@article {Coroneose014141, author = {Christopher J Coroneos and Sophocles H Voineskos and Marie K Christakis and Achilleas Thoma and James R Bain and Melissa C Brouwers}, editor = {, and Bezuhly, Michael and Bristol, Sean G and Cheung, Kevin and Clarke, Howard M and Davidge, Kristen M and Harrop, A Robertson and Lin, Jennifer C and Olson, Jaret L and Ross, Douglas C and Stanciu, Constantin and Tang, David and Thompson, Susan and Verchere, Cynthia and Ying, Yvonne}, title = {Obstetrical brachial plexus injury (OBPI): Canada{\textquoteright}s national clinical practice guideline}, volume = {7}, number = {1}, elocation-id = {e014141}, year = {2017}, doi = {10.1136/bmjopen-2016-014141}, publisher = {British Medical Journal Publishing Group}, abstract = {Objective The objective of this study was to establish an evidence-based clinical practice guideline for the primary management of obstetrical brachial plexus injury (OBPI). This clinical practice guideline addresses 4 existing gaps: (1) historic poor use of evidence, (2) timing of referral to multidisciplinary care, (3) Indications and timing of operative nerve repair and (4) distribution of expertise.Setting The guideline is intended for all healthcare providers treating infants and children, and all specialists treating upper extremity injuries.Participants The evidence interpretation and recommendation consensus team (Canadian OBPI Working Group) was composed of clinicians representing each of Canada{\textquoteright}s 10 multidisciplinary centres.Outcome measures An electronic modified Delphi approach was used for consensus, with agreement criteria defined a priori. Quality indicators for referral to a multidisciplinary centre were established by consensus. An original meta-analysis of primary nerve repair and review of Canadian epidemiology and burden were previously completed.Results 7 recommendations address clinical gaps and guide identification, referral, treatment and outcome assessment: (1) physically examine for OBPI in newborns with arm asymmetry or risk factors; (2) refer newborns with OBPI to a multidisciplinary centre by 1 month; (3) provide pregnancy/birth history and physical examination findings at birth; (4) multidisciplinary centres should include a therapist and peripheral nerve surgeon experienced with OBPI; (5) physical therapy should be advised by a multidisciplinary team; (6) microsurgical nerve repair is indicated in root avulsion and other OBPI meeting centre operative criteria; (7) the common data set includes the Narakas classification, limb length, Active Movement Scale (AMS) and Brachial Plexus Outcome Measure (BPOM) 2 years after birth/surgery.Conclusions The process established a new network of opinion leaders and researchers for further guideline development and multicentre research. A structured referral form is available for primary care, including referral recommendations.}, issn = {2044-6055}, URL = {https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/7/1/e014141}, eprint = {https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/7/1/e014141.full.pdf}, journal = {BMJ Open} }