; homogeneity of data; reproducibility of research; scientific publication formats; learning tools; surgical decision making; shared decision making; patient-related outcome measurements; artificial intelligence and machine learning; patient autonomy

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Evidence-based medicine combines the best external evidence with clinical expertise and patient preferences. Evaluating the quality of surgical performance is challenging, but having complete intra-operative image documentation can help overcome this challenge. Access to this data allows for secondary analysis and comparisons with similar cases, improving publication quality and facilitating the application of research findings to real-world settings. Bridging the gap between clinical research and practice requires joint efforts from surgeons, scientific societies, publishers, and healthcare authorities.
Evidence-based medicine integrates results from randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and meta-analyses, combining the best external evidence with individual clinical expertise and patients' preferences. However, RCTs of surgery differ from those of medicine in that surgical performance is often assumed to be consistent. Yet, evaluating whether each surgery is performed to the same standard is quite challenging. As a primary issue, the novelty of this review is to emphasize-with a focus on orthopedic trauma-the advantage of having complete intra-operative image documentation, allowing the direct evaluation of the quality of the intra-operative technical performance. The absence of complete intra-operative image documentation leads to the inhomogeneity of case series, yielding inconsistent results due to the impossibility of a secondary analysis. Thus, comparisons and the reproduction of studies are difficult. Access to complete intra-operative image data in surgical RCTs allows not only secondary analysis but also comparisons with similar cases. Such complete data can be included in electronic papers. Offering these data to peers-in an accessible link-when presenting papers facilitates the selection process and improves publications for readers. Additionally, having access to the full set of image data for all presented cases serves as a rich resource for learning. It enables the reader to sift through the information and pinpoint the details that are most relevant to their individual needs, allowing them to potentially incorporate this knowledge into daily practice. A broad use of the concept of complete intra-operative image documentation is pivotal for bridging the gap between clinical research findings and real-world applications. Enhancing the quality of surgical RCTs would facilitate the equalization of evidence acquisition in both internal medicine and surgery. Joint effort by surgeons, scientific societies, publishers, and healthcare authorities is needed to support the ideas, implement economic requirements, and overcome the mental obstacles to its realization.

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