1.Self-Appraisal of Clinical Competence in Echocardiography of Chinese Intensivists Post Basic Echocardiography Training.
Wei HE ; Xue-Ying ZENG ; Hong-Min ZHANG ; Xiao-Ting WANG ; Yan-Gong CHAO
Chinese Medical Sciences Journal 2023;38(2):125-129
Objectives To learn the echocardiography skills of intensivists after receiving a basic critical care echocardiography training course, and investigate factors that may influence their performance. Methods We completed a web-based questionnaire that assessed the skills in ultrasound scanning techniques of intensivists who took a training course on basic critical care echocardiography held in 2019 and 2020. Mann-Whitney test was used to analyze the factors which might affect their performance on image acquisition, recognizing clinical syndrome, and measuring the diameter of inferior vena cava, left ventricular ejection fraction and left ventricular outflow tract velocity-time integral.Results We enrolled 554 physicians from 412 intensive care units across China. Among them, 185 (33.4%) reported that they had 10%-30% chance of being misled by critical care echocardiography when making therapeutic decision, and 34 (6.1%) reported that the chance was greater than 30%. Intensivists who performed echocardiography under the guidance of a mentor and finished ultrasound scanning more than 10 times per week reported significant higher scores in image acquisition, clinical syndrome recognition, and quantitative measurement of inferior vena cava diameter, left ventricular ejection fraction and left ventricular outflow tract velocity-time integral than those without mentor and performing echocardiography 10 times or less per week respectively (all P < 0.05).Conclusion The skills in diagnostic medical echocardiography of Chinese intensivists after a basic echocardiographic training course remain low, and further quality assurance training program is clearly warranted.
Humans
;
Clinical Competence
;
East Asian People
;
Echocardiography/standards*
;
Stroke Volume
;
Ventricular Function, Left
;
Self-Assessment
;
Physicians/standards*
;
Internal Medicine/standards*
2.Blinding assessment in clinical trials of traditional Chinese medicine: Exploratory principles and protocol.
Xiao-Cong WANG ; Xiao-Yu LIU ; Kang-le SHI ; Qing-Gang MENG ; Yue-Fan YU ; Shi-Yao WANG ; Juan WANG ; Chang QU ; Cong LEI ; Xin-Ping YU
Journal of Integrative Medicine 2023;21(6):528-536
As one of the key components of clinical trials, blinding, if successfully implemented, can help to mitigate the risks of implementation bias and measurement bias, consequently improving the validity and reliability of the trial results. However, successful blinding in clinical trials of traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) is hard to achieve, and the evaluation of blinding success through blinding assessment lacks established guidelines. Taking into account the challenges associated with blinding in the TCM field, here we present a framework for assessing blinding. Further, this study proposes a blinding assessment protocol for TCM clinical trials, building upon the framework and the existing methods. An assessment report checklist and an approach for evaluating the assessment results are presented based on the proposed protocol. It is anticipated that these improvements to blinding assessment will generate greater awareness among researchers, facilitate the standardization of blinding, and augment the blinding effectiveness. The use of this blinding assessment may further advance the quality and precision of TCM clinical trials and improve the accuracy of the trial results. The blinding assessment protocol will undergo continued optimization and refinement, drawing upon expert consensus and experience derived from clinical trials. Please cite this article as: Wang XC, Liu XY, Shi KL, Meng QG, Yu YF, Wang SY, Wang J, Qu C, Lei C, Yu XP. Blinding assessment in clinical trials of traditional Chinese medicine: Exploratory principles and protocol. J Integr Med. 2023; 21(6): 528-536.
Drugs, Chinese Herbal/therapeutic use*
;
Medicine, Chinese Traditional/methods*
;
Outcome Assessment, Health Care
;
Reference Standards
;
Reproducibility of Results
;
Research Design
;
Clinical Trials as Topic
3.Application Progress of Objective Audiological Detection Techniques in Forensic Clinical Medicine.
Fei FAN ; Juan WU ; Zhen-Hua DENG
Journal of Forensic Medicine 2023;39(4):360-366
The qualitative, quantitative, and localization analysis of hearing loss is one of the important contents of forensic clinical research and identification. Pure-tone audiometry is the "gold standard" for hearing loss assessment, but it is affected by the subjective cooperation of the assessed person. Due to the complexity of the auditory pathway and the diversity of hearing loss, the assessment of hearing loss requires the combination of various subjective and objective audiometric techniques, along with comprehensive evaluation based on the case situation, clinical symptoms, and other examinations to ensure the scientificity, accuracy and reliability of forensic hearing impairment assessment. Objective audiometry includes acoustic impedance, otoacoustic emission, and various auditory evoked potentials. The frequency-specific auditory brainstem response (ABR), 40 Hz auditory event related potential, and auditory steady-state response are commonly used for objective hearing threshold assessment. The combined application of acoustic impedance, otoacoustic emission and ABR can be used to locate hearing loss and determine whether it is located in the middle ear, cochlea, or posterior cochlea. This article reviews the application value of objective audiometry techniques in hearing threshold assessment and hearing loss localization, aiming to provide reference for forensic identification of hearing loss.
