Department of Clinical Sciences, College of Veterinary Medicine, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, USA.
VCA Canada Central Victoria Veterinary Hospital, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada.
J Vet Emerg Crit Care (San Antonio). 2024 Jul-Aug;34 Suppl 1:3-15. doi: 10.1111/vec.13388.
To describe the methodology used by the Reassessment Campaign on Veterinary Resuscitation (RECOVER) to re-evaluate the scientific evidence relevant to CPR in small and large animals, to newborn resuscitation, and to first aid and to formulate the respective consensus-based clinical guidelines.
This report describes the evidence-to-guidelines process employed by RECOVER that is based on the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development, and Evaluation (GRADE) approach and includes Information Specialist-driven systematic literature search, evidence evaluation conducted by more than 200 veterinary professionals, and provision of clinical guidelines in the domains of Preparedness and Prevention, Basic Life Support, Advanced Life Support, Post-cardiac Arrest Care, Newborn Resuscitation, First Aid, and Large Animal CPR.
Transdisciplinary, international collaboration in academia, referral practice, and general practice.
For this update to the RECOVER 2012 CPR guidelines, we answered 135 Population, Intervention, Comparator, and Outcome (PICO) questions with the help of a team of Domain Chairs, Information Specialists, and more than 200 Evidence Evaluators. Most primary contributors were veterinary specialists or veterinary technician specialists. The RECOVER 2024 Guidelines represent the first veterinary application of the GRADE approach to clinical guideline development. We employed an iterative process that follows a predefined sequence of steps designed to reduce bias of Evidence Evaluators and to increase the repeatability of the quality of evidence assessments and ultimately the treatment recommendations. The process also allowed numerous important knowledge gaps to emerge that form the foundation for prioritizing research efforts in veterinary resuscitation science.
Large collaborative, volunteer-based development of evidence- and consensus-based clinical guidelines is challenging and complex but feasible. The experience gained will help refine the process for future veterinary guidelines initiatives.
描述兽医复苏重新评估活动(RECOVER)用于重新评估与小动物、新生儿复苏以及急救中的 CPR 相关的科学证据的方法,并制定基于共识的临床指南。
本报告描述了 RECOVER 使用的证据到指南的过程,该过程基于推荐评估、制定和评估(GRADE)方法,包括信息专家驱动的系统文献搜索、由 200 多名兽医专业人员进行的证据评估,以及在准备和预防、基本生命支持、高级生命支持、心脏骤停后护理、新生儿复苏、急救和大型动物 CPR 领域提供临床指南。
跨学科的学术、转诊实践和一般实践中的国际合作。
对于这个更新的 RECOVER 2012 CPR 指南,我们在 135 个人群、干预、比较和结果(PICO)问题上得到了帮助,这些问题是由一组领域主席、信息专家和 200 多名证据评估者共同完成的。大多数主要贡献者是兽医专家或兽医技师专家。RECOVER 2024 指南代表了 GRADE 方法在兽医临床指南制定中的首次应用。我们采用了迭代过程,遵循预定义的步骤序列,旨在减少证据评估员的偏差,并提高证据评估质量和最终治疗建议的可重复性。该过程还揭示了许多重要的知识差距,为优先考虑兽医复苏科学的研究工作奠定了基础。
大型合作、基于志愿者的循证和共识临床指南的制定具有挑战性和复杂性,但却是可行的。所获得的经验将有助于完善未来兽医指南计划的流程。