Evidence-based medicine: Difference between revisions
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===Acquisition of evidence=== | ===Acquisition of evidence=== | ||
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''The 5 S search strategy'' | ''The 5 S search strategy'' | ||
'''Studies''': original research studies than can be found using search engine like PubMed. | '''Studies''': original research studies than can be found using search engine like PubMed. | ||
''' | '''Synthesis''': systematic reviews or Cochrane Reviews. | ||
'''Synopses''': in evidence-based journals, ACP Journal club etc, these give brief descriptions of original articles and reviews as they appear . | '''Synopses''': in evidence-based journals, ACP Journal club etc, these give brief descriptions of original articles and reviews as they appear . | ||
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'''Summaries''': as published in evidence-based textbooks, these integrate the best available evidence from lower layers (syntheses) to provide a full range of evidence-based management options for a health problem. | '''Summaries''': as published in evidence-based textbooks, these integrate the best available evidence from lower layers (syntheses) to provide a full range of evidence-based management options for a health problem. | ||
'''Systems''': e.g. computerized decision support systems that link individual patient characteristics to relevant evidence. | '''Systems''': e.g. computerized decision support systems that link individual patient characteristics to relevant evidence.|} | ||
The ability to "'''acquire'''" evidence in a timely manner may improve healthcare.<ref name="pmid17971885">{{cite journal |author=Banks DE ''et al.'' |title=Decreased hospital length of stay associated with presentation of cases at morning report with librarian support |journal=Journal of the Medical Library Association : JMLA |volume=95 |pages=381–7 |year=2007 |pmid=17971885 |doi=10.3163/1536-5050.95.4.381 |issn=}}</ref> Unfortunately, doctors may be led astray when acquiring information if they do not systematically review all available evidence, because individual trials may be flawed or their outcomes may not be fully representative.<ref name="pmid16929042">{{cite journal |author=McKibbon KA, Fridsma DB |title=Effectiveness of clinician-selected electronic information resources for answering primary care physicians' information needs |journal=Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association : JAMIA |volume=13 |pages=653–9 |year=2006 |pmid=16929042 |doi=10.1197/jamia.M2087}}</ref> | |||
One proposed structure for a comprehensive evidence search is the 5S search strategy,<ref name="pmid17080967">{{cite journal |author=Haynes RB |title=Of studies, syntheses, synopses, summaries, and systems: the "5S" evolution of information services for evidence-based health care decisions |journal=ACP J Club |volume=145 |pages=A8 |year=2006 |pmid=17080967 |doi=}}</ref> which starts with the search of "summaries" (textbooks). <ref name="pmid17082828">{{cite journal |author=Patel MR ''et al.'' |title=Randomized trial for answers to clinical questions: evaluating a pre-appraised versus a [[MEDLINE]] search protocol |journal= JMLA |volume=94 |pages=382–7 |year=2006 |pmid=17082828 |doi=}}</ref> | |||
===Appraisal of evidence=== | ===Appraisal of evidence=== |
Revision as of 12:57, 21 November 2007
Evidence-based medicine is "the conscientious, explicit and judicious use of current best evidence in making decisions about the care of individual patients.".[1] Alternative definitions are "the process of systematically finding, appraising, and using contemporaneous research findings as the basis for clinical decisions"[2] or "evidence-based medicine (EBM) requires the integration of the best research evidence with our clinical expertise and our patient's unique values and circumstances."[3] Better known as EBM, evidence based medicine emerged in the early 1990's to help healthcare providers and policy makers evaluate the efficacy of different treatments.
Evidence-based practice is not restricted to medicine; dentistry, nursing and other allied health science are adopting "evidence-based medicine" as well as alternative medical approaches, such as acupuncture[4][5]. Evidence-Based Health Care or evidence-based practice extends the concept of EBM to all health professions, including management[6][7] and policy[8][9][10].
Classification
Two types of evidence-based medicine have been proposed.[11] Evidence-based guidelines is EBM at the organizational or institutional level, and involves producing guidelines, policy, and regulations. Evidence-based individual decision making is EBM as practiced by an individual health care provider when treating an individual patient. There is concern that evidence-based medicine focuses excessively on the physician-patient dyad and as a result missing many opportunities to improve healthcare.[11]
Why do we need EBM?
