PHYS THER
Vol. 88, No. 9, September 2008, pp. 1068-1077
DOI: 10.2522/ptj.20080002
A Description of the Trials, Reviews, and Practice Guidelines Indexed in the PEDro Database
Christopher G Maher,
Anne M Moseley,
Cathie Sherrington,
Mark R Elkins and
Robert D Herbert
CG Maher, PhD, is Director, Musculoskeletal Division, The George Institute for International Health, PO Box M201, Missenden Road, Sydney, NSW 2050, Australia, and Professor, Faculty of Medicine, University of Sydney, Lidcombe, NSW, Australia
AM Moseley, PhD, is Senior Research Fellow, The George Institute for International Health and Faculty of Medicine, University of Sydney
C Sherrington, PhD, is Senior Research Fellow, The George Institute for International Health and Faculty of Medicine, University of Sydney
MR Elkins, PhD, is Research Physiotherapist, Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, Sydney
RD Herbert, PhD, is Associate Professor, The George Institute for International Health and Faculty of Medicine, University of Sydney
Address all correspondence and reprint requests to Dr Maher at: cmaher{at}george.org.au
Submitted January 2, 2008;
Accepted May 2, 2008

Abstract
This perspective provides an overview of the randomized controlled
trials, systematic reviews, and evidence-based clinical practice
guidelines in physical therapy. Data from the Physiotherapy
Evidence Database (PEDro) are used to describe key events in
the history of physical therapy research and the growth of evidence
of effects of interventions used in the various subdisciplines
of physical therapy. The 11,494 records that were identified
reveal a rich history of physical therapy research dating back
to the first trial in 1929. Most of the randomized controlled
trials, systematic reviews, and evidence-based clinical practice
guidelines in physical therapy have been published since the
year 2000. This rapid growth presents a challenge for physical
therapists who want to keep up to date in clinical practice.

Introduction
Several physical therapy associations
1–3 now explicitly
advocate an approach to practice that is informed by scientific
evidence. This approach, however, presents a number of challenges
to practitioners. One key challenge is keeping up to date with
the evidence underpinning physical therapist practice. This
challenge exists because there has been a rapid expansion in
physical therapy research in the past 2 decades, much of which
is not indexed in general databases such as MEDLINE.
Our interest is in the evidence of the effects of therapy provided by high-quality randomized controlled trials (RCTs), systematic reviews of such trials, and evidence-based clinical practice guidelines. We have chosen to describe key events in the history of physical therapy clinical trials, RCTs, reviews, and guidelines and provide an overview of the quantity and quality of this research. We chose to describe this information because we agree with proponents of evidence-based practice4 that these research designs provide the most reliable evidence for the effects of therapy; however, we are aware that alternate views exist.5 We also acknowledge that other types of evidence (eg, that provided by qualitative research and studies of diagnosis and prognosis) also are of value in clinical decision making. Consideration of these types of studies, however, is beyond the scope of this perspective. We hope that other authors will take up the challenge and write a similar perspective covering these other types of evidence.

Methods
With the help of several organizations and many volunteers,
we have produced a Web-based database of RCTs, systematic reviews,
and evidence-based clinical practice guidelines in physical
therapy (Physiotherapy Evidence Database or PEDro) (
http://www.pedro.fhs.usyd.edu.au).
6 This article describes that evidence.
Randomized controlled trials in the database are rated for methodological quality using the PEDro scale,7–9 a scale modified from the Delphi list.10 The PEDro scale is an 11-item scale designed for rating methodological quality of RCTs (the scale items and operational definitions for each scale item are given in the Appendix). Each satisfied item (except for item 1, which, unlike other scale items, pertains to external validity) contributes one point to the total PEDro score (range=0–10 points).

