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OE JOURNAL

OE Journal

Vol. 7 | Iss. 14 | July 2019 - 21 Studies

ORIGINAL ANALYSIS

Subgroup Effect: 5 Tips to Judge Trustworthiness

Subgroup analyses help determine whether a treatment works differently across distinct patient groups, but their credibility can vary widely. A tibial fracture trial comparing reamed and unreamed nails raised questions when overall results showed no advantage, yet a subgroup of open fractures appeared to benefit from unreamed fixation. Assessing such findings requires checking whether subgroups were predefined, whether the trial was well designed, whether results could be due to chance, and whether a biological rationale supports the pattern. In this case, the subgroup hypothesis was specified early, the trial was rigorous, the statistical signal was unlikely to be random, and a plausible explanation existed, making the subgroup effect more believable.

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Physical Therapy & Rehab 3
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Spinal mobilization aids in improvement of pain and function in cases of lumbar radiculopathy
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Pain and function unaffected by IFC versus sham in postoperative rehabilitation after TKA
Shoulder & Elbow 1
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