A technology assessment is a literature-based research project that seeks to determine whether a medical device, drug, procedure,
or biologic is effective or to summarize literature on a given technology. A well-conducted assessment is a form of secondary
research that employs the same steps used in primary research studies (ie, well-designed clinical trials). The primary difference
is that in technology assessment the investigator does not collect the raw data. Rather, (s)he must use data collected by
someone else. Nevertheless, a well-designed assessment, like a well-designed study, employs the scientific method, which is
a method designed to combat bias. When there is little available information, such as with new technologies, unbiased examinations
can typically show that enthusiasm for that technology is not backed by much data. When there is more information, assessments
can not only determine whether a technology is effective, but also how effective it is. Technology assessments can provide
busy orthopaedic surgeons (who do not have the time to keep up with and critically evaluate current literature) with succinct
information that enables them to rapidly determine what is and what is not known about any given medical technology.
One or more of the authors (JJJ) has received funding from Zimmer, Medtronics, Wright Medical, Spinal Motion, and Advanced
Spine Technologies. Each author certifies that he or she has or may receive payments or benefits from a commercial entity
related to this work (JJJ: Zimmer, Medtronics).