The Beginning of Physical Therapy Research
One view we commonly encounter is that research is a recent
endeavor in physical therapy. This is not true. The first RCTs
in physical therapy evaluated electrotherapy. Colebrook's trial
11 was published in 1929 (
Fig. 1) and Doull and colleagues
RCT
12 was published in 1931. Both trials predate the 1934 Medical
Research Council trial
13 that evaluated the treatment of pneumonia
and is commonly (although incorrectly) believed to be the first
modern clinical trial.
14 In contrast to the Medical Research
Council trial, which assigned cases alternately to a treatment
group or a control group, the 2 early physical therapy trials
used true random allocation. Evaluation of various forms of
electrotherapy continues to be a major part of physical therapy
research. At present, there are 1,421 RCTs of electrotherapy,
most evaluating the use of electrotherapy for pain relief.

Growth in Physical Therapy Evidence
By 1960, there were 15 RCTs, with at least 1 RCT in each of
3 core areas of physical therapist practice: neurology, musculoskeletal,
and cardiopulmonary. Over the next 4 decades, there was an exponential
increase in RCTs: there were 86 RCTs by 1970, 441 by 1980, 1,925
by 1990, and 5,301 by 2000 (
Fig. 2). With such a growth in research
evidence, it became important to conduct systematic reviews
in order to appraise and summarize the available RCT evidence
and to produce clinical practice guidelines.
The first systematic review in physical therapy was published
in 1975 by Kolind-Sorensen.
15 By 1991, there were 39 systematic
reviews, with at least 1 review in each of the core areas of
physical therapist practice. The first evidence-based clinical
practice guideline relevant to physical therapy, the report
of the Quebec Task Force on Spinal Disorders,
16 was published
in 1987, and by 1995 there were 19 guidelines, with at least
1 guideline in each of the 3 core areas of physical therapist
practice. Compared with the growth in RCTs, the growth in the
number of systematic reviews and guidelines has been more modest.
At the time of data analysis for this article (September 3,
2007), there were 11,494 records indexed in the PEDro database:
9,475 RCTs, 1,541 systematic reviews, and 478 evidence-based
clinical practice guidelines.
*
This rapid growth in research has enormous implications for physical therapist education and practice. As an example, a physical therapist who graduated in 1980 could only have been exposed to less than 5% of today's evidence (RCTs, systematic reviews, and clinical practice guidelines) during his or her training. Even someone who graduated in 2000 could only have been exposed to about 50% of today's evidence during his or her training. In our opinion, this problem is likely to be even more acute for medical practitioners, and it is likely that most medical practitioners initial training would not have provided them with an adequate understanding of the current evidence regarding the effects of physical therapy treatments. This is particularly a concern in regions where physical therapists do not have primary contact status and instead provide treatment at the direction of the referring medical practitioner. These referrals may not be based on the best available evidence on the effects of physical therapy treatments.

Quality of Evidence
As mentioned above, a scale is used to rate the methodological
quality of RCTs in the PEDro database. Items on this scale include
those reflecting the allocation process (randomization method,
use of concealment), blinding or masking (patients, therapists,
outcome assessors); follow-up, and analysis (use of intent-to-treat
analysis, reporting of analysis). The first physical therapy
trial to use random allocation was Colebrook's 1929 trial,
11 with concealed allocation first used in Doull and colleagues
RCT
12 in 1931. Palmer and Sellick's 1953 RCT
17 was the first
physical therapy trial to blind the assessor, Cezeaux and colleagues
1967 RCT
18 the first to blind the patient, and Vyas and colleagues
1971 RCT
19 was the first to blind the therapist. In Wilson's
1972 RCT
20 evaluating pulsed shortwave diathermy, the researchers
managed to blind patient, therapist, and assessor. To put this
in historical perspective, blinding of assessors and patients
had been a feature of experiments in the early 19th century,
and blinding of assessors, patients, and therapists was achieved
in evaluations of homeopathic remedies conducted in the late
19th century.
21 The challenge for physical therapy RCTs was
that it was difficult to develop placebos for the physical treatments
of the time. However, patient and therapist blinding became
possible with the development of electrotherapy treatments such
as pulsed ultrasound and shortwave diathermy, which may not
provide any sensation to the patient and can be configured so
that the operator does not know whether any output is being
produced.
Figure 3 shows the proportion of RCTs that satisfied each item of the PEDro scale, and Figure 4 shows the frequency distribution of the total PEDro score (range=0–10). These figures show that the available RCTs vary greatly in methodological quality and, therefore, in their ability to provide valid and interpretable results. Figure 5 shows how the methodological quality of physical therapy RCTs has improved over time. This welcome trend compounds the problems faced by more experienced clinicians: not only were they only exposed to a smaller subset of the evidence during their training, but the evidence they were exposed to is more likely to provide biased estimates of treatment effectiveness.

