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. 2016 Aug 10;2016(8):CD011052. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD011052.pub2

Summary of findings for the main comparison. What is the effect of general anaesthesia including nitrous oxide compared to without nitrous oxide on the risk of accidental awareness during general anaesthesia in patients aged five years and over?

What is the effect of general anaesthesia including nitrous oxide compared to without nitrous oxide on the risk of accidental awareness during general anaesthesia in patients aged five years and over?
Patient or population: surgical patients
Setting: Seven studies in Europe, three in North America, two in Japan, one in India, one in Hong Kong and one international multi centred
 Intervention: Nitrous oxide‐based
 Comparison: Nitrous oxide ‐free
Outcomes Anticipated absolute effects* (95% CI) Relative effect
 (95% CI) № of participants
 (studies) Quality of the evidence
 (GRADE) Comments
Risk without Nitrous oxide Risk with Nitrous oxide
Accidental awareness ‐ Overall (AAGA)
 assessed with: Any Study population not estimable 3439
 (14 RCTs) ⊕⊝⊝⊝
 VERY LOW 1 2 Results not pooled due to rarity of events
not pooled not pooled
Accidental awareness ‐ In recovery (AAGA)
 assessed with: Any Study population not estimable 263
 (5 RCTs) ⊕⊝⊝⊝
 VERY LOW 1 2 Results not pooled due to rarity of events
not pooled not pooled
Accidental awareness ‐ 24 hours (AAGA)
 assessed with: Any
 follow‐up: 1 days Study population not estimable 556
 (7 RCTs) ⊕⊝⊝⊝
 VERY LOW 1 2 Results not pooled due to rarity of events
not pooled not pooled
*The risk in the intervention group (and its 95% confidence interval) is based on the assumed risk in the comparison group and the relative effect of the intervention (and its 95% CI).
GRADE Working Group grades of evidenceHigh quality: We are very confident that the true effect lies close to that of the estimate of the effect
 Moderate quality: We are moderately confident in the effect estimate: The true effect is likely to be close to the estimate of the effect, but there is a possibility that it is substantially different
 Low quality: Our confidence in the effect estimate is limited: The true effect may be substantially different from the estimate of the effect
 Very low quality: We have very little confidence in the effect estimate: The true effect is likely to be substantially different from the estimate of effect

1The anaesthetist delivering the anaesthetic was aware of the allocation in all studies, as this is essential for patient safety, so we rated all studies at high risk of performance bias.

2Due to the rarity of the events no pooling was appropriate.