Virtual Surgical Planning in Craniofacial Surgery.

Lindsey N Teal, Kristopher M Day
Author Information
  1. Lindsey N Teal: The University of Texas at Austin, Dell Medical School.
  2. Kristopher M Day: Department of Craniofacial and Pediatric Plastic Surgery, Dell Children's Medical Center, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Virtual surgical planning (VSP) is increasingly described in craniofacial surgery literature. However, the quality of the literature that has been published is unknown. The objective of this systematic review was to determine the level of evidence of published articles on VSP.
METHODS: In this systematic review, PubMed, Web of Science, and ScienceDirect databases were queried for key terms in craniofacial VSP. Inclusion and exclusion criteria concentrated on patient-specific surgical outcomes in studies that could be rated for level of evidence. The articles were ranked according to their level of evidence, with level I being the highest level of evidence (randomized-controlled trials) and level V being the lowest (eg, case reports).
RESULTS: The initial keyword search yielded 1524 articles, 273 of which were ranked and included in the systematic review. The average level of evidence for an article published was 4.1 (between level IV and level V). Level IV was the most common level of evidence (65.6%), followed by level V (24.9%), level III (7.3%), level II (2.2%), respectively. There were not any level I articles. The most common study type was case series, accounting for 68.1% of the studies, followed by case reports (23.0%), case-control studies (4.7%), cohort studies (3.3%), and randomized controlled trials (1.1%), respectively.
CONCLUSION: Although the quantity of craniofacial VSP studies has proliferated, the quality of the studies has not. In order for VSP literature to feature a higher level of evidence, future studies would require more sophisticated study design, such as prospective cohort or prospective randomized control trials.

MeSH Term

Humans
Otorhinolaryngologic Surgical Procedures
Planning Techniques
Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0levelevidencestudiesVSParticlescraniofacialliteraturepublishedsystematicreviewtrialsVcaseVirtualsurgicalqualityrankedreports41IVcommonfollowed3%respectivelystudy1%cohortrandomizedprospectiveBACKGROUND:planningincreasinglydescribedsurgeryHoweverunknownobjectivedetermineMETHODS:PubMedWebScienceScienceDirectdatabasesqueriedkeytermsInclusionexclusioncriteriaconcentratedpatient-specificoutcomesratedaccordinghighestrandomized-controlledlowestegRESULTS:initialkeywordsearchyielded1524273includedaveragearticleLevel656%249%III7II22%typeseriesaccounting68230%case-control7%3controlledCONCLUSION:AlthoughquantityproliferatedorderfeaturehigherfuturerequiresophisticateddesigncontrolSurgicalPlanningCraniofacialSurgery

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