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Systems for grading the quality of evidence and the strength of recommendations I: Critical appraisal of existing approaches

  • David Atkins
  • , Martin Eccles
  • , Signe Flottorp
  • , Gordon H. Guyatt
  • , David Henry
  • , Suzanne Hill
  • , Alessandro Liberati
  • , Dianne O'Connell
  • , Andrew D. Oxman
  • , Bob Phillips
  • , Holger Schünemann
  • , Tessa Tan Torres Edejer
  • , Gunn E. Vist
  • , John W. Williams
  • Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality
  • Newcastle University
  • Norwegian Hlth. Serv. Res. Centre
  • McMaster University
  • University of Newcastle
  • University of Modena and Reggio Emilia
  • Ctro. Valutazione Efficacia A.
  • Cancer Council NSW
  • University of Oxford
  • World Health Organization
  • Duke University

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1052 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background: A number of approaches have been used to grade levels of evidence and the strength of recommendations. The use of many different approaches detracts from one of the main reasons for having explicit approaches: to concisely characterise and communicate this information so that it can easily be understood and thereby help people make well-informed decisions. Our objective was to critically appraise six prominent systems for grading levels of evidence and the strength of recommendations as a basis for agreeing on characteristics of a common, sensible approach to grading levels of evidence and the strength of recommendations. Methods: Six prominent systems for grading levels of evidence and strength of recommendations were selected and someone familiar with each system prepared a description of each of these. Twelve assessors independently evaluated each system based on twelve criteria to assess the sensibility of the different approaches. Systems used by 51 organisations were compared with these six approaches. Results: There was poor agreement about the sensibility of the six systems. Only one of the systems was suitable for all four types of questions we considered (effectiveness, harm, diagnosis and prognosis). None of the systems was considered usable for all of the target groups we considered (professionals, patients and policy makers). The raters found low reproducibility of judgements made using all six systems. Systems used by 51 organisations that sponsor clinical practice guidelines included a number of minor variations of the six systems that we critically appraised. Conclusions: All of the currently used approaches to grading levels of evidence and the strength of recommendations have important shortcomings.

Original languageEnglish
Article number38
JournalBMC Health Services Research
Volume4
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 22 2004

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