| Literature DB >> 17615054 |
Yoon K Loke1, Deirdre Price, Andrew Herxheimer.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: As every healthcare intervention carries some risk of harm, clinical decision making needs to be supported by a systematic assessment of the balance of benefit to harm. A systematic review that considers only the favourable outcomes of an intervention, without also assessing the adverse effects, can mislead by introducing a bias favouring the intervention. Much of the current guidance on systematic reviews is directed towards the evaluation of effectiveness; but this differs in important ways from the methods used in assessing the safety and tolerability of an intervention. A detailed discussion of why, how and when to include adverse effects in a systematic review, is required.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2007 PMID: 17615054 PMCID: PMC1933432 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2288-7-32
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Res Methodol ISSN: 1471-2288 Impact factor: 4.615
Scenarios where detailed evaluation of adverse effects may decisively influence the decision whether to use an intervention or not.
| Treatment is of modest or uncertain benefit, with some possibility of harm | • Aspirin for prevention of cardiovascular events in a healthy patient. What is the increased risk of haemorrhage from aspirin? |
| Treatment potentially very beneficial, but there are major safety concerns | • Carotid artery surgery in elderly patients with ischaemic heart disease who have suffered a stroke. The operation can prevent a future stroke but some patients may die from the intervention. |
| Treatment potentially beneficial in long-term, or to community. No immediate direct benefit to individual but possibility of harm exists. | • Improving uptake of a childhood vaccine to promote population immunity, while trying to assuage individual parents' fears about early serious vaccine- induced neurological damage to their child. |
| Treatments are similarly effective, but have different safety profiles | • A new insulin injection device is thought to cause less pain than the existing device |
| The balance of benefits and harms differ substantially, e.g. the most effective intervention may have serious adverse effects, while the less effective one is potentially safer | • Radical mastectomy for breast cancer as opposed to limited, breast-conserving surgery which is less disfiguring but may carry a greater risk of local cancer recurrence. |
| Treatment offers important benefit but adverse effects threaten patient's adherence | • The options for a patient with severe heart failure who has responded well to an ACE inhibitor, but has persistent cough: stop the medication altogether, try a lower dose, or change to an angiotensin receptor blocker? |
Advantages and disadvantages of selecting a broad versus narrow research question for a systematic review of adverse effect
| Easiest approach, especially with regard to data extraction. Hypothesis-testing design allows reviews to focus on important adverse effects and reach conclusions about treatment decision [3] | Conclusions are limited to specific adverse effects, and do not provide a complete picture of the overall safety or tolerability profile. Method is appropriate only for adverse events known in advance | |
| This method can evaluate new adverse effects that were previously unrecognized, and will provide a broad general view of potential problems. Can also be used as part of a scoping exercise to identify specific adverse events that merit a further, more detailed look using the narrow focused approach. | Danger of being swamped by vast quantities of heterogeneous data and of inappropriate pooling. Broad, non-specific evaluations can be resource-intensive and may yield a diverse amount of information from which it is difficult to draw any meaningful conclusions. Detection of previously unrecognized adverse effects may be better addressed through primary surveillance than in a systematic review [3] |
Indexing terms in MEDLINE and EMBASE
| /adverse effects | / |