Coverage of Evidence
The dates of publication of the first RCT, review, and guideline
in 9 subdisciplines of physical therapy are shown in the time
line in the
Table.
11,12,15–19,22–27 It is noteworthy
that the total amount of evidence (
Fig. 6) and growth in evidence
in each of the subdisciplines of physical therapy (
Fig. 7) vary
substantially. Interestingly, some high-profile areas of physical
therapist practice, such as sports physical therapy and ergonomics,
have relatively little discipline-specific evidence available
to guide practice. Another feature that is of interest is the
relative decrease in pediatric research: although this subdiscipline
in the 1970s was ranked third in terms of output, it has now
fallen to seventh.
Some health conditions have been extensively studied. As an
illustration, there are 1,037 records dealing with lumbar spine/sacroiliac
joint/pelvis treatment and 997 records dealing with treatment
of the knee or lower leg. There also are some surprises in terms
of the relative amount of evidence on treatment for particular
health problems. For example, some physical therapists may not
be aware that there is more evidence on physical therapy treatment
of incontinence (173 records) than there is for treatments for
tennis elbow (56 records) or thoracic spine pain (61 records).

Where Is the Evidence Published?
The early physical therapy trials were published in general
medical journals, and it was not until 1967 that the first RCT
was published in a physical therapy journal.
22 The 11,494 records
that we have identified were published in 1,484 different journals
in 30 languages, with publications dating from 1929 to 2007.
This means that the traditional strategy of visiting a library
and scanning the readily available general medical and physical
therapy journals potentially misses a lot of research. As an
illustration, only 3% of the records in PEDro were published
in the general medical journals
New England Journal of Medicine,
Lancet,
JAMA,
Annals of Internal Medicine,
BMJ, and
CMAJ, and
about 3% of records were published in the physical therapy journals
Physical Therapy,
Physiotherapy,
Australian Journal of Physiotherapy,
and
Physiotherapy Canada. The only feasible way to find relevant
evidence from this enormous volume of physical therapy research
is to use electronic databases such as PubMed, Hooked on Evidence,
or PEDro.

Limitations of the Perspective
We acknowledge that PEDro is only one database that archives
physical therapy evidence and that other databases, such as
Hooked on Evidence, might provide a different set of records
and quality ratings. An analysis of the records from both databases
might provide interesting findings.

Conclusions
There has been an exponential increase in physical therapy research
since the first RCT in 1929. With about 11,500 trials, reviews,
and guidelines published to date, much has been revealed about
the effects of physical therapy treatments. This evidence can
be used by physical therapists and their patients when making
decisions about physical therapy intervention.

Appendix.

Footnotes
Each of the authors met the 3 International Committee of Medical
Journal Editors authorship criteria. All authors provided concept/idea/project
design, writing, data collection and analysis, project management,
fund procurement, facilities/equipment, institutional liaisons,
and consultation (including review of manuscript before submission).
The PEDro project has received in-kind and financial support from individual physical therapists, physical therapy associations (including the American Physical Therapy Association), and government/health/education agencies (including the Motor Accidents Authority of New South Wales). A full list of supporters is available at this site: http://www.pedro.fhs.usyd.edu.au/supporters.html. Dr Maher's, Dr Herbert's, and Dr Sherrington's research fellowships are funded by Australia's National Health and Medical Research Council. Dr Moseley's salary is funded by a research grant from the Motor Accidents Authority of New South Wales.
* In May 2008, when the article was being prepared for publication, there were 12,553 records in PEDro. 

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