Title: Evidence-Based%20Medicine
1Evidence-Based Medicine
- Applying the Concepts to Pediatric Nutrition
Practice and Consultation
2What evidence-based medicine is
- Evidence-based medicine is the conscientious,
explicit and judicious use of current best
evidence in making decisions about the care of
individual patients. - Sacket et al. BMJ 1996
3What evidence-based medicine is
- The practice of EBM requires the integration of
- individual clinical expertise
- with the
- best available external clinical evidence from
systematic research.
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5Evidence Based Medicine is Not
- Cook-book medicine
- Cost cutting medicine
- Restricted to randomized trials and meta-analysis
6- If no randomized trials have been carried out
for our patients predicament, we follow the
trail to the next best external evidence and go
from there. -
Sacket et al. BMJ 1996
7Why EBM?
- Clinicians need information
- If asked
- we need it twice a week,
- we get it from our text books journals.
8Clinicians really need information!
- If shadowed
- they need it up to 60 times per week but only
30 of it - and that comes from passers-by
- my textbooks are out of date
- my journals too disorganized
9Medical textbooks are out-of-date
- Fail to recommend Rx up to ten years after its
been shown to be efficacious. - Continue to recommend therapy up to ten years
after its been shown to be useless.
10Three solutions
- Clinical performance can keep up to date
- by learning how to practice evidence-based
medicine ourselves. - by seeking and applying evidence-based medical
summaries generated by others. - by accepting evidence-based practice protocols
developed by our colleagues.
11Process of EBM
- Define the question
- Plan and carry out search of the literature
- Critically appraise the literature
- Apply the results to your practice
- Evaluate your performance
12Step 1 Define Question
- P - Patient and disease
- I - Intervention
- C - Comparative intervention (optional)
- O - Outcome
13Step 2 Search for Evidence
- Translate PICO Question into a searchable
question - Establish a search strategy
- key concepts
- boolean operators
- synonyms
- prioritize
- limit
14Step 2 Search for Evidence
15Step 3 Critically Appraise
- http//healthlinks.washington.edu/help/evidence/
16Step 4 Apply Results
- Within context of individual patient preferences,
values and rights
17Evidence, Values, and Resources
Values
Evidence
Resources
18The Strength of the Evidence Depends on Study
Design
19Randomized Controlled Clinical Trial
- Involves one or more test treatments and a
control treatment - Specified outcome measures for evaluating the
intervention - Bias free method for assigning treatment
20Randomized Controlled Clinical Trial
21Confounding Variable
- An extrinsic factor that is associated with the
predictor variable and a cause of the outcome
variable. - Hulley and Cummings, Designing Clinical Research
22Cohort Study
- Identification of two groups
- one received exposure of interest
- one did not receive exposure
- Follow cohort through time to observe the outcome
of interest
23Cohort Study
24Case-control Study
- Identify patients who have the outcome of
interest (cases) - Identify controls without the same outcome
- Look back to see if they had the exposure of
interest
25Case-control Study
26Cross Sectional Study
- Observation of a defined population at a single
point in time or time interval - Exposures and outcomes determined at same time
27Cross Sectional Study
28Study Design
- Cross Sectional - association
- Case Control exposure outcome
- Cohort exposure outcome
- Randomized controlled trial
29Meta-analysis
- Quantitative method of combining the results of
independent studies - synthesizing summaries and conclusions
30The Five Strengths of Evidence
- Strong Evidence from at least one systematic
review of multiple well-designed RCT - Strong evidence of at least one well designed RCT
of appropriate size - Evidence from well designed trials without
randomization, single group pre-post, cohort,
time series or matched case control - Evidence from well designed non-experimental
studies from more than one research group - Opinions of respected authorities based on
clinical evidence, descriptive studies or reports
of expert committees
31Barriers and BridgesHaynes and Haines, BMJ 1998
- Preliminary studies far outnumber definitive
ones, and all compete in the medical literature
for the attention of readers. - Models for critically appraising evidence have
been developed, but applying these is time
consuming.
32EBM Review Example
- A Systematic review of nonpharmacological and
nonsurgical therapies for gastroesphageal reflux
in infants. Carroll et al. Arch Ped Adol Med.
Feb 2002156109.
33Step 1 Define Question
- P - Patient and disease
- I - Intervention
- C - Comparative intervention (optional)
- O - Outcome
34P Patient and Disease
- Patient infants
- Disease GERD
35I. Intervention (s)
- Placement upright in an infant seat
- Elevating the Head
- Pacifier Use
- Thickening food with rice flour
- Thickening food with carob bean gum preparation
- Changing composition of Formula
- Changing caloric density or osmolality
36C. Comparative Intervention
- Carob bean gum compared to rice flour
37O. Outcome
- Effect on reflux
- Included
- reflux duration (pH probe)
- reflux frequency (pH probe)
- clinical score
- emesis
38Search for Evidence
- Medline, EMBASE, Cochrane, others
- search terms gastroesophageal reflux disease and
infants (gt2500 articles) - excluded non-clinical trials, drug or surgical
therapy included, study included infants with
compound medical problems/prematurity - 10 RCT met selection criteria
39Critically appraise the literature
ExampleThickening with rice flour/cereal - 2
studies
- Study one 52 infants randomly received apple
juice or apple juice with rice flour, placed in
one of 4 positions, monitored with pH probe for 2
hours. No differences except that more reflux
with 30o elevation and rice flour.
40- Study 2. 20 infants with paired feeding
crossover design given formula with and without
rice cereal thickening and monitored via
technetium scintigraphy. No differences on
reflux, but decrease in frank emesis.
41Apply results
- Many conservative measures commonly used to
treat GERD in infants have no proven efficacy.
42Medline
- http//www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?dbP
ubMed - Under Limits can select
- Review
- Meta-analysis
- Practice Guidelines
- Randomized Controlled trial
43Cochran Database of Systematic Reviews
- http//www.cochranelibrary.com/enter Can search
and review abstracts for free - Full text requires subscription
44National Guidelines Clearing House
45Haynes Haines, BMJ 1998