Title: EBM --- Journal Reading
1Presenter??? Date2005/10/27
2Users Guides to the Medical Literature?. How
to Use a Clinical Decision AnalysisA. Are the
Results of the study Valid?
W. Scott Richardson, MD. Allan S. Detsky, MD,
PhD, for the Evidence-Based Medicine Working Group
JAMA April 26, 1995 273, 16
3What is Clinical Decision Analysis?
- ..the application of explicit quantitative
methods to analyze decisions made under
conditions of uncertainty. - In more simple term..
- It uses a mathematical formula to reconstitute
the whole scenario, helping clinicians to
visualize choices that are available and make
appropriate decisions.
4- Decision analysis helps clinicians to compare the
expected consequences of pursuing different
strategies. - A decision analysis model must compare at least
two decision options. - The process involves identifying all the
available management options, and the potential
outcomes of each, in a series of decisions that
have to be made about patient care. - Each decision option can be more clearly
evaluated, and a strategy can be identified for
maximizing clinical utility and minimizing
related health care costs. - The range of choices are plotted on a decision
tree.
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6Analyzing the Analysis
- 1. Are The Results Valid?
- 2. What Are The Results?
- 3. Will The Results Help Me in Caring For My
Patients?
7Are the Results Valid?
- Were all important strategies and outcome
included? - Was an explicit and sensible process used to
identify, select, and combine the evidence into
probabilities? - Were utilities obtained in an explicit and
sensible way from credible sources? - Was the potential impact of any uncertainty in
the evidence determined?
81. Were all important strategies and outcome
included?
- The issue here is..
- how well the structure of the model fits the
clinical decision analyses are built as decision
trees - Decision trees are displayed graphically,
oriented from left-to-right.
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10- Decision tree
- Illustrates all the potential choices and
subsequent outcomes in - diagrammatic form. The decisions and outcomes
are presented in the order in which they are
likely to occur, hence it is hierarchical in
structure. - Decision node
- A point in a decision tree where a decision has
to be made. Generally illustrated by a square.
The lines emanating from a decision node
represent the clinical strategies being compared. - Chance node
- Chance events that may occur following a
decision. Generally illustrated by a circle. The
probability of these events occurring are
included in the decision tree - Outcome node
- The final outcome of a decision path. Generally
illustrated by a triangle or rectangle.
112. Were all of the realistic clinical strategies
compared?
- Strategies ? sequences of actions and decisions
that are contingent on each other - The authors of the analysis should specify which
decision strategies are being compared - Clinical strategies should be described in detail
to recognize them as separate and realistic
choices.
123. Were all clinically relevant outcomes
considered?
- To be useful to clinicians and patients, the
decision model should include the outcomes of the
disease that matter to patients. - These include not only the quantity of life, but
also the quality, in measures of disease and
disability.
13- The specific disorder in question determines
which outcomes are clinically relevant. - E.g..
- For an analysis of an acute, life-threatening
condition, life expectancy might be appropriate
as the main outcome measure - In an analysis of diagnostic strategies for a
nonfatal disorder, more relevant outcomes would
be discomfort from testing or days of disability
avoided.
14- Clinical decision analyses should be built from
the perspective of the patient, that is, should
include all the clinical benefits and risks of
importance to patients. - By comparing the outcomes between strategies, you
can discover the trade-offs (between competing
benefits and competing risks) built into the
model. - The choice of strategies should be balanced on
one or more of such trade-offs. - The outcomes are measured as quality-adjusted
life expectancy, a scale that combines
information about both the quantity and quality
of life.
154. Was an explicit and sensible process used
to identify, select, and combine the evidence
into probabilities ?
- To assemble the large amount of information
necessary for a decision analysis, the authors
should search and select the literature in an
explicit and unbiased way, and then appraise the
validity, effect size, and homogeneity of the
studies in a reproducible fashion. - In other words, authors should perform as
comprehensive a literature review as is required
for a meta-analysis.
16- Once gathered, the information must be
transformed into quantitative estimates of the
likelihood of events, or probabilities. - The scale of probability estimates ranges from 0
(impossible) to 1.0 (absolute certain). - Probabilities must be assigned to each branch
emanating from a chance node, and for each chance
node, the sum of probabilities must add to 1.0.
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185. Were the utilities obtained in an explicit
and sensible way from credible sources?
- Utilities represent quantitative measurements of
the value to the decision maker of the various
outcomes of the decision. - Utility The preference or desirability of a
particular outcome. A commonly used utility scale
ranges from 0 (worst outcome, usually death) to
1.0 (excellent health) - In a decision analysis built for an individual
patient, the most credible ratings are those
measured directly from that patient. - For analysis built to inform clinical policy,
credible ratings could come from three sources - (1) direct measurements from a large groups of
patients with the disorder in question and to
whom results of the decision analysis could be
applied - (2) from published studies of quality-of-life
ratings by patients - (3) from an equally large group of people
representing the general public
196. Was the potential impact of any uncertainty
in the evidence determined?
- Much of the uncertainty in clinical decision
making arises from the lack of valid literature. - Even when it is present, published evidence is
often imprecise, with wide confidence intervals
around estimates for important variables.
20- Decision analyst uses sensitivity analysis to
see what effect varying estimates for risks,
benefits, and values have on the expected
clinical outcomes, and therefore on the choice of
clinical strategies. - Estimates can be varied one at a time
- ? one-way sensitivity analyses
- two or three at a time
- ? multi-way sensitivity analyses