Background: Despite an increasing necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) incidence, treatment strategies have failed to make major advancements towards improved NEC outcomes. Heterogeneity in outcome reporting and a lack of treatment efficacy studies potentially hamper these advancements. We aimed to analyze outcome reporting in recent interventional NEC studies.
Methods: We performed a systematic review identifying interventional studies on NEC between 1st of January 2016 and 1st of June 2023 in MEDLINE, Embase, CENTRAL and Cochrane reviews. Systematic reviews, clinical trials and change-in-practice cohort studies reporting any therapeutic intervention for NEC patients (Bell's stage ≥ IIa) were eligible. We excluded studies on NEC diagnostics or prevention and non-English publications. Outcomes were categorized into five core areas and presented descriptively. The review was registered with PROSPERO (CRD42022302712).
Results: Out of 1.642 screened records, 65 were eligible for full-text review and 15 were finally included for data extraction. Median number of reported outcomes per article was six (range 1-19). We identified 66 unique outcomes, which were mapped to 53 outcome terms. Thirty-four out of the 53 of the outcome terms (64%) were only reported in a single article. Mortality was the most reported outcome (11/15 articles, 73%). Core area 'Adverse outcomes' contained the most outcome terms (n = 19), whereas 'Life impact' contained the least outcome terms (n = 4) and was represented in 3 articles (20%).
Conclusions: Considerable heterogeneity in outcome reporting and a paucity of outcomes concerning 'Life impact' exist in interventional NEC studies. Development of a NEC core outcome set may improve consistency and patient-relevance in outcome reporting.
Study type: Systematic Review and Meta-Analyses.
Level of evidence: III.
Keywords: Core outcome set; Intervention; Necrotizing enterocolitis; Outcome reporting; Treatment.
Copyright © 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.