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《英国医学杂志》 研究文章

The BMJ Research

[圣诞特辑] Nonsensus in the treatment of proximal humerus fractures: uncontrolled, blinded, comparative behavioural analysis between Homo chirurgicus accidentus and Macaca sylvanus [肱骨近端骨折治疗中的不安全因素:对智人和猕猴进行的非对照、双盲的比较行为分析]

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BMJ 2020; 371 doi: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.m4429 (Published 14 December 2020)
Cite this as: BMJ 2020;371:m4429

Authors
Sam Razaeian, Birgitt Wiese, Dafang Zhang, Afif Harb, Christian Krettek, Nael Hawi

Abstract
Objective To investigate the inter-rater reliability of Barbary macaques compared with an expert group of surgeons for the choice of treatment and predicted outcome of proximal humerus fractures.

Design Uncontrolled, blinded, comparative behavioural analysis.

Setting Germany and United States.

Participants 10 blinded experts in the field of orthopaedic trauma surgery (Homo chirurgicus accidentus), with special focus on upper extremity surgery from Germany and the US, and five Barbary macaques (Macaca sylvanus) from a semi-free range enclosure.

Main outcome measures The reliability of agreement between raters assessed with Fleiss’ ĸ.

Results Barbary macaques seem to have inferior inter-rater reliability in comparison with experts for choice of treatment (non-surgical v surgical), but for the geriatric age group most frequently affected by proximal humeral fractures, they performed similarly to the experts in their choices of treatment and choice of surgical procedure. Agreement about predicted outcome was poor among the macaques and slight among the experts. All experts almost always predicted the outcome incorrectly and tended to underestimate it. While only 4 (4.4%) of 90 experts’ predictions were correct, 13 (28.9%) of 45 macaques’ predictions were correct.

Conclusions Consensus on treatment and expected outcomes of proximal humeral fractures is lacking even beyond the human species. Although Barbary macaques tend to predict the clinical outcome more accurately, their reliability to assist surgeons in making a consistent decision is limited. Future high quality research is needed to guide surgeons’ decision making on the optimal treatment of this common injury.