Humans
;
Reproducibility of Results
;
Auditory Threshold/physiology*
;
Evoked Potentials, Auditory, Brain Stem/physiology*
;
Hearing Loss/diagnosis*
;
Audiometry, Pure-Tone/methods*
;
Clinical Medicine
4.Clinical trials and evaluation of Chinese patent medicine for stroke.
Chao-Nan FENG ; Zhao-Chen JI ; De-Hui PENG ; Hai-Yin HU ; Jun-Hua ZHANG ; Bo PANG
China Journal of Chinese Materia Medica 2022;47(9):2330-2337
To systematically collect and analyze clinical randomized controlled trial(RCT) of Chinese patent medicine treatment for stroke in 2020, in order to provide basic information for clinical decision-making and related research. On the basis of the collection in the Traditional Chinese Medicine(TCM) Clinical Evidence Database System(EVDS), CNKI, Wanfang, SinoMed, Cochrane Library, PubMed, EMbase were searched for RCTs of Chinese patent medicine for stroke in 2020. The publication, sample size, intervention and control measures, course of treatment, outcome indicators, methodological quality and other contents were statistically analyzed.A total of 68 RCTs studies on Chinese patent medicine for stroke were included in 2020, of which 29(42.60%) were RCTs with sample size>100 cases. A total of 41 kinds of proprietary Chinese medicines were involved, including 23 kinds of oral proprietary Chinese medicines and 18 kinds of injections. A total of 18 intervention/control cases were included in RCTs, and 19 cases(Chinese patent medicine+Western medicine vs Western medicine) were applied in RCTs, accounting for 27.90%. The duration of treatment was reported in 91.18% of the studies, and the intervention duration was 8-14 days in 50.00% of the studies. Evaluation indexes were widely used, among which physical and chemical testing indexes(49.36%) were the most widely used. According to the methodological quality evaluation, the overall methodological quality of the study is not high, especially the implementation of the allocation hidden, blind method is not accurate, and the registration, ethics and other links are often missing. In conclusion, 2020 implementation of proprietary Chinese medicine in the treatment of stroke research methodology problems is outstanding, the similar function scale large range of optional, no specification selection criteria, reliability and practicability of the impact study, need to further standardize the proprietary Chinese medicine in the treatment of stroke study design, implementation and quality control, and highlight the value of proprietary Chinese medicine in the treatment of stroke and improve the quality of the evidence.
China
;
Clinical Trials as Topic
;
Drugs, Chinese Herbal/therapeutic use*
;
Humans
;
Medicine, Chinese Traditional
;
Nonprescription Drugs/therapeutic use*
;
Reproducibility of Results
;
Stroke/drug therapy*
5.Clinical trials and evaluation of Chinese patent medicine for influenza.
Xiao-di SHENG ; Zhe CHEN ; Zhao-Chen JI ; Hai-Yin HU ; Yi OU ; Lu-Jia CAO ; Li-Ping GUO ; Jun-Hua ZHANG
China Journal of Chinese Materia Medica 2022;47(9):2338-2342
The clinical randomized controlled trial(RCT) of Chinese patent medicine in the treatment of influenza were reviewed and analyzed to provide basic information for clinical decision and related research. On the basis of the collection in the Traditional Chinese Medicine(TCM) Clinical Evidence Database System(EVDS), CNKI, Wanfang, VIP, SinoMed, EMbase, PubMed, and Cochrane Library were searched for RCTs of Chinese patent medicine for influenza published from database inception to July 25, 2021. The publication time, sample size, intervention and control measures, course of treatment, outcome indicators, and methodological quality of the trials were analyzed and evaluated. Ninety-two RCTs of Chinese patent medicine for influenza published between 2005 and 2021, were included, among which 17 RCTs(18.48%) had a sample size higher than 200 and the average sample size was about 145. Twenty-seven Chinese patent medicines were involved, including twenty-one oral medicines and six injections. The Chinese patent medicines in trials reported in more than five papers included Lianhua Qingwen Capsules/Gra-nules, Tanreqing Injection, and Reduning Injection. Fourteen intervention protocols were reported, of which Chinese patent medicine+western medicine+conventional treatment vs western medicine+conventional treatment(20.65%) was the most frequently employed. Additionally, 85.87% of the RCTs reported the course of treatment, and 80.43% of the RCTs determined 3-7 d as the intervention course. Forty-five outcome indicators were extracted, which were used 434 times, including symptoms/signs, physicochemical detection, safety events, TCM symptoms/syndromes, quality of life, long-term prognosis, and economic evaluation. Symptoms/signs(61.52%) exhibited the highest frequency. Methodological problems were prevalent in the included trials. The findings reveal that there are few clinical trials on influenza treatment by Chinese patent medicine, and the methodological problems are prominent, affec-ting the reliability and practicability of the trials. In the future research, the value characteristics of Chinese patent medicine should be highlighted and the quality control in the whole process should be strengthened based on the scientific and rigorous design.