It is easy to assume that physicians always use scientific evidence conscientiously and judiciously in treating patients. In fact, most of the specific practices of physicians and surgeons are based on traditional techniques learned from their mentors in the care of patients during training. Additional modifications come from personal clinical experience, from information in the medical literature and continuing education courses. Although these practices almost always have a rational basis in biology, the actual efficacy of treatments is rarely tested by experimental trials in people. Further, even when the results of experimental trials or other evidence have been reported, there is a lag time between the acceptance of changes to medical practice and establishing them as routine in clinical care. EBM seeks to address these issues by promoting practices that have been shown to have validity using the scientific method.
Steps in EBM
Ask
"Ask" - Formulate a well-structured clinical question, i.e. one that is directly relevant to the identified problem, and which is constructed in a way that facilitates searching for an answer. The question should have four elements: the patient or problem; the medical intervention or exposure (e.g., a cause for a disease); the comparison intervention or exposure; and the clinical outcomes. The better focused the question is, the more relevant and specific the search for evidence will be.
Acquisition of evidence
The 5 S search strategy Studies: original research studies than can be found using search engine like PubMed. Synthesis: systematic reviews or Cochrane Reviews. Synopses: in evidence-based journals, ACP Journal club etc, these give brief descriptions of original articles and reviews as they appear . Summaries: as published in evidence-based textbooks, these integrate the best available evidence from lower layers (syntheses) to provide a full range of evidence-based management options for a health problem. Systems: e.g. computerized decision support systems that link individual patient characteristics to relevant evidence.|} The ability to "acquire" evidence in a timely manner may improve healthcare.[12] Unfortunately, doctors may be led astray when acquiring information if they do not systematically review all available evidence, because individual trials may be flawed or their outcomes may not be fully representative.[13] One proposed structure for a comprehensive evidence search is the 5S search strategy,[14] which starts with the search of "summaries" (textbooks). [15] Appraisal of evidence
Complicating the appraisal process further, many (if not all) studies contain potential flaws in their design, and even when there are no clear methodological flaws, any outcome of a test that is evaluated by statistical test has a margin of error: this means that some positive outcomes will be "false positives". Publication bias In performing a meta-analyses, a file drawer[24] or a funnel plot analysis[25][26] may help detect underlying publication bias among the studies in the meta-analysis. Conflict of interest The presence of a conflict of interest has many effects in medical publishing. See Medical ethics: conflict of interests for more information. Statistical analysis The outcome of a trial or study is often summarised by calculation of a "P-value" that expresses the likelihood that an observed difference between treatment groups reflects a true difference in treatment effectiveness; the P value is a statistical calculation of the chance that the observed apparent difference reflects the chance outcome of random sampling. Some have argued that focussing on P values neglects other important sources of knowledge and information that should properly be used to assess the likely efficacy of a treatment [28] In particular, some argue that the P-value should be interpreted in light of how plausible is the hypothesis based on the totality of prior research and physiologic knowledge.[29][28][30] ApplicationIt is important to "apply" the best practices found to the correct situation. One of the common problems in applying evidence are difficulties with numeracy. Both patients and healthcare professionals have difficulties with health numeracy and probabilistic reasoning.[31] A second problem is to recognise the patient population that will benefit from the new practices. Extrapolating study results to the wrong patient populations (over-generalization)[32][33][34] and not applying study results to the correct population (under-utilization)[35][36] can both increase adverse outcomes. The problem in over-generalization of study results may be more common among specialist physicians.[37] Two studies found specialists were more likely to adopt cyclooxygenase 2 inhibitor drugs before the drug rofecoxib was withdrawn by its manufacturers after it emerged that its use had unanticipated adverse effects [38][39]. One of the studies went on to state:
Similarly, orthopedists provide more expensive care for back pain, but without measurably increased benefit compared to other types of practitioners.[40] Some of the reason that subspecialists may be more likely to adopt inadequately studied innovations is that they read from a spectrum of journals that have less consistent quality.[41] The problem of under-utilizing study results may be more common when physicians are practicing outside of their expertise. For example, specialist physicians are less likely to under-utilize specialty care[42][43], while primary care physicians are less likely to under-utilize preventive care[44][45]. Metrics used in EBMDiagnosis
