Caverly Tanner J, Hayward Rodney A, Reamer Elyse, Zikmund-Fisher Brian J, Connochie Daniel, Heisler Michele, Fagerlin Angela
Veterans Affairs Center for Clinical Management Research, Ann Arbor, MI (TJC, RAH, MH, AF); Department of Internal Medicine, University of Michigan Medical School (TJC, RAH, ER, BJZF, MH, AF), Center for Bioethics and Social Science in Medicine (TJC, BJZF, DC, AF), and Department of Health Behavior and Health Education (BJZF), University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI.
J Natl Cancer Inst. 2016 Feb 24;108(6):djv436. doi: 10.1093/jnci/djv436. Print 2016 Jun.
Cancer prevention and screening guidelines are ideally suited to the task of providing high-quality benefit-harm information that informs clinical practice. We systematically examined how US guidelines present benefits and harms for recommended cancer prevention and screening interventions.
We included cancer screening and prevention recommendations from: 1) the United States Preventive Services Task Force, 2) the American Cancer Society, 3) the American College of Physicians, 4) the National Comprehensive Cancer Network, and 5) other US guidelines within the National Guidelines Clearinghouse. Searches took place November 20, 2013, and January 1, 2014, and updates were reviewed through July 1, 2015. Two coders used an abstraction form to code information about benefits and harms presented anywhere within a guideline document, including appendices. The primary outcome was each recommendation's benefit-harm "comparability" rating, based on how benefits and harms were presented. Recommendations presenting absolute effects for both benefits and harms received a "comparable" rating. Other recommendations received an incomplete rating or an asymmetric rating based on prespecified criteria.
Fifty-five recommendations for using interventions to prevent or detect breast, prostate, colon, cervical, and lung cancer were identified among 32 guidelines. Thirty point nine percent (n = 17) received a comparable rating, 14.5% (n = 8) received an incomplete rating, and 54.5% (n = 30) received an asymmetric rating.
Sixty-nine percent of cancer prevention and screening recommendation statements either did not quantify benefits and harms or presented them in an asymmetric manner. Improved presentation of benefits and harms in guidelines would better ensure that clinicians and patients have access to the information required for making informed decisions.
癌症预防和筛查指南非常适合提供高质量的利弊信息,为临床实践提供参考依据。我们系统地研究了美国指南如何阐述推荐的癌症预防和筛查干预措施的益处和危害。
我们纳入了以下机构的癌症筛查和预防建议:1)美国预防服务工作组;2)美国癌症协会;3)美国医师学会;4)国家综合癌症网络;5)国家指南交换中心中的其他美国指南。检索于2013年11月20日和2014年1月1日进行,并对截至2015年7月1日的更新内容进行了审查。两名编码员使用一种摘要形式对指南文件(包括附录)中任何位置呈现的有关益处和危害的信息进行编码。主要结果是根据益处和危害的呈现方式,对每项建议的利弊“可比性”进行评级。同时列出益处和危害的绝对影响的建议获得“可比”评级。其他建议根据预先设定的标准获得不完整评级或不对称评级。
在32项指南中,共确定了55项关于使用干预措施预防或检测乳腺癌、前列腺癌、结肠癌、宫颈癌和肺癌的建议。30.9%(n = 17)获得可比评级,14.5%(n = 8)获得不完整评级,54.5%(n = 30)获得不对称评级。
69%的癌症预防和筛查建议声明要么没有对益处和危害进行量化,要么以不对称的方式呈现。指南中改进益处和危害的呈现方式将更好地确保临床医生和患者能够获得做出明智决策所需的信息。