China
;
Clinical Trials as Topic
;
Drugs, Chinese Herbal/therapeutic use*
;
Humans
;
Influenza, Human/drug therapy*
;
Medicine, Chinese Traditional
;
Nonprescription Drugs/therapeutic use*
;
Quality of Life
;
Reproducibility of Results
6.Clinical trials and evaluation of Chinese patent medicine for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
Chao-Nan FENG ; Hai-Yin HU ; Zhao-Chen JI ; Xiao-Yu QIANG ; Zhe CHEN ; Yi OU ; Lu-Jia CAO ; Jun-Hua ZHANG
China Journal of Chinese Materia Medica 2022;47(9):2351-2357
The clinical randomized controlled trials(RCTs) of Chinese patent medicine in the treatment of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease(COPD) were reviewed and analyzed to provide references for clinical research, guideline development, policy formulation, and quality improvement of clinical evidence. On the basis of the collection in the Traditional Chinese Medicine(TCM) Clinical Evidence Database System(EVDS), CNKI, Wanfang, SinoMed, Cochrane Library, PubMed, EMbase were searched for RCTs of Chinese patent medicine for COPD as a source of clinical evidence from database inception to December 31, 2019. The publication time, sample size, intervention and control measures, course of treatment, outcome indicators, and methodological quality of the trials were analyzed and evaluated. A total of 733 RCTs of Chinese patent medicine for COPD were included, among which 228 RCTs had a sample size higher than 100, accounting for 31.1% of total RCTs. Eighty-eight Chinese patent medicines were involved, including 40 oral medicines and 48 injections. A total of 327 RCTs mentioned intervention and control measures(Chinese patent medicine + conventional treatment vs conventional treatment), accounting for 43.0%. In addition, 94.40% of the RCTs reported the course of treatment, and 53.20% of the RCTs determined 8-14 d as the intervention course. The evaluation indicators adopted were numerous, among which physicochemical indicators(70.57%) and symptoms/signs(24.35%) were the most frequently employed. The operation of allocation concealment and blinding was not standard. Registration and the procedure related to ethics were mostly missing. The results indicate that there are prominent methodological problems in the clinical trials of Chinese patent medicine in the treatment of COPD, affecting the reliability and practicability of the trials. It is necessary to further standardize the design, implementation, and quality control of clinical trials of Chinese patent medicine in the treatment of COPD, highlight the clinical value of Chinese patent medicine for COPD, and improve the quality of evidence.
China
;
Clinical Trials as Topic
;
Drugs, Chinese Herbal/therapeutic use*
;
Humans
;
Medicine, Chinese Traditional
;
Nonprescription Drugs/therapeutic use*
;
Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive/drug therapy*
;
Reproducibility of Results
7.Shanghai expert consensus on clinical protocol for traditional Chinese medicine treatment of COVID-19 among the elderly population (second edition).
Xuan CHEN ; Chou-Ping HAN ; Wei ZHANG
Journal of Integrative Medicine 2022;20(5):427-431
This document is the revised edition of the previously issued Shanghai Expert Consensus on Clinical Protocol for Traditional Chinese Medicine Treatment of COVID-19 among the Elderly Population. Based on the clinical experience and the Protocol for Diagnosis and Treatment of COVID-19 (Trial 9th Edition), this revised edition provides treatment approaches and recommendations to proactively cope with Omicron variant and increase the therapeutic efficacy for coronavirus disease 2019 among the elderly population in Shanghai, China.
Aged
;
COVID-19/drug therapy*
;
China
;
Clinical Protocols
;
Consensus
;
Humans
;
Medicine, Chinese Traditional
;
SARS-CoV-2
8.Strategic Scientific and Technological Capacity-Building in Clinical Medicine in China: Taking the Innovative Development of Reproductive Medicine at Peking University Third Hospital as an Example.
