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International criteria for reporting study quality for sudden cardiac arrest/death tool

  • Jamie J. Edwards
  • , Claire Compton
  • , Aaron Baggish
  • , Mats Börjesson
  • , Domenico Corrado
  • , Jonathan A. Drezner
  • , Andre La Gerche
  • , Aneil Malhotra
  • , Eloi Marijon
  • , Michael Papadakis
  • , Antonio Pelliccia
  • , Chris Semsarian
  • , Jamie O'Driscoll
  • , Kimberly G. Harmon
  • , Nikhil Chatrath
  • , Bradley J Petek
  • , Sabiha Gati
  • , B. Gray
  • , J. Kim
  • , Dermot Phelan
  • S. Sharma, Rajan Sharma

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Studies reporting on the incidence of sudden cardiac arrest and/or death (SCA/D) in athletes commonly lack methodological and reporting rigor, which has implications for screening and preventative policy in sport. To date, there are no tools designed for assessing study quality in studies investigating the incidence of SCA/D in athletes. The International Criteria for Reporting Study Quality for Sudden Cardiac Arrest/Death tool (IQ-SCA/D) was developed following a Delphi process. Sixteen international experts in sports cardiology were identified and invited. Experts voted on each domain with subsequent moderated discussion for successive rounds until consensus was reached for a final tool. Interobserver agreement between a novice, intermediate, and expert observer was then assessed from the scoring of 22 relevant studies using weighted and unweighted κ analyses. The final IQ-SCA/D tool comprises 8 domains with a summated score of a possible 22. Studies are categorized as low, intermediate, and high quality with summated IQ-SCA/D scores of ≤11, 12 to 16, and ≥17, respectively. Interrater agreement was "substantial" between all 3 observers for summated IQ-SCA/D scores and study categorization. The IQ-SCA/D is an expert consensus tool for assessing the study quality of research reporting the incidence of SCA/D in athletes. This tool may be used to assist researchers, reviewers, journal editors, and readers in contextualizing the methodological quality of different studies with varying athlete SCA/D incidence estimates. Importantly, the IQ-SCA/D also provides an expert-informed framework to support and guide appropriate design and reporting practices in future SCA/D incidence trials.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)e033723
    JournalJournal of the American Heart Association
    Volume13
    Issue number11
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 23 May 2024

    Keywords

    • Athletes’ heart
    • Consensus
    • Delphi technique
    • Observer variation
    • SCA/D
    • Sports cardiology
    • Sports medicine
    • Sudden cardiac death

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