National Health and Medical Research Council Centre for Research Excellence in PCOS, Monash University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia; National Health and Medical Research Council Centre for Research Excellence in PCOS, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia; Monash Centre for Health Research and Implementation, Monash Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Monash University and Monash Health, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
National Health and Medical Research Council Centre for Research Excellence in PCOS, Monash University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia; National Health and Medical Research Council Centre for Research Excellence in PCOS, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia; Monash Centre for Health Research and Implementation, Monash Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Monash University and Monash Health, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
Fertil Steril. 2018 Aug;110(3):364-379. doi: 10.1016/j.fertnstert.2018.05.004. Epub 2018 Jul 19.
What is the recommended assessment and management of women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), based on the best available evidence, clinical expertise, and consumer preference?
International evidence-based guidelines including 166 recommendations and practice points, addressed prioritized questions to promote consistent, evidence-based care and improve the experience and health outcomes of women with PCOS.
Previous guidelines either lacked rigorous evidence-based processes, did not engage consumer and international multidisciplinary perspectives, or were outdated. Diagnosis of PCOS remains controversial and assessment and management are inconsistent. The needs of women with PCOS are not being adequately met and evidence practice gaps persist.
STUDY DESIGN, SIZE, DURATION: International evidence-based guideline development engaged professional societies and consumer organizations with multidisciplinary experts and women with PCOS directly involved at all stages. Appraisal of Guidelines for Research and Evaluation (AGREE) II-compliant processes were followed, with extensive evidence synthesis. The Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development, and Evaluation (GRADE) framework was applied across evidence quality, feasibility, acceptability, cost, implementation and ultimately recommendation strength.
PARTICIPANTS/MATERIALS, SETTING, METHODS: Governance included a six continent international advisory and a project board, five guideline development groups, and consumer and translation committees. Extensive health professional and consumer engagement informed guideline scope and priorities. Engaged international society-nominated panels included pediatrics, endocrinology, gynecology, primary care, reproductive endocrinology, obstetrics, psychiatry, psychology, dietetics, exercise physiology, public health and other experts, alongside consumers, project management, evidence synthesis, and translation experts. Thirty-seven societies and organizations covering 71 countries engaged in the process. Twenty face-to-face meetings over 15 months addressed 60 prioritized clinical questions involving 40 systematic and 20 narrative reviews. Evidence-based recommendations were developed and approved via consensus voting within the five guideline panels, modified based on international feedback and peer review, with final recommendations approved across all panels.
The evidence in the assessment and management of PCOS is generally of low to moderate quality. The guideline provides 31 evidence based recommendations, 59 clinical consensus recommendations and 76 clinical practice points all related to assessment and management of PCOS. Key changes in this guideline include: i) considerable refinement of individual diagnostic criteria with a focus on improving accuracy of diagnosis; ii) reducing unnecessary testing; iii) increasing focus on education, lifestyle modification, emotional wellbeing and quality of life; and iv) emphasizing evidence based medical therapy and cheaper and safer fertility management.
LIMITATIONS, REASONS FOR CAUTION: Overall evidence is generally low to moderate quality, requiring significantly greater research in this neglected, yet common condition, especially around refining specific diagnostic features in PCOS. Regional health system variation is acknowledged and a process for guideline and translation resource adaptation is provided.
The international guideline for the assessment and management of PCOS provides clinicians with clear advice on best practice based on the best available evidence, expert multidisciplinary input and consumer preferences. Research recommendations have been generated and a comprehensive multifaceted dissemination and translation program supports the guideline with an integrated evaluation program.
STUDY FUNDING/COMPETING INTEREST(S): The guideline was primarily funded by the Australian National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia (NHMRC) supported by a partnership with ESHRE and the American Society for Reproductive Medicine. Guideline development group members did not receive payment. Travel expenses were covered by the sponsoring organizations. Disclosures of conflicts of interest were declared at the outset and updated throughout the guideline process, aligned with NHMRC guideline processes. Full details of conflicts declared across the guideline development groups are available at https://www.monash.edu/medicine/sphpm/mchri/pcos/guideline in the Register of disclosures of interest. Of named authors, Dr Costello has declared shares in Virtus Health and past sponsorship from Merck Serono for conference presentations. Prof. Laven declared grants from Ferring, Euroscreen and personal fees from Ferring, Euroscreen, Danone and Titus Healthcare. Prof. Norman has declared a minor shareholder interest in an IVF unit. The remaining authors have no conflicts of interest to declare. The guideline was peer reviewed by special interest groups across our partner and collaborating societies and consumer organizations, was independently assessed against AGREEII criteria and underwent methodological review. This guideline was approved by all members of the guideline development groups and was submitted for final approval by the NHMRC.
