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GRADING QUALITY OF EVIDENCE THE GRADE APPROACH International Medicine 32 nd Annual Meeting, May 14 th 2009 Elie A. Akl, MD, MPH, PhD David Atkins, MD, MPH Eric Bass, MD, MPH Yngve Falck-Ytter, MD Stephanie Chang, MD, MPH 1

Grading quality of evidence the GRADE approach

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Society of General International Medicine 32 nd Annual Meeting, May 14 th 2009 Elie A. Akl, MD, MPH, PhD David Atkins, MD, MPH Eric Bass, MD, MPH Yngve Falck-Ytter, MD Stephanie Chang, MD, MPH . Grading quality of evidence the GRADE approach . Session outline. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Grading quality of evidence the GRADE approach

GRADING QUALITY OF EVIDENCETHE GRADE APPROACH

Society of General International Medicine

32nd Annual Meeting, May 14th 2009

Elie A. Akl, MD, MPH, PhD David Atkins, MD, MPHEric Bass, MD, MPH Yngve Falck-Ytter, MD Stephanie Chang, MD, MPH

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Page 2: Grading quality of evidence the GRADE approach

Session outline

Introductions, objectives (5 min)

Overview of the GRADE approach (25 min)

Applying the GRADE approach (45 min)

Wrap-up (10 min) Session evaluation (5

min)

Page 3: Grading quality of evidence the GRADE approach

Disclosure

Presenters are members of the GRADE working group and have received honoraria related to this work that were deposited into research accounts

No conflict of interest related to pharmaceutical industry

Page 4: Grading quality of evidence the GRADE approach

Objectives

Page 5: Grading quality of evidence the GRADE approach

Learning objectives

To enumerate GRADE categories for quality of evidence

To list the GRADE factors that affect the quality of evidence

To apply the GRADE approach to a specific body of evidence

To discuss the strengths and limitations of the GRADE approach

Page 6: Grading quality of evidence the GRADE approach

Overview of the GRADE approach

Page 7: Grading quality of evidence the GRADE approach

GRADE WORKING GROUP

Grades of Recommendation Assessment,

Development and Evaluation

CMAJ 2003, BMJ 2004, BMC 2004, BMC 2005, AJRCCM 2006, Chest 2006, BMJ 2008

Page 8: Grading quality of evidence the GRADE approach

“Extent to which confidence in estimate of effect adequate to support decision”

GRADE definition of Quality of Evidence

Page 9: Grading quality of evidence the GRADE approach

GRADE rating of outcomes

GRADE rates the quality of evidence for each outcome separately The type of evidence may be different

for different outcomes Different audiences are likely to have

varying perspective on the importance of outcomes

GRADE considers desirable and undesirable outcomes and rates their relative importance

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Page 10: Grading quality of evidence the GRADE approach

Desirable outcomes lower mortality reduced hospital stay reduced duration of disease reduced resource expenditure

Undesirable outcomes adverse reactions the development of resistance costs of treatment

GRADE rating of outcomes

Page 11: Grading quality of evidence the GRADE approach

2

Critical for decision making

Important, but not critical for decision making

Of lowimportance

5

6

7

8

9

3

4

1

GRADE rating of outcomes

Page 12: Grading quality of evidence the GRADE approach

Ranking outcomes by their relative importance can help to focus attention on those outcomes that are considered most important

Outcome choice should be based on what is important, and not what was measured

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GRADE rating of outcomes

Page 13: Grading quality of evidence the GRADE approach

GRADE uses a comprehensive and transparent conceptual framework for rating the quality of evidence

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Page 14: Grading quality of evidence the GRADE approach

High:

Moderate:

Low:

Very low:

GRADE levels of Evidence

Page 15: Grading quality of evidence the GRADE approach

High: considerable confidence in estimate of effect

Moderate: further research likely to have

impact on confidence in estimate, may change estimate

Low: further research is very likely to impact on confidence, likely to change the estimate

