Surgery and Music Blog Series, Post #10: A look at the Meta-analysis of 100’s of Studies

FacebooktwitterpinterestlinkedinmailFacebooktwitterpinterestlinkedinmail

You may have heard of a meta-analysis.  It’s when scientists and researchers looks at hundreds of studies that have been done on a specific issues, or even just an aspect of that issue.  For example, researchers have looked at hundreds of studies that were done on Surgery with Music, one looking at anxiety reduction, and another looking at a reduction in pain perception.  Then they distill the most important imformation from the study and publish it.

In 2015, the prestigious British Medical Journal, “The Lancet” published an important meta-analysis:

https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(15)60169-6/fulltext

This publication garnered so much attention world-side, that I got at least a dozen notifications that this study had come out around the world.  The final summary states,

Summary

Background

Music is a non-invasive, safe, and inexpensive intervention that can be delivered easily and successfully. We did a systematic review and meta-analysis to assess whether music improves recovery after surgical procedures.

Methods

We included randomised controlled trials (RCTs) of adult patients undergoing surgical procedures, excluding those involving the central nervous system or head and neck, published in any language. We included RCTs in which any form of music initiated before, during, or after surgery was compared with standard care or other non-drug interventions. We searched MEDLINE, Embase, CINAHL, and Cochrane Central. We did meta-analysis with RevMan (version 5.2), with standardised mean differences (SMD) and random-effects models, and used Stata (version 12) for meta-regression. This study is registered with PROSPERO, number CRD42013005220.

Findings

We identified 4261 titles and abstracts, and included 73 RCTs in the systematic review, with size varying between 20 and 458 participants. Choice of music, timing, and duration varied. Comparators included routine care, headphones with no music, white noise, and undisturbed bed rest. Music reduced postoperative pain (SMD −0·77 [95% CI −0·99 to −0·56]), anxiety (−0·68 [–0·95 to −0·41]), and analgesia use (−0·37 [–0·54 to −0·20]), and increased patient satisfaction (1·09 [0·51 to 1·68]), but length of stay did not differ (SMD −0·11 [–0·35 to 0·12]). Subgroup analyses showed that choice of music and timing of delivery made little difference to outcomes. Meta-regression identified no causes of heterogeneity in eight variables assessed. Music was effective even when patients were under general anaesthetic.

Interpretation

Music could be offered as a way to help patients reduce pain and anxiety during the postoperative period. Timing and delivery can be adapted to individual clinical settings and medical teams.
Excited journalists from the around the world contacted me to make sure that I knew about this.  This was a huge moment for Surgical Serenity Solutions because of major validation from this meta-analysis.
Shortly after this publication, NPR did a piece on this study and how important it was in the time of the opioid crisis.  Listen to it here:
If you’re interested in knowing more about some of the many meta-analyses that have been done on Surgery with Music, simple Google the topic and read the many clinical topics.  The NPR page goes on to say:

DAVID GREENE, HOST:

There is a free and powerful treatment hospitals could probably be using more often to treat patients who have surgery. It’s music. Scores of studies have looked at the power of music to ease this kind of pain. NPR’s Richard Harris reports on new research that pulls many of these findings together.

RICHARD HARRIS, BYLINE: When researchers in London started combing through the medical literature for studies about music’s healing powers, they found hundreds of small studies suggesting some benefit. The idea goes back to the days of Florence Nightingale. And music was used to sooth surgical pain as early as 1914. Dr. Catherine Meads at Brunel University focused her attention on 73 rigorous, randomized clinical trials about the role of music among surgery patients.

CATHERINE MEADS: As the studies themselves were small, they didn’t really find all that much. But once we put them all together, we had much more power to find whether music worked or not.

HARRIS: She and her colleagues now report in The Lancet that, yes indeed, surgery patients who listen to music, either before, during or after surgery, were better off.

MEADS: Reduced pain and less anxiety and better patient satisfaction.

HARRIS: Remarkably, patients listening to music used significantly less pain medication. Meads says music on average helped them to drop two notches on the 0-to-10 pain scale. That’s often what you’d get with a dose of medicine. Music in place of heavy-duty pharmaceuticals is a good trade-off. And we’re not just talking Mozart or Yanni. Music in many of these studies was whatever patients chose for themselves.

(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)

MEADS: I didn’t think it mattered at all which sort of music it was. It could be anything from Spanish guitar to Chinese classical music.

HARRIS: Was there any downside?

MEADS: Doesn’t seem to have any sort of side effects or anything like that.

HARRIS: Well, maybe one. A few other studies have noted that operating rooms are very noisy places, and added music can make it harder for the surgical staff to hear what’s going on. Doctors sometimes have to repeat their commands, creating opportunities for misunderstanding.

MEADS: If surgeons are listening to music, it can be a bit of a distraction. So it may be it’s not such a wise idea to have it during the operation itself.

HARRIS: That was not, however, something Meads analyzed in her study of music and medicine. Richard Harris, NPR News.

FacebooktwitterpinterestlinkedinmailFacebooktwitterpinterestlinkedinmail