Amélie Lambert-Hoffert, Vincent Tarazona, Tesnim Ben Romdhane, Ruud G. Nijman, Remy Boussageon, Jérémie F. Cohen, Mathilde Francois
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background
Clinical practice guidelines (CPGs) for managing acute otitis media (AOM) have heterogeneous treatment recommendations. We hypothesized that this variability may be due to differences in the evidence cited to support the recommendations, and we first wanted to investigate whether this difference existed.
Objective
To analyze the studies on which different national and international CPGs are based regarding the indication for antibiotic therapy in patients with AOM.
Methods
We included and analysed European and North American CPGs for the management of AOM. For each CPG, we identified the studies cited to justify antimicrobial prescribing. For each individual study, we extracted the main study features, including the study design, and its publication date. Two independent reviewers carried out study selection and data extraction.
Results
A total of 15 CPGs for AOM were included. In total, 76 different studies were cited to justify antimicrobial prescribing (median of 8 studies cited, range 1–23). Among these studies, randomized controlled trials were the most frequent (19/76, 25%), followed by systematic reviews with meta-analysis (16/76, 21%). Some CPGs (5/15, 33%) cited more than two systematic reviews with meta-analysis; two CPGs cited no systematic review (with or without meta-analysis). Most studies (53/76, 69%) were cited by only one of the 15 CPGs.
Conclusions
In this review of CPGs, we found considerable variability in the quantity and type of studies cited to justify the recommendation to use antibiotics in AOM. These findings question one of the core principles of evidence-based medicine and its application to everyday clinical practice.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice aims to promote the evaluation and development of clinical practice across medicine, nursing and the allied health professions. All aspects of health services research and public health policy analysis and debate are of interest to the Journal whether studied from a population-based or individual patient-centred perspective. Of particular interest to the Journal are submissions on all aspects of clinical effectiveness and efficiency including evidence-based medicine, clinical practice guidelines, clinical decision making, clinical services organisation, implementation and delivery, health economic evaluation, health process and outcome measurement and new or improved methods (conceptual and statistical) for systematic inquiry into clinical practice. Papers may take a classical quantitative or qualitative approach to investigation (or may utilise both techniques) or may take the form of learned essays, structured/systematic reviews and critiques.