To comprehend the results of a randomized controlled trial (RCT),
readers must understand its design, conduct, analysis, and interpretation.
That goal can be achieved only through complete transparency from authors.
Despite several decades of educational efforts, the reporting of RCTs
needs improvement. Investigators and editors developed the original
CONSORT (Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials) statement to help
authors improve reporting by using a checklist and flow diagram. The
revised CONSORT statement presented here incorporates new evidence and
addresses some criticisms of the original statement.
The checklist items pertain to the content of the Title, Abstract,
Introduction, Methods, Results, and Discussion. The revised checklist
includes 22 items selected because empirical evidence indicates that
not reporting the information is associated with biased estimates of
treatment effect, or because the information is essential to judge the
reliability or relevance of the findings. We intended the flow diagram
to depict the passage of participants through an RCT. The revised flow
diagram depicts information from four stages of a trial (enrollment,
intervention allocation, follow-up, and analysis). The diagram explicitly
shows the number of participants, for each intervention group, included
in the primary data analysis. Inclusion of these numbers allows the
reader to judge whether the authors have done an intention-to-treat
analysis.(Link)