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. 2014 Oct 29;9(10):e110254. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0110254

Table 5. Methodological characteristics of included systematic reviews.

title, reference, year searching included studies method of synthesis remarks
number, type quality assessment
EXERCISE TREATMENTS:
Physical exercises as a treatment for adolescent idiopathic scoliosis. A systematic review. 2003; [51]; (SR 1 of 3)1 MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, Cochrane Library (no particular database reported), PEDro n = 11∶5 uncontrolled before-after; 6 controlled (2 with a historical control) 11 quality criteria assessed; not referred to any validated scoring tool study characteristic in tables and figures; individual studies described narratively
Exercises reduce the progression rate of adolescent idiopathic scoliosis: results of a comprehensive systematic review of the literature. 2008; [52]; (SR 2 of 3)1 MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, Cochrane Library (no particular database reported), PEDro; hand searching n = 8 new: 1 RCT, 3 other controlled, 4 uncontrolled 11 quality criteria assessed; not referred to any validated scoring tool study characteristic in tables and figures; individual studies described narratively
Physical exercises in the treatment of adolescent idiopathic scoliosis: an updated systematic review. 2011; [53; (SR 3 of 3)1 MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, Cochrane Library (no particular database reported), PEDro; hand searching n = 1 new PC characteristic of individual studies descriptive characteristics; studies not assessed for heterogeneity study design not an inclusion criterion
Efficacy of exercise therapy for the treatment of adolescent idiopathic scoliosis: a review of the literature. 2012; [54] PubMed; MEDLINE (separately from PubMed, with different results reported); EMBASE; Cochrane Library n = 12∶9 PC (3 controlled); 2 RC; 1 CS LoE for each study defined; characteristic of individual studies characteristic of individual studies in tables and narratively
Exercises for adolescent idiopathic scoliosis. 2012; [33]; Cochrane review CENTRAL, MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, SportsDiscus, PsycInfo, PEDro; reference lists; trial registries; grey literature; contacts with authors and investigators n = 2∶1 RCT; 1PC quality scoring tools: Cochrane risk of bias tool for RCTs and CCTs; NOS scale for PCs;clinical relevance: 5 standard questions;characteristic of individual studies dichotomous outcomes: RR for each trial; continuous outcomes: MD and SMD; two studies included and assessed for clinical heterogeneity, therefore no meta-analysis performed; overall quality of evidence for each outcome: adapted GRADE approach
MANUAL THERAPY:
Manual therapy as a conservative treatment for adolescent idiopathic scoliosis. 2008; [6] MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, Cochrane Library, PEDro, ICL, Osteomed, Osteopathic Research Web, NCCAM n = 3∶1 C; 1 CS; 1 pilot/feasibility study; additionally, 3 CS discussed characteristics of individual studies; clinical relevance of studies assessed using five questions recommended by Cochrane Back Review Group descriptive characteristics of included studies types of manipulation techniques not defined/diversified; studies described narratively; no formal quality assessment and data synthesis;
The use of spinal manipulative therapy for pediatric health conditions: a systematic review of the literature. 2012 [55] ICL, PubMed; reference lists of previously published reviews n = 1 pilot RCT on AIS (17 studies regarding other conditions) 10 item quality assessment tool developed by Sackett, maximal score 50 points; characteristics of individual studies characteristics of individual studies in a table and narratively quality score not used to draw conclusions regarding AIS; conclusions based on 1 small feasibility pilot study
Myofascial release as a treatment for orthopaedic conditions: a systematic review. 2013; [56] MEDLINE, CINAHL, Cochrane Library, PEDro, Academic Search Premier n = 1 CS on AIS (4 RCTs and 5CSs regarding other conditions) quality scoring tool: PEDro scale for RCTs (4 studies assessed); LoE (CEBM Oxford) for each of 10 studies defined; characteristic of individual studies characteristic of individual studies in a table and narratively the paper is in part a report of an SR of experimental studies (RCTs, as we conclude from the LoEs stated and quality appraisal tool used), and in part a narrative analysis of case studies