Very low: any estimate of effect is very uncertain

GRADE levels of Evidence

Page 16: Grading quality of evidence the GRADE approach

Quality starts high for evidence from RCTs

Quality starts low for evidence from observational studies

5 factors lower the quality of evidence

3 factors can increase the quality of evidence

Determinants of quality

Page 17: Grading quality of evidence the GRADE approach

Factors that lower quality1. Study limitations (in design and

execution)2. Inconsistency3. Indirectness4. Reporting bias5. Imprecision

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1. Study limitations (in design and execution)

Inappropriate randomization Lack of concealment Intention to treat principle violated Inadequate blinding Loss to follow-up Early stopping for benefit

Factors that lower quality

Page 19: Grading quality of evidence the GRADE approach

From Cates , CDSR 2008

CDSR 2008

Factors that lower quality

Page 20: Grading quality of evidence the GRADE approach

Overall judgment required

Factors that lower quality

Page 21: Grading quality of evidence the GRADE approach

2. Inconsistency Assess for inconsistency (Heterogeneity)

variation in size of effect overlap in confidence intervals statistical significance of heterogeneity I2

If inconsistency look for explanation patients, intervention, outcome, methods

If unexplained inconsistency downgrade quality

Factors that lower quality

Page 22: Grading quality of evidence the GRADE approach

Akl E, Barba M, Rohilla S, Terrenato I, Sperati F, Schünemann HJ. “Anticoagulation for the long term treatment of venous thromboembolism in patients with cancer”. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2008 Apr 16;(2):CD006650.

2. Inconsistency

Heparin or vitamin K antagonists for survival in patients with cancer:

Factors that lower quality

Page 23: Grading quality of evidence the GRADE approach

Capurso G, Schünemann HJ, Terrenato I, Moretti A, Koch M, Muti P, Capurso L, Delle Fave G. Meta-analysis: the use of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs and pancreatic cancer risk for different exposure categories.

Aliment Pharmacol Ther. 2007 Oct 15;26(8):1089-99.

2. Inconsistency

Non-steroidal drug use and risk of pancreatic cancer:

Factors that lower quality

Page 24: Grading quality of evidence the GRADE approach

3. Indirectness of Evidence Differences in populations/patients

mild versus severe COPD

Differences in interventions all inhaled steroids, new vs. old

Differences in outcomes important vs. surrogate;

Factors that lower quality

Page 25: Grading quality of evidence the GRADE approach

Alendronate

Risedronate

Placebo

3. Indirectness of Evidence indirect comparisons

interested in A versus B have A versus C and B versus C

Factors that lower quality

Page 26: Grading quality of evidence the GRADE approach

4. Publication bias

Number of small studies

Faster and multiple publication of “positive” trials

Fewer and slower publication of “negative” trials

Factors that lower quality

Page 27: Grading quality of evidence the GRADE approach

Egger M, Smith DS. BMJ 1995;310:752-54 27

I.V. Mg in acute myocardial infarctionPublication bias

Meta-analysisYusuf S.Circulation 1993

ISIS-4Lancet 1995

Page 28: Grading quality of evidence the GRADE approach

Egger M, Cochrane Colloquium Lyon 2001 28

Funnel plotS

tand

ard

Err

or

Odds ratio0.1 0.3 1 3

3

2

1

0

100.6

Symmetrical:No publication bias

Page 29: Grading quality of evidence the GRADE approach

Egger M, Cochrane Colloquium Lyon 2001 29

Funnel plotS

tand

ard

Err

or

Odds ratio0.1 0.3 1 3

3

2

1

0

100.6

Asymmetrical:Publication bias?

Page 30: Grading quality of evidence the GRADE approach

Egger M, Smith DS. BMJ 1995;310:752-54 30

I.V. Mg in acute myocardial infarctionPublication bias

Meta-analysisYusuf S.Circulation 1993

ISIS-4Lancet 1995

Page 31: Grading quality of evidence the GRADE approach

Egger M, Smith DS. BMJ 1995;310:752-54 31

Meta-analysis confirmed by mega-trials

Page 32: Grading quality of evidence the GRADE approach

5. Imprecision small sample size

small number of events

wide confidence intervals uncertainty about magnitude of effect

how to decide if CI too wide? grade down one level? grade down two levels?

