by Sims, Charles R.;
Warner, Matthew A.; Stelfox, Henry Thomas; Hyder, Joseph A.
Objectives: We
examined recommendations within critical care guidelines to describe the
pairing patterns for strength of recommendation and quality of evidence. We
further identified recommendations where the reported strength of
recommendation was strong while the reported quality of evidence was not
high/moderate and then assessed whether such pairings were within five
paradigmatic situations offered by Grading of Recommendations Assessment,
Development and Evaluation methodology to justify such pairings.
Data Sources and Extraction: We identified all clinical critical care
guidelines published online from 2011 to 2017 by the Society of Critical Care
Medicine along with individual guidelines published by Surviving Sepsis Campaign,
Kidney Disease Improving Global Outcomes, American Society for Parenteral and
Enteral Nutrition, and the Infectious Disease Society of America/American
Thoracic Society.
Data Synthesis: In
all, 15 documents specifying 681 eligible recommendations demonstrated
variation in strength of recommendation (strong n = 215 [31.6%], weak n = 345
[50.7%], none n = 121 [17.8%]) and in quality of evidence (high n = 41 [6.0%],
moderate n = 151 [22.2%], low/very low n = 298 [43.8%], and Expert
Consensus/none n = 191 [28.1%]). Strength of recommendation and quality of
evidence were positively correlated (ρ = 0.66; p < 0.0001). Of 215 strong
recommendations, 69 (32.1%) were discordantly paired with evidence other than
high/moderate. Twenty-two of 69 (31.9%) involved Strong/Expert Consensus
recommendations, a category discouraged by Grading of Recommendations
Assessment, Development and Evaluation methodology. Forty-seven of 69
recommendations (68.1%) were comprised of Strong/Low or Strong/Very Low
variation requiring justification within five paradigmatic scenarios. Among
distribution in the five paradigmatic scenarios of Strong/Low and Strong/Very
Low recommendations, the most common paradigmatic scenario was life threatening
situation (n = 20/47; 42.6%). Four Strong/Low or Strong/Very Low
recommendations (4/47; 8.5%) were outside Grading of Recommendations
Assessment, Development and Evaluation methodology.
Conclusions: Among
a large, diverse assembly of critical care guideline recommendations using
Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation methodology,
the strength of evidence of a recommendation was generally associated with the
quality of evidence. However, strong recommendations were not infrequently made
in the absence of high/moderate quality of evidence. To improve clarity and
uptake, future guideline statements may specify why such pairings were made,
avoid such pairings when outside of Grading of Recommendations Assessment,
Development and Evaluation criteria, and consider separate language for Expert
Consensus recommendations (good practice statements).
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