Yaroslavtseva Olga, Gargaro Judith, Patsakos Eleni M, Nair Aishwarya, Teasell Robert, Bayley Mark T
KITE Research Institute, Toronto Rehabilitation Institute, University Health Network, 550 University Avenue, Room 11-161, Toronto, ON, M5G 2A2, Canada.
University of Toronto, 160-500 University Ave, Toronto, ON, M5G 1V7, Canada.
Biomed Eng Online. 2025 May 3;24(1):52. doi: 10.1186/s12938-025-01385-6.
Despite the proliferation of clinical research that can be used to inform Clinical Practice Guidelines there remain many areas where the number and quality of research studies vary widely. Using the Canadian Clinical Practice Guideline for Moderate-to-Severe Traumatic Brain Injury (MOD-SEV TBI) as an example, there is a lack of robust research evidence, derived from randomized controlled trials, meta-analyses, and systematic reviews to inform the recommendations. Randomized controlled trials in this field often have limitations, such as smaller sample sizes and gender and racial disparities in enrollment, that reduce the level of evidence they can provide. Notably, evidence is often lacking in the priority areas identified by people with lived experience (PWLE) and guideline end-users.
The Canadian Clinical Practice Guideline for MOD-SEV TBI rehabilitation is a Living Guideline that implemented a robust and replicable process to mitigate these issues. This process includes: 1. Identification of Priorities by PWLE of MOD-SEV TBI and Guideline End-Users; 2. Involvement of Diverse Multidisciplinary Expert Panels, Including PWLE; 3. Compilation, Review and Evaluation of Published MOD-SEV TBI Evidence; 4. Identification of Gaps in the Published Literature; 5. Formulation of Recommendations, Rigorous Grading of Available Evidence and Formal Voting; 6. Creation of Knowledge Translation and Mobilization Tools and 7. Publication of the Updated Living Guideline.
Since 2014-15, the Canadian TBI Living Guideline has implemented and refined this process to produce high-quality expert consensus-based recommendations and knowledge translation and mobilization tools across 21 comprehensive domains of TBI rehabilitation. There are 351 recommendations in the current version of the Canadian TBI Living Guideline; 68% of these are primarily consensus-based recommendations. Developing a comprehensive guideline in areas where research may not be present or strong ensures that the Guideline is comprehensive and addresses the priority needs of clinicians and PWLE.
The use of robust, transparent, and replicable evidence reviews and expert consensus building process produces clinical guidelines that are relevant and applicable even when empirical data are lacking or absent. This process of developing consensus-based recommendations can be used to develop guidelines in other content areas and populations facing similar challenges.
尽管可用于为临床实践指南提供信息的临床研究不断增多,但仍有许多领域的研究数量和质量差异很大。以加拿大《中重度创伤性脑损伤临床实践指南》(MOD-SEV TBI)为例,缺乏来自随机对照试验、荟萃分析和系统评价的有力研究证据来为指南建议提供依据。该领域的随机对照试验往往存在局限性,如样本量较小以及入组患者存在性别和种族差异,这降低了它们所能提供的证据水平。值得注意的是,在有实际经验的患者(PWLE)和指南最终用户确定的优先领域,往往缺乏证据。
加拿大《MOD-SEV TBI康复临床实践指南》是一份动态指南,实施了一个强大且可重复的流程来缓解这些问题。该流程包括:1. 由MOD-SEV TBI的有实际经验的患者和指南最终用户确定优先事项;2. 包括有实际经验的患者在内的多学科专家小组参与;3. 汇编、审查和评估已发表的MOD-SEV TBI证据;4. 确定已发表文献中的差距;5. 制定建议、对现有证据进行严格分级并进行正式投票;6. 创建知识转化和推广工具;7. 发布更新后的动态指南。
自2014 - 15年以来,加拿大创伤性脑损伤动态指南实施并完善了这一流程,以在创伤性脑损伤康复的21个综合领域中产生基于高质量专家共识的建议以及知识转化和推广工具。加拿大创伤性脑损伤动态指南的当前版本中有351条建议;其中68%主要是基于共识的建议。在可能没有研究或研究不够充分的领域制定全面的指南,可确保该指南全面且满足临床医生和有实际经验的患者的优先需求。
使用强大、透明且可重复的证据审查和专家共识建立流程,即使在缺乏实证数据的情况下,也能产生相关且适用的临床指南。这种基于共识制定建议的流程可用于为面临类似挑战的其他内容领域和人群制定指南。