Factors that lower quality

Page 33: Grading quality of evidence the GRADE approach

Factors that raise quality1. Large magnitude of effect

2. Dose response relation

3. All plausible confounding may be working to reduce the demonstrated effect or increase the effect if no effect was observed

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Page 34: Grading quality of evidence the GRADE approach

1. Large magnitude of effect large (RRR 50%) can raise by one level very large (RRR 80%) can raise by two

levels common criteria

everyone used to do badly almost everyone does well

Examples oral anticoagulation for mechanical heart

valves insulin for diabetic ketoacidosis hip replacement for severe osteoarthritis

Factors that raise quality

Page 35: Grading quality of evidence the GRADE approach

2. Dose response relation

higher INR – increased bleeding

childhood lymphoblastic leukemia risk for CNS malignancies 15 years after

cranial irradiation no radiation: 1% (95% CI 0% to 2.1%) 12 Gy: 1.6% (95% CI 0% to 3.4%) 18 Gy: 3.3% (95% CI 0.9% to 5.6%)

Factors that raise quality

Page 36: Grading quality of evidence the GRADE approach

3. All plausible confounding may be working to reduce the demonstrated effect or increase the effect if no effect was observed

Factors that raise quality

Page 37: Grading quality of evidence the GRADE approach

Example 1: higher death rates in private for-profit versus private not-for-profit hospitals

patients in the not-for-profit hospitals likely sicker than those in the for-profit hospitals

for-profit hospitals are likely to admit a larger proportion of well-insured patients than not-for-profit hospitals (and thus have more resources with a spill over effect)

Factors that raise quality

Page 38: Grading quality of evidence the GRADE approach

Example 2: hypoglycaemic drug phenformin causes lactic acidosis

The related agent metformin is under suspicion for the same toxicity.

Large observational studies have failed to demonstrate an association

Clinicians would be more alert to lactic acidosis in the presence of the agent

Factors that raise quality

Page 39: Grading quality of evidence the GRADE approach

Summary of GRADE framework for rating the quality of evidence

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Page 40: Grading quality of evidence the GRADE approach

Quality of evidence

Study design Lower if Higher if

High Randomised trial Study quality: Serious limitations Very serious limitations I mportant inconsistency Directness: Some uncertainty Major uncertainty Sparse or imprecise data High probability of reporting bias

Strong association: Strong, no plausible confounders Very strong, no major threats to validity Evidence of a Dose response gradient All plausible confounders would have reduced the eff ect

Moderate

Low Observational study

Very low

Page 41: Grading quality of evidence the GRADE approach

Evidence Profiles and Summary of Findings (SoF) Tables summarize the rating of the quality of evidence across selected outcomes

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Page 44: Grading quality of evidence the GRADE approach

Applying the GRADE approach

Exercise: parenteral anticoagulation for prolonging the survival of patients with cancer

Page 45: Grading quality of evidence the GRADE approach

Wrap-up

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Page 47: Grading quality of evidence the GRADE approach

Advantages of GRADE

Developed by a widely representative group of international guideline developers

Clear separation between quality of evidence and strength of recommendations

Explicit evaluation of the importance of outcomes

Explicit, comprehensive criteria for downgrading and upgrading quality of evidence ratings

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Page 48: Grading quality of evidence the GRADE approach

Advantages of GRADE

Transparent process of moving from evidence to recommendations

Explicit acknowledgment of values and preferences

Clear, pragmatic interpretation of strong versus weak recommendations for clinicians, patients, and policy makers

Useful for systematic reviews and health technology assessments, as well as guidelines

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Page 49: Grading quality of evidence the GRADE approach

Disadvantages of GRADE

Involves a number of judgments that might affect its reliability

Requires expertise/training

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Session evaluation

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Thank you!