基于最佳现有证据、临床专业知识和消费者偏好,推荐对患有多囊卵巢综合征(PCOS)的女性进行哪些评估和管理?
国际循证指南包括 166 条建议和实践要点,解决了优先问题,以促进一致的、基于证据的护理,并改善 PCOS 患者的体验和健康结果。
以前的指南要么缺乏严格的循证过程,要么没有涉及消费者和国际多学科观点,要么已经过时。PCOS 的诊断仍然存在争议,评估和管理也不一致。PCOS 患者的需求未得到充分满足,实践中的证据差距仍然存在。
研究设计、规模、持续时间:国际循证指南制定工作涉及专业协会和消费者组织,以及直接参与各个阶段的多学科专家和 PCOS 患者。遵循了符合评估指南研究和评价(AGREE)II 标准的流程,并进行了广泛的证据综合。应用了分级推荐、评估、制定和评价(GRADE)框架来评估证据质量、可行性、可接受性、成本、实施以及最终的推荐强度。
参与者/材料、设置、方法:治理包括一个由六个大陆的国际顾问和一个项目委员会、五个指南制定小组以及消费者和翻译委员会组成的组织。广泛的卫生专业人员和消费者参与为指南的范围和优先事项提供了信息。参与的国际社会提名小组包括儿科、内分泌学、妇科、初级保健、生殖内分泌学、产科、精神病学、心理学、营养学、运动生理学、公共卫生和其他专家,以及消费者、项目管理、证据综合和翻译专家。涵盖 71 个国家的 37 个协会和组织参与了这一过程。在 15 个月内进行了 20 次面对面会议,涉及 60 个优先临床问题,包括 40 项系统综述和 20 项叙述性综述。在五个指南小组内通过共识投票制定和批准了基于证据的建议,并根据国际反馈和同行评审进行了修改,最终建议在所有小组中获得批准。
评估和管理 PCOS 的证据总体质量较低,为低至中。该指南提供了 31 条基于证据的建议、59 条临床共识建议和 76 条临床实践要点,全部与 PCOS 的评估和管理有关。本指南的主要变化包括:i)重点是提高诊断准确性,对个体诊断标准进行了相当大的细化;ii)减少不必要的检测;iii)增加对教育、生活方式改变、情绪健康和生活质量的关注;以及 iv)强调基于证据的医学治疗和更便宜、更安全的生育管理。
局限性、谨慎的原因:总体证据质量较低,需要在这个被忽视但常见的疾病上进行更多的研究,特别是在细化 PCOS 的具体诊断特征方面。承认区域卫生系统的差异,并提供了指南和翻译资源适应的过程。
多囊卵巢综合征的国际评估和管理指南为临床医生提供了基于最佳现有证据、专家多学科意见和消费者偏好的最佳实践建议。已经提出了研究建议,并通过一个综合的多方面传播和翻译计划支持该指南,并附有一个综合的评估计划。
研究资助/利益冲突:该指南主要由澳大利亚国家健康与医学研究理事会(NHMRC)资助,与 ESHRE 和美国生殖医学学会合作。指南制定小组成员没有获得报酬。旅行费用由赞助组织承担。从一开始就公布了利益冲突的披露情况,并在整个指南制定过程中进行了更新,与 NHMRC 指南制定过程保持一致。指南制定小组中所有声明的利益冲突的详细信息都可以在 https://www.monash.edu/medicine/sphpm/mchri/pcos/guideline 中查看,注册披露的利益。在指定的作者中,Costello 博士在 Virtus Health 拥有股份,并因会议演讲获得过 Merck Serono 的赞助。Laven 教授从 Ferring、Euroscreen 获得过资助,并从 Ferring、Euroscreen、Danone 和 Titus Healthcare 获得过个人酬金。Norman 教授拥有一家 IVF 单位的少数股东权益。其余作者没有利益冲突需要披露。该指南已由我们的合作伙伴和合作协会和消费者组织的特殊利益团体进行了同行评审,并根据 AGREEII 标准进行了独立评估,并进行了方法学审查。该指南得到了指南制定小组成员的一致批准,并提交给 NHMRC 进行最终批准。