Manchikanti Laxmaiah, Singh Vijay, Helm Standiford, Trescot Andrea M, Hirsch Joshua A
Pain Management Center of Paducah, Paducah, KY 42003, USA.
Pain Physician. 2008 May-Jun;11(3):291-310.
Today, with the growing interest of the medical community and others in practice guidelines, there is greater emphasis on formal procedures and methods for arriving at a widely scrutinized and endorsed consensus than ever before. Conflicts in terminology and technique are notable for the confusion that guidelines create and for what they reflect about differences in values, experiences, and interests among different parties. While public and private development activities continue to multiply, the means for coordinating these efforts to resolve inconsistencies, fill in gaps, track applications and results, and assess the soundness of particular guidelines continue to be limited. In this era of widespread guideline development by private organizations, the American College of Occupational and Environment Medicine (ACOEM) has developed guidelines that evaluate areas of clinical practice well beyond the scope of occupational medicine and yet fail to properly involve physicians expert in these, especially those in the field of interventional pain management. As the field of guidelines suffers from imperfect and incomplete scientific knowledge as well as imperfect and uneven means of applying that knowledge without a single or correct way to develop guidelines, ACOEM guidelines have been alleged to hinder patient care, reduce access to interventional pain management procedures, and transfer patients into a system of disability, Medicare, and Medicaid.
To critically appraise occupational medicine practice guidelines for interventional pain management by an independent review utilizing the Appraisal of Guidelines for Research and Evaluation (AGREE), American Medical Association (AMA), Institute of Medicine (IOM), and other commonly utilized criteria.
Revised chapters of ACOEM guidelines, low back pain and chronic pain, developed in 2007 and 2008 are evaluated, utilizing AGREE, AMA, IOM instruments, and Shaneyfelt et al's criteria, were independently reviewed by 4 appraisers.
Critical appraisal utilizing the AGREE instrument found that both chapters scored less than 10% in 3 of the 6 domains, less than 20% in one domain, over 30% in one domain, and over 70% in one domain. Global assessment also scored below 30% with a recommendation from AGREE, "not recommended or suitable for use in practice." Based on AMA key attributes, both chapters of ACOEM guidelines met only one of the 6 key attributes, only 3 of the 8 attributes were met by IOM criteria, and based on the criteria described by Shaneyfelt et al, overall only 28% of criteria were met.
Both the low back pain and chronic pain chapters of the ACOEM guidelines may not be ideal for clinical use based on the assessment by the AGREE instrument, AMA attributes, and criteria established by Shaneyfelt et al. They also scored low on IOM criteria (37.5%). These guidelines may not be applicable for clinical use.
如今,随着医学界及其他领域对实践指南的兴趣日益浓厚,相较于以往,人们更加注重达成广泛审查和认可的共识的正式程序和方法。术语和技术方面的冲突因指南所造成的混乱以及它们所反映出的不同各方在价值观、经验和利益上的差异而备受关注。尽管公共和私人开发活动不断增加,但协调这些努力以解决不一致之处、填补空白、跟踪应用情况和结果以及评估特定指南合理性的手段仍然有限。在这个由私人组织广泛制定指南的时代,美国职业与环境医学学会(ACOEM)制定的指南评估的临床实践领域远远超出职业医学范畴,却未能妥善让这些领域的专家医生参与其中,尤其是介入性疼痛管理领域的专家。由于指南领域存在不完善和不完整的科学知识,以及应用这些知识的手段不完善且不均衡,且没有单一或正确的指南制定方式,ACOEM指南被指阻碍患者护理、减少介入性疼痛管理程序的可及性,并将患者转移到残疾、医疗保险和医疗补助体系中。
通过利用研究与评估指南(AGREE)、美国医学协会(AMA)、医学研究所(IOM)及其他常用标准进行独立审查,对介入性疼痛管理的职业医学实践指南进行批判性评估。
对ACOEM指南2007年和2008年制定的有关腰痛和慢性疼痛的修订章节,使用AGREE、AMA、IOM工具以及Shaneyfelt等人的标准进行评估,由4名评估者独立审查。
利用AGREE工具进行的批判性评估发现,两个章节在6个领域中的3个领域得分低于10%,在一个领域得分低于20%,在一个领域得分超过30%,在一个领域得分超过70%。总体评估得分也低于30%,AGREE给出的建议是“不推荐或不适合在实践中使用”。基于AMA关键属性,ACOEM指南的两个章节仅符合6个关键属性中的一个,IOM标准仅满足8个属性中的3个,而根据Shaneyfelt等人描述的标准,总体仅满足28%的标准。
基于AGREE工具、AMA属性以及Shaneyfelt等人确立的标准进行评估,ACOEM指南中有关腰痛和慢性疼痛的章节可能并不适合临床使用。它们在IOM标准上的得分也较低(37.5%)。这些指南可能不适用于临床。