Title: Clinical Practice Guidelines
1Clinical (Practice) Guidelines
- Sudigdo Sastroasmoro
- sudigdo_s_at_yahoo.com
2Clinical guidelines What are they?
3Taxonomy of healthcare standards
- Clinical (practice) guidelines
- Protocols
- Standard operating procedures
- Algorithms
- Clinical pathways
- Standing orders
Must be Evidence-based Periodically
revisedb
Ashton, 2002
4EBM
- Bringing research evidence into practice
- EBM concerns with practical application of theory
(clinical epidemiology) - We are not daydreaming with theoretical basis of
medicine, but primarily concern with the
practical implementation of advances in medical
science and technology
CEBM, 1994
5Medical practice in modern eraWhat are the
facts?
- 25,000 journals
- 6,000,000 articles per yr
- 17,000 biomedical books/yr
- 1,500 procedures
- Problems in daily practice
- 3,000 diseases
- 80 symptoms and signs
- consumerism, IT
- demographic changes, etc
- Strategies
- Read all available evidence and apply to your
patients (impossible) - Find out the clinical problem from our daily
practice and systematically - search, appraise, and apply the evidence
6- Clinical guideline is one way
- to implement
- research evidence into practice
7What are CGs?
- Clinical (practice) guidelines are defined as
systematically developed statements to assist
practitioner and patient decisions about
appropriate health care for specific clinical
circumstances. They tend (but not always) to be
used after a diagnosis has been reached.
NICE, 2003
8What are CGs?
- Guidelines are evidence-based (based on current
research), and unlike other types of formats that
provide a step-wise approach to care and
treatment, the guidelines provide information
regarding the most effective managements. - Physicians use this information along with their
experience and knowledge of the patient to
determine the appropriate plan of care.
NICE, 2003
9When a guideline is needed?
- Highly varied clinical practice
- Difference opinions among professionals
- especially if they have the following
characteristics - High volume
- High risk
- High cost
10Relevance Types of Evidence
- POE Patient-oriented evidence
- mortality, morbidity, quality of life
- DOE Disease-oriented evidence
- pathophysiology, pharmacology, etiology
11POEM
- Patient-Oriented
- Evidence
- that Matters
- matters to us, the clinicians, because if valid,
will require us to change our practice
12Comparing DOEs and POEMs
Drug A ? mortality
Antiarrhythmic Therapy
Drug A ? PVC On ECG
DOE POEM contradicts
Drug X ? mortality
POEM agrees With DOE
Antihypertens. Therapy
Drug X ? BP
PSA screening detects prostate Ca. early
? whether PSA screening ? mortality
Prostate screening
DOE exists, but POEM unknown
13Good Guidelines should
- be effective - lead to health gains expected from
them - be efficient - and hence cost effective
- be evidence based
14Aim of Guidelines
- to rid ineffective methods
- to rid waste of resources
Improvement of quality of care
15Who should make up the guidelines?
- Everyone
- Professional organizations
- Universities
- Hospitals
- Individuals
- NGOs, Insurance companies
- Government
16Who should make up the guidelines?
- Depends on the subject and who develops the
guidelines. Usually - Experts in respective area (Multidisciplinary)
- Relevant consultants
- A Health Authority/Medical Pharmaceutical Adviser
Pharmacist - Epidemiologist/Health Economist
- A Specialist in Guideline methodology
- Laymen
17The process guidelines development
- Select relevant subject
- List specific questions
- Search and synthesise published reports
- Assess the quality of each study
- Perform economic analysis
- Determine the grade of recommendations
- Resolve unanswered questions
- Determine schedule for revision
18The process guidelines development
- Select relevant subject
- Management of complex febrile convulsions
19The process guidelines development
- 2. List specific questions to be answered
- In a child with complex febrile convulsion do
- long-term anticonvulsants compared with no
treatment - prevent subsequent seizures?
