Alexander Paul E, Bero Lisa, Montori Victor M, Brito Juan Pablo, Stoltzfus Rebecca, Djulbegovic Benjamin, Neumann Ignacio, Rave Supriya, Guyatt Gordon
Health Research Methods (HRM), Department of Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics, McMaster University, 1280 Main Street West, Hamilton, Ontario L8S 4K1, Canada.
University of California, San Francisco, Suite 420, Box 0613, 3333 California Street, San Francisco, CA 94118, USA.
J Clin Epidemiol. 2014 Jun;67(6):629-34. doi: 10.1016/j.jclinepi.2013.09.020. Epub 2014 Jan 3.
Expert guideline panelists are sometimes reluctant to offer weak/conditional/contingent recommendations. Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation (GRADE) guidance warns against strong recommendations when confidence in effect estimates is low or very low, suggesting that such recommendations may seldom be justified. We aim to characterize the classification of strength of recommendations and confidence in estimates in World Health Organization (WHO) guidelines that used the GRADE approach and graded both strength and confidence (GRADEd).
We reviewed all WHO guidelines (January 2007 to December 2012), identified those that were GRADEd, and, in these, examined the classifications of strong and weak and associated confidence in estimates (high, moderate, low, and very low).
We identified 116 WHO guidelines in which 43 (37%) were GRADEd and had 456 recommendations, of which 289 (63.4%) were strong and 167 (36.6%) were conditional/weak. Of the 289 strong recommendations, 95 (33.0%) were based on evidence warranting low confidence in estimates and 65 (22.5%) on evidence warranting very low confidence in estimates (55.5% strong recommendations overall based on low or very low confidence in estimates).
Strong recommendations based on low or very low confidence estimates are very frequently made in WHO guidelines. Further study to determine the reasons for such high uncertainty recommendations is warranted.
专家指南制定小组有时不愿给出弱推荐/有条件推荐/偶然推荐。推荐分级评估、制定与评价(GRADE)指南提醒,当对效应估计值的信心较低或非常低时,不要给出强推荐,这表明此类推荐很少有合理性依据。我们旨在描述世界卫生组织(WHO)采用GRADE方法对推荐强度和估计信心进行分级(GRADEd)的指南中推荐强度的分类以及对估计的信心情况。
我们回顾了WHO的所有指南(2007年1月至2012年12月),确定了那些采用GRADE分级的指南,并在这些指南中检查了强推荐和弱推荐的分类以及相关的估计信心(高、中、低和非常低)。
我们确定了116份WHO指南,其中43份(37%)采用了GRADE分级,包含456条推荐,其中289条(63.4%)为强推荐,167条(36.6%)为有条件/弱推荐。在289条强推荐中,95条(33.0%)基于对估计值信心较低的证据,65条(22.5%)基于对估计值信心非常低的证据(总体上55.5%的强推荐基于对估计值低或非常低的信心)。
WHO指南中经常出现基于低或非常低信心估计的强推荐。有必要进一步研究确定此类高不确定性推荐的原因。