Title: Information Mastery: EvidenceBased Medicine in Everyday Practice
1Information Mastery Evidence-Based Medicine in
Everyday Practice
- David C. Slawson, MD
- Allen F. Shaughnessy, PharmD
-
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3The Medical Information Business
Production
- Original Research
- Clinical experience
Shaughnessy AF, Slawson DC. Are we providing
doctors with the training and tools for lifelong
learning? British Medical Journal 1999 (13 Nov)
www.bmj.com. (http//bmj.com/cgi/reprint/319/7220/
1280.pdf)
4The Medical Information Business
Production
- Systematic reviews
- POEM Alert System
Refinement
5The Medical Information Business
Production
- Clinician-centered
- Just-in-time information
- Hunting/foraging tools
Refinement
Distribution
6The Medical Information Business
Production
- Information Mastery
- The Applied Science of Clinical Medicine
Sales Marketing
Refinement
Distribution
7How do we learn?
- Adults learn by solving problems
- Our problems clinical questions
- CME can highlight advances and make us aware of
our deficits - 120 studies, short term benefit to testing, but
no patient benefit to traditional lecture - Answering clinical questions at the point of care
is how we learn and improve outcomes
8Clinical questions
- Theyre common Average 1 question for every
other patient - Theyre important
- Only 1 in 3 questions pursued
- Found answer 80 of time
- Guess at 70-80 of information needs!
- Journals only used to answer 2 of 1101 questions
- Books, colleagues used most often
- Average search time 1 minute or less.
-
- Ely JE. Analysis of questions asked by family
doctors regarding patient care. BMJ
1999319358-61
9Clinical Questions
- Internal Medicine Residents
- 2 for every 3 patients
- 29 pursued
- textbook (31) journals (21) attendings (17)
- Patient expectation, fear of malpractice
associated with seeking answer - Lack of time (60), forgot (29).
- Am J Med 2000109218-33.
10Information Sources for the Point of Care
- Everything is based on the usefulness equation
- Usefulness Relevance x Validity
- Work
- Slawson DC, Shaughnessy AF, Bennett JH. Becoming
a Medical Information MasterFeeling Good About
Not Knowing Everything. The Journal of Family
Practice 199438505-13.
11Validity
- The hard part of Information Mastery
- Technique EBM working group
- Guyatt G, Rennie D, ed. Users guides to the
medical literature. A manual for evidence-based
clinical practice. Chicago AMA, 2002. - Did the researchers find what they think they
found? - Do the results apply to your patients?
- Self vs delegation- Take responsibility
12Work
- Not all information sources are created equal
- Two type of information sources
- Just-in-case sources high work
- Just-in-time sources low work
13Relevance Type of Evidence
- POE Patient-oriented evidence
- mortality, morbidity, quality of life
- Live longer and/or better
- DOE Disease-oriented evidence
- pathophysiology, pharmacology, etiology
Shaughnessy AF, Slawson DC, Bennett JH. Becoming
an Information Master A Guidebook to the Medical
Information Jungle. The Journal of Family
Practice 199439(5)489-99.
14POEM
- Patient-Oriented
- Evidence
- that Matters
- matters to you, the clinician, because if valid,
will require you to change your practice
Shaughnessy AF, Slawson DC, Bennett JH. Becoming
an Information Master A Guidebook to the Medical
Information Jungle. The Journal of Family
Practice 199439(5)489-99.
15POEMs The Change Factor
- Pen G prevents rheumatic fever
- Would a study showing this require a change?
- ALLHAT study (ALLHAT Officers and Coordinators.
Major outcomes in high-risk hypertensive patients
randomized to angiotensin-converting enzyme
inhibitor or calcium channel blocker vs diuretic.
The Antihypertensive and Lipid-Lowering Treatment
to prevent Heart Attack Trial (ALLHAT). JAMA
20022882981-97). - Diuretics gt effective than other treatments to
prevent mortality and morbidity associated with
hypertension, including type 2 diabetes - Would this study require a change in behavior?
16Determining Validity
- Levels of Evidence (LOE)
- 1a, b, c 2a, b, c etc., 5- expert opinion
- A, B, C, D,
- Therapy, diagnosis, prognosis, reviews, etc.
- A moving target
- The best way to ascertain trust in the process
17Was allocation assignment concealed?
- Did investigators know to which group the
potential subject would be assigned before
enrolling them?
18Importance of concealed allocation
- Trials with unconcealed allocation consistently
overestimate benefit by 40 - Schulz KF, Chalmers I, Hayes RJ, et al. JAMA
1995273408-12 - Schulz KF, Grimes DA. Lancet 2002359614-18.
19Was allocation assignment concealed?
- Concealed allocation ? blinding
- Blinding can occur without concealed allocation
- UVA example- surfactant in the NICU
- Allocation can be concealed in an unblinded study
- PT vs surgery for knee DJD
- Moseley JB, O'Malley K, Petersen NJ, et al. N
Engl J Med 2002 34781-8.
20Importance of concealed assignment
- Meta-analysis of trials evaluating screening
mammography - In studies in which allocation wasnt concealed
- Higher SE status, education level in screened
group - Age disparity (average 6 mo older in the
unscreened group) - Richer, smarter, younger live longer!
- Trials with concealed allocation screening
harmful! - No effect or increased mortality
- 20 more mastectomies
- Lancet Jan 8, 2000 Oct 20, 2001
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22Should we use a new test? Levels of Valid
POEMness
- Sensitivity specificity
- Does it change diagnoses?
