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Outcome reporting in bariatric surgery: an in‐depth analysis to inform the development of a core outcome set, the BARIACT S tudy
Author(s) -
Hopkins J. C.,
Howes N.,
Chalmers K.,
Savovic J.,
Whale K.,
Coulman K. D.,
Welbourn R.,
Whistance R. N.,
Andrews R. C.,
Byrne J. P.,
Mahon D.,
Blazeby J. M.
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
obesity reviews
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.845
H-Index - 162
eISSN - 1467-789X
pISSN - 1467-7881
DOI - 10.1111/obr.12240
Subject(s) - medicine , outcome (game theory) , randomized controlled trial , weight loss , adverse effect , set (abstract data type) , clinical trial , medline , surgery , intensive care medicine , obesity , mathematics , mathematical economics , computer science , law , political science , programming language
Summary Outcome reporting in bariatric surgery needs a core outcome set ( COS ), an agreed minimum set of outcomes reported in all studies of a particular condition. The aim of this study was to summarize outcome reporting in bariatric surgery to inform the development of a COS . Outcomes reported in randomized controlled trials ( RCTs ) and large non‐randomized studies identified by a systematic review were listed verbatim and categorized into domains, scrutinizing the frequency of outcome reporting and uniformity of definitions. Ninety studies (39 RCTs ) identified 1,088 separate outcomes, grouped into nine domains with most ( n  = 920, 85%) reported only once. The largest outcome domain was ‘surgical complications’, and overall, 42% of outcomes corresponded to a theme of ‘adverse events’. Only a quarter of outcomes were defined, and where provided definitions, which were often contradictory. Percentage of excess weight loss was the main study outcome in 49 studies, but nearly 40% of weight loss outcomes were heterogeneous, thus not comparable. Outcomes of diverse bariatric operations focus largely on adverse events. Reporting is inconsistent and ill‐defined, limiting interpretation and comparison of published studies. Thus, we propose and are developing a COS for the surgical treatment of severe and complex obesity.

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