BackgroundThe Glasgow Benefit Inventory (GBI) is a validated, generic patient-recorded outcome measure widely used in otolaryngology to report change in quality of life post-intervention.Objectives of reviewTo date, no systematic review has made (i) a quality assessment of reporting of Glasgow Benefit Inventory outcomes; (ii) a comparison between Glasgow Benefit Inventory outcomes for different interventions and objectives; (iii) an evaluation of subscales in describing the area of benefit; (iv) commented on its value in clinical practice and research.Type of reviewSystematic review.Search strategy‘Glasgow Benefit Inventory’ and ‘GBI’ were used as keywords to search for published, unpublished and ongoing trials in PubMed, EMBASE, CINAHL and Google in addition to an ISI citation search for the original validating Glasgow Benefit Inventory paper between 1996 and January 2015.Evaluation methodPapers were assessed for study type and quality graded by a predesigned scale, by two authors independently. Papers with sufficient quality Glasgow Benefit Inventory data were identified for statistical comparisons. Papers with <50% follow-up were excluded.ResultsA total of 118 eligible papers were identified for inclusion. A national audit paper (n = 4325) showed that the Glasgow Benefit Inventory gave a range of scores across the specialty, being greater for surgical intervention than medical intervention or ‘reassurance’. Fourteen papers compared one form of surgery versus another form of surgery. In all but one study, there was no difference between the Glasgow Benefit Inventory scores (or of any other outcome). The most likely reason was lack of power. Two papers took an epidemiological approach and used the Glasgow Benefit Inventory scores to predict benefit. One was for tonsillectomy where duration of sore throat episodes and days with fever were identified on multivariate analysis to predict benefit albeit the precision was low. However, the traditional factor of number of episodes of sore throat was not predictive. The other was surgery for chronic rhinosinusitis where those with polyps on univariate analysis had greater benefit than those without. Forty-three papers had a response rate of >50% and gave sufficient Glasgow Benefit Inventory total and subscales for meta-analysis. For five of the 11 operation categories (vestibular schwannoma, tonsillectomy, cochlear implant, middle ear implant and stapes surgery) that were most likely to have a single clear clinical objective, score data had low-to-moderate heterogeneity. The value in the Glasgow Benefit Inventory having both positive and negative scores was shown by an overall negative score for the management of vestibular schwannoma. The other six operations gave considerable heterogeneity with rhinoplasty and septoplasty giving the greatest percentages (98% and 99%) most likely because of the considerable variations in patient selection. The data from these operations should not be used for comparative purposes. Five papers also reported the number of patients that h...
ContextAcute testicular torsion is a common urological emergency. Accepted practice is surgical exploration, detorsion and orchidopexy for a salvageable testis.
ObjectiveTo critically evaluate methods of orchidopexy and their outcomes with a view to determining optimal surgical technique.
Evidence AcquisitionThe review protocol was published via PROSPERO [CRD42016043165] and conducted in accordance with PRISMA. EMBASE, MEDLINE and CENTRAL databases were searched using terms: 'orchidopexy', 'fixation', 'exploration', 'torsion', 'scrotum' and variants. Article screening was performed by two reviewers independently. The primary outcome was retorsion rate of the ipsilateral testis following orchidopexy. Secondary outcomes included testicular atrophy and fertility.
Evidence SynthesisTo our knowledge, this is the first systematic review on this topic. The search yielded 2257 abstracts. Five studies (n=138 patients) were included.All five techniques differed in incision and/or type of suture and/or point(s) of fixation. Postoperative complications were reported in one study and included scrotal abscess in 9.1% and stitch abscess in 4.5%. The contralateral testis was fixed in 57.6% of cases.Three studies reported follow-up duration (range 6-31 weeks). No study reported any episodes of ipsilateral retorsion. In the studies reporting ipsilateral atrophy rate, this ranged from 9.1-47.5%. Fertility outcomes and patient reported outcome measures were not reported in any studies.
Tears are increasingly prevalent in women of advancing years and lower socioeconomic status which should be considered when planning operative approach in this demographic. When recognised and repaired there is no difference in the clinical outcome for those with abductor mechanism tears of the hip.
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