TY - JOUR
T1 - Subacromial decompression surgery for adults with shoulder pain
T2 - A clinical practice guideline
AU - Vandvik, Per Olav
AU - Lähdeoja, Tuomas
AU - Ardern, Clare
AU - Buchbinder, Rachelle
AU - Moro, Jaydeep
AU - Brox, Jens Ivar
AU - Burgers, Jako
AU - Hao, Qiukui
AU - Karjalainen, Teemu
AU - Van Den Bekerom, Michel
AU - Noorduyn, Julia
AU - Lytvyn, Lyubov
AU - Siemieniuk, Reed A.C.
AU - Albin, Alexandra
AU - Shunjie, Sean Chua
AU - Fisch, Florian
AU - Proulx, Laurie
AU - Guyatt, Gordon
AU - Agoritsas, Thomas
AU - Poolman, Rudolf W.
PY - 2019/1/1
Y1 - 2019/1/1
N2 - Clinical question Do adults with atraumatic shoulder pain for more than 3 months diagnosed as subacromial pain syndrome (SAPS), also labelled as rotator cuff disease, benefit from subacromial decompression surgery? This guideline builds on to two recent high quality trials of shoulder surgery. Current practice SAPS is the common diagnosis for shoulder pain with several first line treatment options, including analgesia, exercises, and injections. Surgeons frequently perform arthroscopic subacromial decompression for prolonged symptoms, with guidelines providing conflicting recommendations. Recommendation The guideline panel makes a strong recommendation against surgery. How this guideline was created A guideline panel including patients, clinicians, and methodologists produced this recommendation in adherence with standards for trustworthy guidelines and the GRADE system. The recommendation is based on two linked systematic reviews on (a) the benefits and harms of subacromial decompression surgery and (b) the minimally important differences for patient reported outcome measures. Recommendations are made actionable for clinicians and their patients through visual overviews. These provide the relative and absolute benefits and harms of surgery in multilayered evidence summaries and decision aids available in MAGIC (www.magicapp.org) to support shared decisions and adaptation. The evidence Surgery did not provide important improvements in pain, function, or quality of life compared with placebo surgery or other options. Frozen shoulder may be more common with surgery. Understanding the recommendation The panel concluded that almost all informed patients would choose to avoid surgery because there is no benefit but there are harms and it is burdensome. Subacromial decompression surgery should not be offered to patients with SAPS. However, there is substantial uncertainty in what alternative treatment is best.
AB - Clinical question Do adults with atraumatic shoulder pain for more than 3 months diagnosed as subacromial pain syndrome (SAPS), also labelled as rotator cuff disease, benefit from subacromial decompression surgery? This guideline builds on to two recent high quality trials of shoulder surgery. Current practice SAPS is the common diagnosis for shoulder pain with several first line treatment options, including analgesia, exercises, and injections. Surgeons frequently perform arthroscopic subacromial decompression for prolonged symptoms, with guidelines providing conflicting recommendations. Recommendation The guideline panel makes a strong recommendation against surgery. How this guideline was created A guideline panel including patients, clinicians, and methodologists produced this recommendation in adherence with standards for trustworthy guidelines and the GRADE system. The recommendation is based on two linked systematic reviews on (a) the benefits and harms of subacromial decompression surgery and (b) the minimally important differences for patient reported outcome measures. Recommendations are made actionable for clinicians and their patients through visual overviews. These provide the relative and absolute benefits and harms of surgery in multilayered evidence summaries and decision aids available in MAGIC (www.magicapp.org) to support shared decisions and adaptation. The evidence Surgery did not provide important improvements in pain, function, or quality of life compared with placebo surgery or other options. Frozen shoulder may be more common with surgery. Understanding the recommendation The panel concluded that almost all informed patients would choose to avoid surgery because there is no benefit but there are harms and it is burdensome. Subacromial decompression surgery should not be offered to patients with SAPS. However, there is substantial uncertainty in what alternative treatment is best.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85060945630&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1136/bmj.l294
DO - 10.1136/bmj.l294
M3 - Article
C2 - 30728120
AN - SCOPUS:85060945630
SN - 0959-8146
VL - 364
JO - BMJ
JF - BMJ
M1 - 294
ER -