Number needed to treat: A statistic relevant for physical therapists

被引:26
作者
Dalton, GW
Keating, JL
机构
[1] St Vincents Hosp, Barbara Walker Ctr Pain Management, Melbourne, Vic, Australia
[2] Latrobe Univ, Sch Physiotherapy, Melbourne, Vic, Australia
来源
PHYSICAL THERAPY | 2000年 / 80卷 / 12期
关键词
number needed to treat; physical therapy; statistics;
D O I
10.1093/ptj/80.12.1214
中图分类号
R826.8 [整形外科学]; R782.2 [口腔颌面部整形外科学]; R726.2 [小儿整形外科学]; R62 [整形外科学(修复外科学)];
学科分类号
摘要
The number needed to treat (NNT) is a method of reporting outcomes from clinical trials.' Treatment efficacy is determined by evaluating the outcome of one treatment relative to another treatment or to a control group when the only difference between the groups is the intervention of interest. The NNT can also be used to express the size of the outcome of one treatment relative to another. The NNT is expressed in terms designed to help decide whether the intervention might be valuable in clinical practice: the number of patients who need to be treated before a therapist can be wire that one patient improved who would not have improved without the intervention. For example, when comparing treatment X and treatment Y an NNT score of 5 for treatment X indicates that, on average, after treating 5 patients, treatment X will have achieved one more positive outcome than if treatment Y had been used. The NNT does not tell the clinician which of those 5 patients will respond, only that 1 patient is likely to do so. The NNT was described in 1988 by Laupacis et al,(2) and, although its use is becoming more popular, it is still not widely used. A search of MEDLINE back to 1991 using the search terms "number needed to treat" or "NNT" identified 121 citations reporting NNT information. Of these citations, only 3 concerned outcomes of physical therapy(3-5) and, of these, only one(5) described die use of NNT in a journal with content relevant to physical therapists.
引用
收藏
页码:1214 / 1219
页数:6
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