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What Comparative Effectiveness Research Is Needed? A Framework for Using Guidelines and Systematic Reviews to Identify Evidence Gaps and Research Priorities

Authors :
Tianjing Li
Roberta W. Scherer
S. Swaroop Vedula
Kay Dickersin
Source :
Annals of Internal Medicine. 156:367
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
American College of Physicians, 2012.

Abstract

The authors developed and tested a framework for identifying evidence gaps and prioritizing comparative effectiveness research by using a combination of clinical practice guidelines and systematic reviews. In phase 1 of the project, reported elsewhere, 45 clinical questions on the management of primary open-angle glaucoma were derived from practice guidelines and prioritized by using a 2-round Delphi survey of clinicians. On the basis of the clinicians' responses, 9 questions were classified as high-priority. In phase 2, reported here, systematic reviews that addressed the 45 clinical questions were identified. The reviews were classified as at low, high, or unclear risk of bias, and evidence gaps (in which no systematic review was at low risk of bias) were identified. The following comparative effectiveness research agenda is proposed: Two of the 9 high-priority questions require new primary research (such as a randomized, controlled trial) and 4 require a new systematic review. The utility and limitations of the framework and future adaptations are discussed.

Details

ISSN :
00034819
Volume :
156
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Annals of Internal Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6e8393fff66f881310315a2e94a9cc4a
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.7326/0003-4819-156-5-201203060-00009