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Evidence - based medicine

Evidence - based medicine. Course: Research in Biomedicine and Health III Seminar 2: Asking a question. What is EBM in practice ?. EBM steps Step 1: Formulating questions that can be answered Step 2: Finding best evidence Step 3: Quick critical assessment of the evidence

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Evidence - based medicine

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  1. Evidence-based medicine Course: Research in Biomedicine and Health III Seminar 2: Asking a question

  2. What is EBM inpractice? • EBM steps • Step 1: Formulating questions that can be answered • Step 2: Finding best evidence • Step 3: Quick critical assessment of the evidence • Step 4: Applying evidence • Step 5: Assessing effectiveness and efficiency of the process

  3. How to ask a clinical question? “PICOT” model: Patient (For which patient, population or problem you need information?) Intervention/indicator (What is the intervention you are studying?) Comparison/control (Which is the alternative treatment?) Outcome (What is the effect of the intervention?) • Type of study • (Which is the optimal study design ?) What is the study design? What is the comparison? Who is treated? What is given as a treatment? What outcome is of interest to us?

  4. Clinical questions and study design

  5. I intervention C Comparison (not always) Be precise! P Patient, problem T Type of study O Outcome Kew words for database search

  6. Aimofsteps 1. i 2. : find “pearls”

  7. Examples of clinical questions • What is causing migraine? • How often a 40 year-old women needs to go to mammography? • What is the efficacy and safety of early and long-term use of clopidogrel and aspirin compared to aspirin alone in patients with acute coronary syndrome without ST-segment increase? • In patients with mechanical ventilation longer than 48 hours, is oral decontamination with chlorchexidine (CHX) or CHX + colistine useful in decreasing the risk of pneumonia related to ventilation?

  8. Examples of clinical questions How to treat a disease or condition? Intervention Ethiology and risk factors What is causing the problem? How common is the problem? Prevalence Has this patient a problem? Diagnosis Who will have a problem? Prognosis and prediction What is the problem? Phenomenon

  9. Interventions • Interventions cover a wide spectrum of activities - from medications and other clinical therapeutics to change in life habits (exercise, smoking cessation) and social activities (education programmes). • Interventions may include patient care for a single patient but also public health activities.

  10. Intervention – example 28 year-old man suffers from furunculosis in the last 8 months. These episodes are treated by drainage and 2 different atibiotics, but the disease relapses. The patient asks if the relapses can be prevented. Patient with recurring furunculosis Prophylactic antibiotics No treatment Decrease in relapse of furunculosis Q: In patients with recurring furunculosis, can prophylactic antibiotic therapy in comparison to no treatment decrease the incidence of recurring episodes?

  11. Interventionn – example 2 • Reading a medical journal, you find an article about imiquimode cream for the treament of basal cell carcinoma. The notion of a cream as cancer therapy sounds surprising, so you wonder about its efficacy, especially in regard to long-term cure rate. Patient with basal cell carcinoma Imiquimode cream Active placebo – standard/gold therapy Increase in long-term cure rate with the cream Q: In patients with basal cell carcinoma, can im iquimode cream , in comparison to standad surgical intervention, increase the long-term cure rate in these patients?

  12. Ethiology and risk factors • Questions about ethiology and risk factors are questions about what causes a disease or health condition. • Harmful outcomes of activities or exposures • Common in public health: • Can intake of certain food increase risk of cardiovascular disease? • Can exposure to infrared waves increase risk of cancer?

  13. Ethiology – Example Jane is expecting her first baby in two months. She read about the benefits and harms of injections of vitamin K to newborns. She is scared by the reports of increased risk of childhood leukemia in babies administered vit. K injections. She asks you if this is true and what the risk is for her baby. Newborn Vitamin K injection No vitamin K injection Childhood leukemia Q: In newborns, does the administration of vit. K injection increase the risk of childhood leukemia?

  14. Prevalence • Questions about how many people have a diseases or health condition. • Examples: • What is the prevalence of hearing problems in newborns? • What is the prevalence of Alzheimer’s disease in the population older than 70?

  15. Prevalence – example Maria is a 6-month baby coming to her regular check up. She was born prematurely, at the gestational age of 35 months. You want to warn the parents about the odds that Maria may have hearing problems. Infant Premature birth Term birth Deafness Q: In preterm infants, in comparison to term babies, what is the prevalence of deafness?

  16. Diagnosis • Questions about: • How accurate are diagnostic tests in different patient groups. • How accurate are diagnostic tests in comparison to other tests.

  17. Diagnosis – example Clara is pregnant for the second time. She had her first baby when she was 30 and had amniocentesis to exclude Down’s syndrome. The test was negative, but she was not satisfied because she got results in the 18th pregnancy week. She is now 35 and asks if there is a test with a quicker answer. Your hospital has biochemical test of serum markers and ultrasound of nuchal folds in the first trimester, but you want the check if the test is sensitive and specific enough in comparison to amniocentesis. Pregnant women Serum markers biochemistry +US of nuchal folds Amniocentesis Correct diagnosis (specificity and sensitivity) of Down’s syndrome Q: In pregnant women, is nuchal fold US + serum markers test equaly correct as amniocentesisin diagnosing Down’s syndrome?

  18. Prognosis • What are the odds for an outcome for a population with certain characteristics (risk factors)? • What are the odds that a man who feels atypical chest pain develops heart failure? • What is predicted mortality and morbidity for a person who is diagnosed with colon cancer?

  19. Prognosis – example Clonic seizures in childhood are common and disturbing for parents, but the decision to start prophylactic therapy after the first attack is difficult. To help parents make a decision, you have to explain them the risk of new attacks after the first clonic seizure of undeterminedcause. Children A clonic attack of undetermined cause No attack Future attacks Q: In children with a single clonic attack of undetermined origin, in comparison to children without attacks, what is the risk of future clonic seizures?

  20. Clinical questions and study design • For each type of clinical question there are study designs that provide best evidence for the question. • These are always study designs that have a maximum decrease in bias .

  21. Clinicalquestionsandstudydesign

  22. Design Observational Experimental Randomized control No control Cohort Non-randomized control Case-control Single blind Open Increasing validity of evidence for conclusions on cause and consequence Doubleblind

  23. Importanceofchoosingrightoutcomes Examples of disbalance between surogate and relevant outcomes:

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