International impact of large multi-centre surgical trials of arthroscopic subacromial decompression

2021 
ObjectivesTo examine temporal trends in incidence of arthroscopic subacromial decompression (ASAD) surgery internationally during conduct and after publication of placebo controlled trials finding no evidence of meaningful benefit of ASAD for shoulder impingement. DesignObservational study of incidence rates. SettingLarge routinely collected datasets were used: outpatient data from Belgium and UK, and insurance claims and outpatient data from US. UK data were from Clinical Practice Research Datalink and Belgium and US data were from IQVIA. US and UK data spanned 2005 - 2019 and Belgium data 2011 - 2019. ParticipantsPatients were eligible for inclusion in the study if they had at least one visit recorded in the database in a given year and cases were defined as patients undergoing ASAD for the first time in their records in a given year. Outcome measuresWe calculated incidence of ASAD over time, overall and stratified by age and sex. Characteristics of patients undergoing ASAD were also assessed over time. ResultsUK incidence has fallen since a peak of 4.7 per 10,000 person years in 2011 (when the CSAW trial began) to 1.8 in 2019. US incidence shows no clear pattern and remains consistently higher than the UK, at 11.5 per 100,000 person years in 2019. Changes in incidence patterns were similar across different age groups and sexes. The number of cases in Belgium was too small for meaningful conclusions. ConclusionsWe found ASAD rates have fallen in the UK during conduct and after publication of two large surgical RCTs from the UK and Finland that questioned the effectiveness of ASAD for shoulder impingement. A similar impact on clinical practice has not been seen in US. Further work to understand the barriers or concerns preventing international uptake of high quality evidence into clinical practice is needed. Strengths and limitations of this studyO_LIThis is the most comprehensive study of ASAD incidence we are aware of. Routinely collected datasets were used to assess proportions of the patients undergoing this procedure in several countries C_LIO_LIStandardised case definitions were used across databases to increase comparability of findings C_LIO_LITemporal changes in database coverage and quality of reporting can influence findings. The observed variation in ASAD incidence may not be entirely attributable to changes in ASAD surgery rates. C_LI
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