christopher eccleston centre for pain research the university of bath [email protected]

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Christopher Eccleston Centre for Pain Research The University of Bath [email protected]

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Page 1: Christopher Eccleston Centre for Pain Research The University of Bath c.eccleston@bath.ac.uk

Christopher Eccleston

Centre for Pain Research

The University of Bath

[email protected]

Page 2: Christopher Eccleston Centre for Pain Research The University of Bath c.eccleston@bath.ac.uk

Order of service

• Cochrane Collaboration• Methods• Communication• Methods Development• Other

Page 3: Christopher Eccleston Centre for Pain Research The University of Bath c.eccleston@bath.ac.uk

Cochrane Collaboration

• Founded in 1993 Iain Chalmers• Following Archie Cochrane• Principles of Evidence for all• 52 CRGs• Centres & Fields• Volunteer• Consumerist• Quality• Control over Bias• Living Library

Page 4: Christopher Eccleston Centre for Pain Research The University of Bath c.eccleston@bath.ac.uk

Cochrane Collaboration Review GroupPain, Palliative & Supportive Care

PaPaS

• http://papas.cochrane.org

• Established in 1998• Based in Oxford• Updates 2 years• Cochrane Database

Systematic Reviews• The Cochrane Library• Field Editors

Page 5: Christopher Eccleston Centre for Pain Research The University of Bath c.eccleston@bath.ac.uk

Current Status• Editorial Board

– Mike Bennett– Andrew Moore– Tim Steiner– Amanda Williams– Acute Pain Vacancy

• Title to Protocol to review

• 120 reviews• 70 protocols and titles• 2 overviews• IASP SIG Systematic Reviews• ACTINPAIN Writing Group

Page 6: Christopher Eccleston Centre for Pain Research The University of Bath c.eccleston@bath.ac.uk

Quality improvement (Actinpain)

hssce
add moore et al back pain and methods topical review in pain with sebastian straube
Page 7: Christopher Eccleston Centre for Pain Research The University of Bath c.eccleston@bath.ac.uk

Methods• Guidance?• Common Methods• RevMan (free)• Supported (Title Reg)• Professional Searching• Published Protocols• International (not English)• Meta-analysis• Bias Control• Communication

www.cochrane-handbook.org/

Page 8: Christopher Eccleston Centre for Pain Research The University of Bath c.eccleston@bath.ac.uk

Features

• Standard description of condition/intervention

• Full description of studies (Tables)

• Assessment of heterogeneity– Clinical pooling like with unlike– Statistical (small n)

• Sub-group analyses– (dose)

Page 9: Christopher Eccleston Centre for Pain Research The University of Bath c.eccleston@bath.ac.uk

Meta-analysis +

• Effect sizes• Forest plots• Assumptions

– Fixed effects• Assume variation is

sampling error

• Violations– Heterogeneity– Small n

• Junk in Junk out– Quality of primary

Page 10: Christopher Eccleston Centre for Pain Research The University of Bath c.eccleston@bath.ac.uk

Communication

• Abstracting

• Plain Language Summary

• Risk of Bias Tool

• Summary of Findings

• Podcast

• Journal Club

• PICO

Page 11: Christopher Eccleston Centre for Pain Research The University of Bath c.eccleston@bath.ac.uk

Risk of Bias

Page 12: Christopher Eccleston Centre for Pain Research The University of Bath c.eccleston@bath.ac.uk

Summary of Findings

Guyatt GH, Oxman AD, Vist GE, Kunz R, Falck-Ytter Y, Alonso-Coello P, Schünemann HJ; GRADE Working Group. GRADE: an emerging consensus on rating quality of evidence and strength of recommendations. BMJ. 2008 Apr 26;336(7650):924-6.

Page 13: Christopher Eccleston Centre for Pain Research The University of Bath c.eccleston@bath.ac.uk

The GRADE system classifies the quality of evidence in one of four grades:

GRADE DEFINITION

High

⊕⊕⊕⊕Further research is very unlikely to change our confidence in the estimate of effect.

Moderate

⊕⊕⊕

Further research is likely to have an important impact on our confidence in the estimate of effect and may change the estimate.

Low

⊕⊕

Further research is very likely to have an important impact on our confidence in the estimate of effect and is likely to change the estimate.

Very Low

Any estimate of effect is very uncertain.

Page 14: Christopher Eccleston Centre for Pain Research The University of Bath c.eccleston@bath.ac.uk

Journal Club

Page 15: Christopher Eccleston Centre for Pain Research The University of Bath c.eccleston@bath.ac.uk
Page 16: Christopher Eccleston Centre for Pain Research The University of Bath c.eccleston@bath.ac.uk

Methods 1: Outcomes

• Use outcomes (IMMPACT) chronic• Pain reduction: 30% moderate, 50% Good• Other

– Time to re-medication– non-pain outcomes

• Not recommended– Odds ratios– Analgesic consumption

• No use of group means– Pain relief has a U shaped distribution– Response analysis on dichotomous data

• Adverse events

Page 17: Christopher Eccleston Centre for Pain Research The University of Bath c.eccleston@bath.ac.uk

Core outcomes

Page 18: Christopher Eccleston Centre for Pain Research The University of Bath c.eccleston@bath.ac.uk

Methods 2: ROB

• Use of quality rating scales?

• Jadad scale• Non-pharmacological

interventions?

Page 19: Christopher Eccleston Centre for Pain Research The University of Bath c.eccleston@bath.ac.uk

PaPaS RAG

Page 20: Christopher Eccleston Centre for Pain Research The University of Bath c.eccleston@bath.ac.uk

Methods 3: GRADE

Page 21: Christopher Eccleston Centre for Pain Research The University of Bath c.eccleston@bath.ac.uk

Alternative?

Page 22: Christopher Eccleston Centre for Pain Research The University of Bath c.eccleston@bath.ac.uk

Methods 4: NNT

• Inverse of the absolute risk• Benefits

– Easier to understand– Compare between treatments easily

• Costs– More is worse– Can hide effect (EMEA Report)

• Never an NNT alone• RR, NNT, NNH, percentage improvement

Page 23: Christopher Eccleston Centre for Pain Research The University of Bath c.eccleston@bath.ac.uk

Stabilizing a review

• Publication bias• Stabilizing (not updating)

Page 24: Christopher Eccleston Centre for Pain Research The University of Bath c.eccleston@bath.ac.uk

Not discussed• Overclaiming

– No effective or no evidence of effect• Quality control in non-pharmacological trials• Language of confidence• Simplify vs simplistic (95% read abstract)• 30 or 50 or 70• Responder analysis vs response analysis• Does pain relief drive QoL outcomes?• Comparing treatments

– Overview reviews– Stopping rules, Switch rules– Indirect comparisons

• Judgement biases– Behavioural economics (choices)– Myth of rational man

Page 25: Christopher Eccleston Centre for Pain Research The University of Bath c.eccleston@bath.ac.uk

Communication

• What is the risk doctor?

• Tell it to me straight.

• What are my chances doctor?

• Tell it to me straight.

Page 26: Christopher Eccleston Centre for Pain Research The University of Bath c.eccleston@bath.ac.uk

Thank you