- Does it change treatment?
- Does it change outcomes?
- Is it worthwhile (to patients and/or society)?
- (examples T4/PKU in newborns, BNP for CHF, HbA1C
for DM, electron beam tomography for CAD, CRP,
BMD) - Fryback DG, Thornbury JR. The efficacy of
diagnostic imaging. Med Decis Making 1991
1188-94
23- Mundus Vult Decipi- The world wishes to be
deceived - People would rather be deceived that have the
truth cause anxiety - Caleb Carr, Killing Time
24Two Tools Needed to Master Information- BMJ 1999
- A method of being alerted to new information (a
foraging tool) - A tool for finding the information again when you
need it. (a hunting tool) - Without both
- You dont know that new info. is available
- You cant find it when you do
- Clinical example- Riboflavin for migraines
- Shaughnessy AF, Slawson DC. Are we providing
doctors with the training and tools for lifelong
learning? British Medical Journal 1999 (13 Nov)
www.bmj.com. (http//bmj.com/cgi/reprint/319/7220/
1280.pdf)
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26Can we trust reviews (Hunting Tools)?
- Study of 36 review articles using 10 criteria for
determining rigor - Overall rating of rigor
- Experts correlation 0.23
- Non-experts correlation 0.78
- ? expertise of writer stronger prior opinion ?
less time spent on review ? lower quality - Study of quality of 35 review articles on type 2
DM - Ave. score 1/15 best score 5/15
- Experts should do research
- Non-experts should write due to less bias
- Oxman AD, Guyatt GH. The science or reviewing
research. Ann N Y Acad Sci 1993703125-33.
Shaughnessy AF, Slawson DC. What happened to the
valid POEMs? A survey of review articles on the
treatment of type 2 diabetes. British Medical
Journal 2003327266-9.
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28Typical Flow of Information in Medicine
Medical Research Published
29Flow of Information from the UKPDS
Results Selectively Presented by Experts
Patient Care Based on Wrong/Incomplete Information
30Translational ValidityCan We Trust Review
Articles?
- Reporting of the UKPDS by 35 review articles
- 85 of reviews readers not told that good
glucose control alone doesnt decrease mortality
(NNR 7) Important Non-Valid POEM - All reported that good control decreased
complications - None reported that almost all (84) benefit due
to decreased rates of retinal photocoagulation
(no change in blindness rate, the Important
Non-Valid POEM) - Valid POEM Only 18 (NNR 6) reported that
metformin decreased mortality, independent of BS
control -
31Translational ValidityCan We Trust Review
Articles?
- None reported lack of any benefit (micro- or
macrovascular) of insulin/ sulfonylureas in obese
diabetics- Important Non-Valid POEM - Valid POEM Only 13 (NNR 8) reported that blood
pressure control is more important than BG
control - None of the reviews reported all Valid and
Important Non-Valid POEMs (NNR gt 35). - Including significant EB databases
- Shaughnessy AF, Slawson DC. What happened to the
valid POEMs? A survey of review articles on the
treatment of type 2 diabetes. BMJ
2003327266-271.
32Lending a Hand to Patients with Type 2 Diabetes
Metformin/?ASA
Blood pressure
Cholesterol
Glucose control?
Smoking
Vijan S. Treatment of hypertension in type 2
diabetes mellitus blood pressure goals, choice
of agents, and setting priorities in diabetes
care. Ann Intern Med 2003 138593-602.
33Drilling for the Best Information
34InfoRetriever 2005 Windows 95/98/NT/ME/2000/XP,
PocketPC, Palm and Web
1900 short research synopses (400 added per year)
Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews over
1300 abstracts
5 Minute Clinical Consult
Bayesian diagnostic test / HP calculator
150 clinical prediction rules
Basic drug info by class and cost for 1200 drugs
Key evidence-based treatment guidelines
www.InfoPOEMs.com
35Characteristics of an Ideal Clinical Awareness
System
- Specialty-specific
- Comprehensive
- Coordinated hunting and foraging tools
- Specific and reproducible criteria for relevance
and validity - Available at the point-of-care
- All backed up by levels of evidence
36The Clinician of the Future
- I know a lot, therefore I am
- Replaceable by a computer
- I think, therefore I am
- Never replaceable by computer
- Travel agent should they memorize schedules?
- Would you trust them?
- How do you know?
- Hand held computer stethoscope of the future
37Take-Home Points
- Confidence through information
- Hunting foraging tools providing relevant and
valid information when needed - Focus on valid POEMs Patient-Oriented Evidence
that Matters
38- Effect on Patient-Oriented Outcomes
- Symptoms
- Functioning
- Quality of Life
- Lifespan
SORT A
SORT B
- Effect on Disease Markers
- Diabetes
- Arthritis
- Peptic Ulcer
SORT C
Relevance of Outcome
- Effect on Risk Factors for Disease
- Improvement in markers (blood pressure,
cholesterol)
- Highly Controlled Research
- Randomized Controlled Trials
- Systematic Reviews
- Physiologic Research
- Preliminary Clinical Research
- Case reports
- Observational studies
Uncontrolled Observations Conjecture
Validity of Evidence
39Take-Home Points
- Clinicians will be/are valued by how they think
and not by what they know - The information age is about information
management, not information acquisition
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