Osteopathic manipulative treatment for pediatric conditions: a systematic review. 2013; [7] AMED, CINAHL, Embase, Medline, OSTMED.DR, PsycINFO, Cochrane Library, PEDro, ISI Web of Knowledge, Osteopathic Research Web, Rehabdata; reference lists of retrieved studies and key SRs of OMT n = 1 RCT on OMT in mild AIS (16 RCTs regarding other conditions) Cochrane risk of bias tool; characteristic of individual studies effect sizes for the effect of OMT on any type of OM calculated by using Cohen’s d formulas; characteristic, quality and limitations of included RCTs discussed both in concert, and separately for each study
BRACING:
Surgical rates after observation and bracing for adolescent idiopathic scoliosis: an evidence-based review. 2007; [25] MEDLINE, Web of Science, CENTRAL, Clinical Evidence, reference lists bracing n = 15∶4 R comparison studies, 8 R CS, 2 P CS, 1 P/R CS; observation n = 3 R comparison studies rating system (LoE); characteristics of individual studies pooled prevalence estimates of surgery in untreated and brace treated patients; pooled prevalence for surgery by type of brace, curve type, skeletal maturity and dose (full time vs part time wear) search limited to English language; quality assessment not conducted; one reviewer selected studies and extracted data; studies not tested for heterogeneity
Braces for idiopathic scoliosis in adolescents. 2010; [16]; Cochrane review CENTRAL, MEDLINE, CINAHL, up to July 2008; reference lists; trial registries; grey literature; contacts with authors and investigators n = 2∶1 RCT; 1 multicentre international PC Quality scoring tools: Cochrane risk of bias tool for RCTs and CCTs; NOS for PCs; characteristic of individual studies Meta-analysis not performed as only 1 RCT and 1 PC included; overall quality of evidence for each outcome assessed with an adapted GRADE approach
Effectiveness and outcomes of brace treatment: A systematic review. 2011; [57] PubMed n = 20∶2 CCT; 18 C–C 11 criteria of methodological quality (Cochrane Back Review Group) characteristics of individual studies; CCTs and C–C assessed with the same criteria, and analysed collectively; LoE ratings provided, but not used low quality of reporting: different papers included (selected) and different ones analysed in “discussion” section
Efficacy of bracing versus observation in the treatment of idiopathic scoliosis. 2011; [43] PubMed, Cochrane Collaboration database (no particular database reported), NGC; references of “key articles” n = 8∶5 PC; 3 RC comparison studies characteristic of individual studies, addressing QoL, curve angle and surgery rates; rating system: SoE pooling of data impossible due to heterogeneity; pooled surgical rates and between groups risk differences calculated from study-level data; treatment effects calculated by subtracting change scores; descriptive characteristics of individual studies; Comparison (analytic design) cohort studies included; RCT an inclusion criterion – no RCTs found; findings based on “the highest” obtainable (comparison studies), but still “very low to low” level of evidence
Bracing in adolescent idiopathic scoliosis, surrogate outcomes, and the number needed to treat. 2012; [36] Cochrane Database (not stated, which particular one), PubMed Clinical Queries two separate searches: question 1: bracing efficacy: n = 6 (3SRs, 2 P (1 RCT), 1 R CS); question 2: studies comparing different braces: n = 11 (1 RCT, 1 CCT, 2 SRs, 9 R comparison studies) included studies of various types discussed shortly in a narrative; LoEs reported as quality of evidence analysis included studies characterised individually in a narrative, including methodological assessment of some of them; one cohort study analysed in detail, with NNTs calculated and discussed review of studies of various types, including SRs; one CS analysed in detail; the manuscript consists partly of the report of SR of studies of various types, and partly of an educational presentation of the issue of NNTs and surrogate outcomes
DIFFERENT COMBINATIONS OF NON-SURGICAL INTERVENTIONS
Effectiveness of non-surgical treatment for idiopathic scoliosis. Overview of available evidence. 1991; [58] MEDLINE, 1975–1987; reference lists natural history n = 17∶4 PC, 3 RC; bracing n = 10∶7 RC, 1 PC, 2 unclear data; bracing+exercise: n = 1 PC; LESS: n = 5∶3 PC, 1 RC, 1 unclear P characteristics of individual studies pooled proportions of data; descriptive characteristics of included studies; searching incomprehensive; lack of quality appraisal of the included studies; only uncontrolled studies included; data from studies on juvenile and adolescent IS mixed
A meta-analysis of the efficacy of non-operative treatments for idiopathic scoliosis. 1997; [26] Campbell’s Operative Pediatric Orthopedics, 2nd ed., 1995; 2 publications added by authors n = 19∶18P and 1R: 13 on bracing; 6 on LESS; 1 on observation; 18 published (1 thesis); 1 unpublished characteristics of individual studies number of failures of treatment and mean proportion of success determined for each study; then data combined in meta-analysis; Q test to assess homogeneity; other tests to determine the contribution of variables one data source searched, details of searching lacking; limited data on included studies and their quality; results not adjusted for compliance to brace wear; potential differences in LESS technique not considered