InterventionsRelative measures
Absolute measures
Health policy
Experimental trials: producing the evidence
"A clinical trial is defined as a prospective scientific experiment that involves human subjects in whom treatment is initiated for the evaluation of a therapeutic intervention. In a randomized controlled clinical trial, each patient is assigned to receive a specific treatment intervention by a chance mechanism."[49] The theory behind these trials is that the value of a treatment will be shown in an objective way, and, though usually unstated, there is an assumption that the results of the trial will be applicable to the care of patients who have the condition that was treated. The best evidence is thought to come from large multicentre clinical trials that are randomised and placebo-controlled, and which are conducted double-blind according to a predetermined schedule that is strictly adhered to. Trials should be large, so that serious adverse events might be detected even when they occur rarely. Multi-centre trials minimise problems that can arise when a single geographical locus has a population that is not fully representative of the global population, and they can minimise the effect of geographical variations in environment and health care delivery. Randomisation (if the study population is large enough) should mean that the study groups are unbiased. A double-blind trial is one in which neither the patient nor the deliverer of the treatment is aware of the nature of the treatment offered to any particular individual, and this avoids bias caused by the expectations of either the doctor or the patient. Placebo controls are important, because the placebo effect can often be very strong. However such trials are very expensive, difficult to co-ordinate properly, and are often impractical to design optimally. For example, for many types of medical intervention, no satisfactory placebo treatment is possible. For several medical interventions, the use of a placebo, although feasible, is considered unethical (see section on Unethical use of placebos). Sackett, one of the founders of EBM, recognized that large-scale trials were not conducted for many conditions (see section below), and that it might not be possible to conduct them. Underlining the difficulty in extrapolating from large trials, Sackett proposed the use of N of 1 randomized controlled trials (also called single-subject randomized trials). In these, the patient is both the treatment group and the placebo group, but at different times. Blinding must be done with the collaboration of the pharmacist, and treatment effects must appear and dissapear quickly following introduction and cessation of the therapy. This type of trial can be performed for many chronic, stable conditions.[50] The individualized nature of the single-subject randomized trial, and the fact that it often requires the active participation of the patient (questionnaires, diaries), appeals to the patient and promotes better insight and self-management[51][52] as well as patient safety,[53] in a cost-effective manner. Summarizing the evidenceSystematic reviewA systematic review is a summary of healthcare research that involves a thorough literature search and critical appraisal of individual studies to identify the valid and applicable evidence. It often, but not always, uses appropriate techniques (meta-analysis) to combine these valid studies, and may grade the quality of the particular pieces of evidence according to the methodology used, and according to strengths or weaknesses of thstudy design. While many systematic reviews are based on an explicit quantitative meta-analysis of available data, there are also qualitative reviews which nonetheless adhere to the standards for gathering, analyzing and reporting evidence. Clinical practice guidelinesClinical practice guidelines are defined as "Directions or principles presenting current or future rules of policy for assisting health care practitioners in patient care decisions regarding diagnosis, therapy, or related clinical circumstances. The guidelines may be developed by government agencies at any level, institutions, professional societies, governing boards, or by the convening of expert panels. The guidelines form a basis for the evaluation of all aspects of health care and delivery."[54] Incorporating evidence into clinical careMedical informaticsPracticing clinicians cite the lack of time for keeping up with emerging medical evidence that may change clinical practice.[55] Medical informatics is an essential adjunct to EBM, and focuses on creating tools to access and apply the best evidence for making decisions about patient care.[3] Before practicing EBM, informaticians (or informationists) must be familiar with medical journals, literature databases, medical textbooks, practice guidelines, and the growing number of other dedicated evidence-based resources, like the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews and Clinical Evidence.[55] Similarly, for practicing medical informatics properly, it is essential to have an understanding of EBM, including the ability to phrase an answerable question, locate and retrieve the best evidence, and critically appraise and apply it.[56][57] Teaching evidence-based medicine
