• Title of article

    Evaluation of surgical and non-surgical interventions for clavicle fractures

  • Author/Authors

    YANG, Shengping First Hospital of Lanzhou University, China , YANG, Shengping First Clinical Medicine College of Lanzhou University, China , ZHANG, Rui Fudan University - Shanghai Medical College, China , ZHANG, Rui Liver Cancer Institute - Zhongshan Hospital, China , ZHU, Qingling First Clinical Medicine College of Lanzhou University, China , ZHU, Qingling First Hospital of Lanzhou University, China , WANG, Guan Clinical Medicine College of Lanzhou University, China , WANG, Guan First Hospital of Lanzhou University, China , DING, Xuanxi First Clinical Medicine College of Lanzhou University, China , DING, Xuanxi First Hospital of Lanzhou University, China , WANG, Jianmin First Clinical Medicine College of Lanzhou University, China , WANG, Jianmin First Hospital of Lanzhou University, China

  • From page
    253
  • To page
    258
  • Abstract
    Objective: The aim of this study was to review all systematic reviews and meta-analyses and providean overview of the evidence of efficacy of interventions for clavicle fractures. Methods: The Cochrane Library, PubMed, MEDLINE, Chinese Biomedicine database, China Academic Journals Full-text Database, VIP Chinese Science and Technology Periodicals Database and Wanfang Database were searched for eligible studies using keywords related to clavicle fractures. The methodological quality of included studies was assessed using the AMSTAR assessment tool. Direct evidence was analyzed narratively. Randomized controlled trials were pooled again for meta-analysis. The GRADE approach was used in summary conclusions. Results: The result of pooled data showed that while operative treatment had lower nonunion and malunion rates and higher patient satisfaction than non-operative treatment modalities [RR=6.57, 95% CI (3.01, 14.35), RR=6.93, 95% CI (2.99, 16.09); RR=0.68, 95% CI (0.51, 0.90)], these 3 outcomes were based on low-quality evidence. There was no difference between dissimilar operative and dissimilar non-operative treatments. Conclusion: Operative treatment is more effective than non-operative treatment in terms of nonunion and malunion rates and patient satisfaction. As the quality of evidence comparing efficacy between intervention methods is generally low, further original studies are needed.
  • Keywords
    Clavicle fracture , GRADE , non , operative treatment , operative treatment , overview of reviews , systematic review
  • Journal title
    Acta Orthopaedica Et Traumatologica Turcica
  • Journal title
    Acta Orthopaedica Et Traumatologica Turcica
  • Record number

    2633110