Effect of bracing and other conservative interventions in the treatment of idiopathic scoliosis in adolescents: a systematic review of clinical trials.2005; [37] Cochrane, CINAHL, PubMed, PEDro n = 13∶3 RCTs: 2 on bracing+exercises; 1 on traction; 10 CCTs: 7 on different rigid braces; 1 on side-shift therapy; 1 on behaviourally posture-oriented training; 1 on LESS quality scoring tool: Delphi list, quality scores; rating system (LoE); characteristics of individual studies quality of individual studies assessed; where possible, relative risks calculated; studies assessed for homogeneity some AMSTAR items scored “N”, but criteria partially met (Table 2); many interventions and outcomes considered, with few weak quality primary studies available
The treatment of adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS) according to present evidence. A systematic review. 2008; [17] 2 PubMed, MEDLINE, Web of Science, EMBASE, DH-DATA, Allied and Complementary Medicine, British Nursing Index, CENTRAL, CINAHL, PsycInfo; reference lists physiotherapy: n = 6 “level III studies with control groups and cohort studies”, n = 2 SRs; bracing: n = 2 “level II studies” –1 P controlled multicenter, 1 P controlled long-term follow-up; 26 R or uncontrolled series, 1 meta-analysis discussion of chosen papers, general impression of the LoEs general assumption of the LoEs (Oxford CEBP) from the included studies; descriptive characteristics of some of the included studies search strategy reported, but only keywords provided; quality appraisal: only levels of evidence mentioned, but appraisal/scale/scoring not addressed or reported; the paper is in part a report from an SR of evidence, and in part a narrative review
USUAL PHYSICAL ACTIVITY:
Is physical activity contraindicated for individuals with scoliosis? A systematic literature review. 2009; [59] PubMed, CINAHL, ICL, NGC, reference lists; websites of organisations n = 11∶3 C–C; 1 CS; 1 survey; 6 narrative reviews rating system (LoE) used (but reported as quality assessment); characteristic of individual studies descriptive characteristics of included studies study type not an inclusion criterion −6 out of 11 papers included were narrative reviews; opinion-based recommendations rather than evidence-synthesis
ADVERSE EVENTS:
Low bone mineral status in adolescent idiopathic scoliosis. 2008; [60] MEDLINE; EMBASE; CINAHL; All EBM Reviews (Cochrane DSR, CCTR, DARE, ACP Journal Club); reference lists 5 brace studies of different characteristic (no details on design provided) no formal quality assessment due to “wide variations”across studies; characteristics of individual studies pooling of data not performed due to heterogeneity; descriptive characteristics of included studies lack of clear information on the types of included studies; no quality assessment performed
Scoliosis and dental occlusion: a review of the literature. 2011; [61] MEDLINE, EMBASE, Cochrane Oral Health Group Trial Register, handsearching: orthodontic journals, reference lists n = 2 referenced, 1 (CCT ?) regarding the effect of Milwaukee brace on dentofacial growth analysed narratively design, number and age of participants, and type of control group descriptive characteristics of the included study low quality of reporting: e.g. errors in referencing, “discussion” and “conclusions” sections do not address results of the evidence synthesis

B – bracing; Ex – exercises; O – observation; Surgery; NR – not reported; P –prospective study; R – retrospective study; C - cohort study; CS – case series; LESS – lateral electrical stimulation; ES – electrical stimulation; RCT – randomised controlled trial; CCT – controlled clinical trial; C–C – case-control study; NCCAM – National Centre for Complementary and Alternative Medicine; ICL – the Index to Chiropractic Literature; NGC – National Guideline Clearinghouse; QoL – quality of life; CENTRAL – the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials; NOS scale – the Nottingham-Ottawa scale; LoE – level of evidence; SoE – strength of evidence; SR – systematic review; SSE - scoliosis-specific exercises; ATR – angle of trunk rotation; RR – risk ratio; MD – mean difference; SMD – standardised mean difference; OMT – osteopathic manipulative treatment;

1

series of updates, analysed in concert or separately, depending on how the authors addressed individual study characteristics (also explained in Table S1);

2

the review has a section on surgical treatment, not reported here.