Chinese Medical Sciences Journal 2022;37(3):261-264
Based on the macroanalysis of the unbalanced development of the "demand side" and the "supply side" of clinical medicine in China, this paper elucidates the stakeholders, resources, and ecosystem of the strategic scientific and technological capacity-building and calls for a larger coverage, smoother supply chain, and more sustainable ecosystem to ensure the development of clinical medicine. Furthermore, focusing on the establishment and development of clinical reproductive health in China, the authors introduce the strategic scientific and technological capacity-building of reproductive medicine in Peking University Third Hospital, with an attempt to inform similar efforts in other fields and even the whole clinical medicine in China.
Humans
;
Ecosystem
;
Universities
;
China
;
Clinical Medicine
;
Reproductive Medicine
;
Hospitals
9.Appraisal of treatment outcomes in integrative medicine using metabonomics: Taking non-alcoholic fatty liver disease with spleen deficiency syndrome as an example.
Liang DAI ; Jing-Juan XU ; Wen-Jun ZHOU ; Ai-Ping LÜ ; Guang JI
Journal of Integrative Medicine 2022;20(6):524-533
OBJECTIVE:
Appraisal of treatment outcomes in integrative medicine is a challenge due to a gap between the concepts of Western medicine (WM) disease and traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) syndrome. This study presents an approach for the appraisal of integrative medicine that is based on targeted metabolomics. We use non-alcoholic fatty liver disease with spleen deficiency syndrome as a test case.
METHODS:
A patient-reported outcome (PRO) scale was developed based on literature review, Delphi consensus survey, and reliability and validity test, to quantitatively evaluate spleen deficiency syndrome. Then, a metabonomic foundation for the treatment of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease with spleen deficiency syndrome was identified via a longitudinal interventional trial and targeted metabolomics. Finally, an integrated appraisal model was established by identifying metabolites that responded in the treatment of WM disease and TCM syndrome as positive outcomes and using other aspects of the metabonomic foundation as independent variables.
RESULTS:
Ten symptoms and signs were included in the spleen deficiency PRO scale. The internal reliability, content validity, discriminative validity and structural validity of the scale were all qualified. Based on treatment responses to treatments for WM disease (homeostasis model assessment of insulin resistance) or TCM syndrome (spleen deficiency PRO scale score) from a previous randomized controlled trial, two cohorts comprised of 30 participants each were established for targeted metabolomics detection. Twenty-five metabolites were found to be involved in successful treatment outcomes to both WM and TCM, following quantitative comparison and multivariate analysis. Finally, the model of the integrated appraisal system was exploratively established using binary logistic regression; it included 9 core metabolites and had the prediction probability of 83.3%.
CONCLUSION
This study presented a new and comprehensive research route for integrative appraisal of treatment outcomes for WM disease and TCM syndrome. Critical research techniques used in this research included the development of a TCM syndrome assessment tool, a longitudinal interventional trial with verified TCM treatment, identification of homogeneous metabolites, and statistical modeling.
Humans
;
Drugs, Chinese Herbal
;
Integrative Medicine
;
Medicine, Chinese Traditional/methods*
;
Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease/therapy*
;
Reproducibility of Results
;
Spleen
;
Syndrome
;
Treatment Outcome
;
Clinical Trials as Topic
10.Common issues in safety analysis of clinical trail reports for new drugs of traditional Chinese medicine.
China Journal of Chinese Materia Medica 2021;46(17):4581-4584
Clinical trail report is a summary of the process and results of clinical trail, an important basis to support the effectiveness and safety evaluation of drug marketing and an important technical data required for drug registration. Safety analysis is the main part and the most common issue of clinical trial report. In this article, it is summarized and analyzed the common problems found in the safety analysis part of the clinical trial report of new drugs of traditional Chinese medicine(TCM) in combination with the clinical professional evaluation of the application for marketing license of innovative TCM. The common problems in writing the safety aspects of clinical trail reports were summarized and analyzed, including the omissions of adverse events and laboratory test results, the failure to provide a detailed list of laboratory test outliers, the lack of professional depth in the analysis of the causal relationship between adverse events and TCM. In view of the common problems, it is suggested that the drug use degree, adverse events and adverse reactions, as well as laboratory examination should be considered. Check the three dimensions for necessary medical analysis, collation and summary and continuously improve the quality of safety analysis in clinical trial reports.
Clinical Trials as Topic
;
Drugs, Chinese Herbal/adverse effects*
;
Medicine, Chinese Traditional

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