Criticisms of EBMThere are a number of criticisms of EBM.[58][59] Most generally, EBM has been criticized as an attempt to define knowledge in medicine in the same way that was done unsuccessfully by the logical positivists in epistemology, "trying to establish a secure foundation for scientific knowledge based only on observed facts".[60]A general problem with EBM is that it seeks to make recommendations for treatment that (on balance) are likely to provide the best treatment for most patients. However what is the best treatment for most patients is not necessarily the best treatment for a particular individual patient. The causes of disease, and the patient responses to treatment all vary considerably, and are affected for example by the individual's genetic make-up, their particular history, and by factors of individual lifestyle. To take these properly into account requires the clinical experience of the treating physician, and over-reliance upon recommendations based upon statistical outcomes of treatments given in a standardised way to large populations may not always lead to the best care for a particular individual. Unethical use of placebosIdeally, the effectiveness of any medical treatment should be compared with that of a placebo in a double-blind trial, where neither the patient nor the doctor is aware of whether the treatment administered is an active treatment or an inert placebo. Placebo controls are thought to be important because of the considerable "power of suggestion". However, as stated in The Declaration of Helsinki by the World Medical Association it is unethical to give any patient a placebo treatment if an existing treatment option is known to be beneficial.[61][62] Many scientists and ethicists consider that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, by demanding placebo-controlled trials, encourages the systematic violation of the Declaration of Helsinki.[63] The use of placebo controls remains a convenient way to avoid direct comparisons with a competing drug. As EBM evolves, appropriate use of placebo is being revised.[64][65] When guidelines suggest a placebo is an unethical control, then an "active-control noninferiority trial" may be used.[66] To establish non-inferiority, the following three conditions should be - but frequently are not - established:[66]
Lack of randomized controlled trialsRandomized controlled trials are available to support 21%[67] to 53%[68] of principle therapeutic decisions.[69] Due to this, evidence-based medicine has evolved to accept lesser levels of evidence when randomized controlled trials are not available.[70] Ulterior motivesAn early criticism of EBM is that it will be a guise for rationing resources or other goals that are not in the interest of the patient.[71][72] In 1994, the American Medical Association helped introduce the "Patient Protection Act" in Congress to reduce the power of insurers to use guidelines to deny payment for a medical services.[73] As a possible example, Milliman Care Guidelines state they produce "evidence-based clinical guidelines since 1990".[74] In 2000, an academic pediatrician sued Milliman for using his name as an author on a practice guidelines that he stated were "dangerous" [75][76][77] A similar suit disputing the origin of care decisions at Kaiser has been filed.[78] The outcomes of both suits are not known. Conversely, clinical practice guidelines by the Infectious Disease Society of America are being investigated by Connecticut's attorney general on grounds that the guidelines, which do not recognize a chronic form of Lyme disease, are anticompetitive.[79][80] EBM not recognizing the limits of clinical epidemiologyEBM is a set of techniques derived from clinical epidemiology, but a common criticism of epidemiology is that it can show association, but not causation. While clinical epidemiology has its role in inspiring clinical decisions, if it is complemented with testable hypotheses on disease,[81] many critics consider that EBM is a form of clinical epidemiology which became so prevalent in health care systems, and imposed such an empiricist bias on medical research, that it has undermined the very notion of causal inference in clinical practice.[82] It is argued that it has even become condemnable to use common sense,[83] as was cleverly illustrated in a systematic review of randomized controlled trials studying the effects of parachutes against gravitational challenges (free falls).[84] Fallibility of knowledgeEBM has been criticized on epistemologic grounds as "trying to establish a secure foundation for scientific knowledge based only on observed facts"[60] and not recognizing the fallible nature[85] of knowledge in general. The inevitable failure of reliance on empiric evidence as a foundation for knowledge was recognized over 100 years ago and is known as the "Problem of Induction" or "Hume's Problem".[86] Complexity theory References
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