Title: Knowledge for Knowledge Translation
1Knowledge for Knowledge Translation
- Jeremy Grimshaw MD, PhD
- Clinical Epidemiology Program, OHRI
- Department of Medicine, University of Ottawa
- Canada Research Chair in Health Knowledge
Transfer and Uptake
2Outline
- Session 1
- Definitions
- K for KT
- Session 2
- Effects of KT strategies
- KT for policy makers
- KT for clinicians
- KT for patients
- What can/should researchers do to promote KT?
- Putting it together
3Knowledge translation
- CIHR definition
- Knowledge translation is the exchange, synthesis
and ethically-sound application of researcher
findings within a complex system of relationships
among researchers and knowledge users.
4Knowledge translation
- Knowledge translation is about ensuring that
- stakeholders are aware of and use research
evidence to inform their decision making - research is informed by current available
evidence and the experiences and information
needs of stakeholders
5Knowledge translation
Audiences for KT
6Knowledge translation
- Why do we need to think about knowledge
translation? - Traditional KT approaches have emphasised
publication in peer reviewed journals - Consistent evidence of failure to translate
research findings into clinical practice - 30-40 patients do not get treatments of proven
effectiveness - 2025 patients get care that is not needed or
potentially harmful - Schuster, McGlynn, Brook (1998). Milbank Memorial
Quarterly - Grol R (2001). Med Care
7K for KT
- Individual studies rarely by themselves provide
sufficient evidence for policy or practice
changes - Individual studies are often misleading
- An additional issue is dealing with the hype from
basic science discoveries
8Dont believe the hype likelihood of benefit
from basic science discoveries
25, 190 articles (published in 1979-1983 in
Nature, Science, Cell, JEM, JCI, JBC)
562 articles (retrieved key word search)
153 potentially eligible articles (full text)
101 original articles that made clear promises
for immediate clinical translation
Contopoulos-Ioannidis et al. Am J Med 2003 and
Ioannidis JP. J Translational Med 2004
9Dont believe the hype likelihood of benefit
from basic science discoveries
RCT
Positive RCT
10Dont believe the hype publication and outcome
bias
- Consistent evidence of publication bias
positive studies more likely to be published and
more likely to be published earlier. - Growing evidence of outcome bias in randomised
trials changes in primary outcome in
randomised trials (if primary outcome shows no or
modest effect) to outcome showing positive
changes.
11Dont believe the hype early highly positive
results often contradicted
12Dont believe the hype early highly positive
results often contradicted
- Analyzed 115 articles published in 1990-2003 in
the 3 major general medical journals (NEJM, JAMA,
Lancet) and specialty journals that had received
over 1000 citations each by August 2004 - 49 reported evaluations of health care
interventions 45 claimed that the interventions
were effective. - By 2004 5/6 non randomised studies and 9/39
randomised trials were already contradicted or
found to be exaggerated - Ioannidis JP. JAMA 2005
13Dont believe the hype early highly positive
results often contradicted
Ioannidis et al, Nature Genetics 2001
14K for KT
- The results of individual studies need to be
interpreted alongside the totality of evidence
(ie systematic reviews) - Emphasis on KT of individual studies may distract
the stakeholder group (increasing the noise to
signal) - Dont believe the hype
- Dont generate the hype
15K for KT
- Problems of information management
- Over 20,000 medical journals published per year
- Published research of variable quality and
relevance - Users often poorly trained in critical appraisal
skills - Users often have limited time (average time
professionals have available to read lt1
hour/week)
16 K for KT
- Users Guides to the Medical Literature
- We now recommend that resolving a clinical
problem begins with a search for a valid
systematic review or practice guideline as the
most efficient method of deciding on the best
patient care. - Guyatt GH, Rennie D (1994). JAMA.
17K for KT
- Systematic reviews are a generic methodology used
to synthesise evidence from a broad range of
research methods addressing different questions.
18K for KT
- The steps involved in undertaking a systematic
review include - stating the objectives of the research
- defining eligibility criteria for studies to be
included - identifying (all) potentially eligible studies
- applying eligibility criteria
- assembling the most complete dataset feasible
- analysing this dataset, using statistical
synthesis and sensitivity analyses, if
appropriate and possible - preparing a structured report of the research.
19K for KT
- Systematic reviews are a generic methodology used
to synthesise evidence from a broad range of
research methods addressing different questions. - Effectiveness of health care interventions
- Diagnostic and screening tests
- Determinants of health
- Aetiological epidemiological studies
- Genetic epidemiological studies
- Health system issues (eg quality of discharge
coding) - Qualitative methods consumers experiences of
health care
20Systematic reviews of what works questions
21K for KT
- Clinical practice guidelines
- Systematically developed statements to assist
practitioner and patient decisions about
appropriate health care for specific clinical
circumstances. - Institute of Medicine (1992). Guidelines for
clinical practice from development to use.
22K for KT
- Factors influencing validity of CPGs
- Composition of guideline development group
- Multidisciplinary group
- Methods of identifying and synthesising evidence
- Sytematic review
- Methods of developing guidelines
- Explicit method linking recommendations to
strength of evidence - Grimshaw, Russell (1993). Quality in Health Care.
23K for KT
- Increasing availability of high quality
guidelines and systematic reviews available to
support practice - Cochrane Collaboration
- AHRQ evidence based practice reports
- HUGENet
- Multiple guideline development agencies
24K for KT buyer beware
- Quality of systematic reviews and CPGs highly
variable. Need to appraise prior to use - Systematic reviews Oxman and Guyatt
- Guideline appraisal AGREE instrument
25Summary
- Knowledge translation is about ensuring that
stakeholders are aware of and use research
evidence to inform their decision making - KT should be based on mature K base.
26Contact details
- Jeremy Grimshaw - jgrimshaw_at_ohri.ca
- EPOC epoc_at_uottawa.ca