This study aimed to describe the perceptions of decision-makers in major orthopedic centers regarding the value, implementation and use of spine surgery registries. A 33-item survey was sent to CEOs and heads of spine surgery of the International Society of Orthopedic Centers (ISOC). ISOC includes 21 hospitals worldwide with a special focus on high-quality musculoskeletal care. Twelve out of 20 member centers (60%) replied to the survey. Seven have working registries; 5 in Europe and 2 in North America. The estimations for the cost/year were distributed more evenly: $10,000 [2], $20,000 [1], $50,000 [1]. Society cannot afford unnecessary surgery nor renounce to cure patients with effective treatments. Spine surgery registries provide high levels of evidence. The cost of implementing a registry is limited in comparison to RCTs. Spine registries can pragmatically fill our knowledge gap by turning every operated patient into a study participant

Ismael, M., Villafañe, J., Cabitza, F., Banfi, G., Berjano, P. (2018). Spine surgery registries: hope for evidence-based spinal care?. JOURNAL OF SPINE SURGERY, 4(2), 456-458 [10.21037/jss.2018.05.19].

Spine surgery registries: hope for evidence-based spinal care?

Cabitza, F;Banfi, G;
2018

Abstract

This study aimed to describe the perceptions of decision-makers in major orthopedic centers regarding the value, implementation and use of spine surgery registries. A 33-item survey was sent to CEOs and heads of spine surgery of the International Society of Orthopedic Centers (ISOC). ISOC includes 21 hospitals worldwide with a special focus on high-quality musculoskeletal care. Twelve out of 20 member centers (60%) replied to the survey. Seven have working registries; 5 in Europe and 2 in North America. The estimations for the cost/year were distributed more evenly: $10,000 [2], $20,000 [1], $50,000 [1]. Society cannot afford unnecessary surgery nor renounce to cure patients with effective treatments. Spine surgery registries provide high levels of evidence. The cost of implementing a registry is limited in comparison to RCTs. Spine registries can pragmatically fill our knowledge gap by turning every operated patient into a study participant
Articolo in rivista - Review Essay
Spine; management; observational; outcomes; prospective studies; registry; research
English
2018
4
2
456
458
none
Ismael, M., Villafañe, J., Cabitza, F., Banfi, G., Berjano, P. (2018). Spine surgery registries: hope for evidence-based spinal care?. JOURNAL OF SPINE SURGERY, 4(2), 456-458 [10.21037/jss.2018.05.19].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/255600
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