20The process guidelines development
- Search and synthesise published reports
- Use appropriate keywords in relevant databases
(MEDLINE, Cochrane, AAP, etc)
21The process guidelines development
- 4. Assess the quality of each study VIA
- VALIDITY In Methods section
- design, sample, sample size, eligibility criteria
(inclusion, exclusion) sampling method,
randomization method, intervention, measurements,
methods of analysis, etc - IMPORTANCE In Results section
- characteristics of subjects, drop out, effect
size, analysis, P value, confidence intervals,
etc - APPLICABILITY In Discussion section our
patients characteristics, local setting
22Assessment of evidence
- Appropriateness of inclusion/exclusion criteria
- Concealment of allocation
- Blinding of patients, investigators, both
- Objective or blind method of data collection
- Valid or blind method of data analysis
- Completeness and length of follow up
- Appropriateness of outcome measures
- Statistical power of results
- Publication bias - was a company of interest
sponsoring the study - Conflict of interest
235. Perform economic analysis
The process guidelines development
- Systemic appraisals of
- effectiveness
- compliance
- safety
- health service resource use
- cost effectiveness
246. Evaluate strength of recommendation
The process guidelines development
- Effectiveness
- Applicability of the evidence to the population
of interest - Guideline developers awareness of the practical
issues - Cost effectiveness
25Hierarchy of the Evidence
Rec A B C
Meta-analysis of RCT Large RCT Small
RCT Quasi-experimentals Observational
studies Case series / reports Anecdotes,
expert, consensus
267. Resolve unanswered question(s), if any
The process guidelines development
- Not all questions can be answered with firm
evidence - Try hard to answer even if not conclusive
278. Scheduled review
The process guidelines development
- Every time new important evidence is available
- More practical Scheduled every . year
depending on the expected rate of new evidence
28Attributes of high-quality CGs Â
- Valid
- Reproducible
- Clinically flexible
- Multidisciplinary process
- Documentation
- Reliability
- Clinically applicable
- Clear
- Scheduled review
29Ten key principles for NHS clinical guidelines
- The objective of CGs is to improve the quality of
care - Quality care is based on clinical effectiveness
- Quality of care includes cost effectiveness of
health care - CGs are relevant to the care provided by the NHS
- CGs are advisory
- CGs are based on research evidence, expert
opinion and consensus - CGs should respect of patients, the NHS and
stakeholders - Patients are involved in a clinical guideline
development. - CGs should consider clinicians, patients, public,
Government and the health care industries - CGs should be both ambitious and realistic
NICE, 2003
30Formats of CGs
- Full-text
- Abridged or summary
- Format for patients
NICE, 2003
31Example of CGs
- Amer Assoc Clin Endocrinologist (2003) Guideline
for evaluation and treatment of male sexual
dysfunction. 19 pages, 104 references - AAP Clinical Practice Guideline (2000) Diagnosis
and evaluation of the child with ADHD. 13 pages,
60 references. - California Workgroup (2002) Guideline for
management of Alzheimers disease. 55 pages, 217
references - APA (2001) Guideline for management of patients
with sinusitis. 24 pages, 79 references - American College of Cardiology / American Heart
Association (2002) Guideline update for the
management of chronic stable angina. 136 pages,
1053 references
32Appraising CGs
- Validity
- Importance
- Applicability
Please refer to the Worksheet provided
33Implementing clinical guidelines
- Guideline should not be implemented rigidly
- In implementing clinical guidelines into
individual patients it should be borne in mind
that - Guidelines are advisory
- Guidelines are developed for the average
patients - Guidelines are developed for isolated disease or
condition - Individual response to diagnostic and therapeutic
procedure varies widely - Guidelines are valid at the time of its
publication - Modern medical practice encourages involving
patients in clinical decision making - The most appropriate person make a decision is
the doctor in charge - Should the physician decides not to comply with
the guideline she or he must write clearly her or
his reasons to do so
34Remember the cardinal rule
- If it is not written down
- it didnt happen
35Types of health care professionals
Evidence generators
Evidence Users
Evidence Finders
Evidence Ignorer