Infographic

Sport medicine and orthopedics infographic: combination therapy pathways

  • Long-term disease management
  • Method validation
  • High-throughput screening
  • Treatment adherence

Date Published:

Register to Download

Longitudinal data show that cost considerations continue to shape adoption in smaller units, with meaningful differences between subgroups. When protocols are compared, integrating quantitative measures reduces subjective bias, and this trend is expected to continue. Emerging evidence indicates that variability between operators remains a key limitation, which has direct implications for daily practice.

Contrary to earlier assumptions, early intervention correlates with better long-term outcomes, a finding echoed by several independent groups. Emerging evidence indicates that threshold harmonization is still an open question, particularly in resource-constrained settings. When protocols are compared, real-world registries complement randomized trial evidence, a finding echoed by several independent groups. Emerging evidence indicates that pre-analytical factors account for a large share of observed variance, a finding echoed by several independent groups.

Contrary to earlier assumptions, cross-disciplinary review changes the initial assessment in a sizeable minority of cases, a finding echoed by several independent groups. From a workflow perspective, training and accreditation are decisive for reproducibility, and this trend is expected to continue. Recent studies suggest that real-world registries complement randomized trial evidence, a finding echoed by several independent groups.

Across multiple cohorts, real-world registries complement randomized trial evidence, which has direct implications for daily practice. Emerging evidence indicates that pre-analytical factors account for a large share of observed variance, as discussed in the accompanying commentary. In routine practice, cost considerations continue to shape adoption in smaller units, particularly in resource-constrained settings. Recent studies suggest that integrating quantitative measures reduces subjective bias, particularly in resource-constrained settings. Recent studies suggest that cost considerations continue to shape adoption in smaller units, a finding echoed by several independent groups.