| Literature DB >> 23782862 |
Kirsty Loudon1, Merrick Zwarenstein, Frank Sullivan, Peter Donnan, Shaun Treweek.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: If you want to know which of two or more healthcare interventions is most effective, the randomised controlled trial is the design of choice. Randomisation, however, does not itself promote the applicability of the results to situations other than the one in which the trial was done. A tool published in 2009, PRECIS (PRagmatic Explanatory Continuum Indicator Summaries) aimed to help trialists design trials that produced results matched to the aim of the trial, be that supporting clinical decision-making, or increasing knowledge of how an intervention works. Though generally positive, groups evaluating the tool have also found weaknesses, mainly that its inter-rater reliability is not clear, that it needs a scoring system and that some new domains might be needed. The aim of the study is to: Produce an improved and validated version of the PRECIS tool. Use this tool to compare the internal validity of, and effect estimates from, a set of explanatory and pragmatic trials matched by intervention.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23782862 PMCID: PMC3748822 DOI: 10.1186/1745-6215-14-115
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Figure 1Pragmatic Explanatory Continuum Indicator Summary (PRECIS) [10].
Summary of existing work with PRECIS
| Riddle (2010) Pain coping skills training for patients - knee arthroscopy | 0-4 cm circle VAS | X | 1 | 7 | YES (individual scoring then consensus score) | Useful to focus trial design discussion. PRECIS scoring: Initial, personal ideal and then post meeting. 1-day face-to-face meeting to discuss trial. PRECIS facilitates discussion. |
| Trial design changed: domain ‘practitioner expertise’ - needed to do psychologist training and domain ‘practitioner adherence’ - rigorous ongoing assessment to check intervention as intended. Visual analogue scale cannot be used if ‘online ratings’. | ||||||
| Glasgow (2010) Weight loss in obese patients with comorbid conditions | 0-4 scale | 3 | X | 9 | NO | PRECIS improved ‘transparency’ in trial design decisions, encouraged others to use. |
| Domain most variation: Primary analysis. | ||||||
| Trialists rate own trial more pragmatic than other raters. Not clear if original criteria are sufficient to provide a comprehensive profile. | ||||||
| Tosh (2011) Mental health | 1-5 | X | 10 | 3 | NO | ‘Useful tool’. Cumulative scores for all 10 PRECIS domains. Experimental 0–15, Pragmatic >35, 31–19 interim where trial balances pragmatic and explanatory domains. Scoring depends on rater’s perspective. 0 for missing information |
| Koppenhaal (2011) Systematic review on lifestyle improvements in General Practice | 1-5% | 20 | X | 2 | YES (individual scoring then consensus score) | ‘Useful estimate by estimating quantitatively how pragmatic each RCT is’. Chose PRECIS as explanatory/pragmatic continuum and visual analogue scale. Domains most variation: Practitioner expertise (comparison), primary analysis. Tried 1–10 score but too much difference between consecutive scores not meaningful, still concerned arbitrary - important to reduce subjectivity so two raters (third rater if not consensus). Weighting could be important; eligibility criteria important but flexibility of the comparison intervention may be less important. Problems using PRECIS due to reporting as CONSORT guidelines not being followed. |
| Bratton (2011) | No scoring | 3 | X | 2 | Joint discussion | Blinding inserted and combined experience of practitioner expertise for comparison and experimental intervention as postulated no difference in expertise in these trials. |
| Bratton (2012) | | 1 (ongoing) | X | 6 | NO | ‘Useful tool for designing, conducting and reporting trials’. Strongest consensus ‘flexibility of the comparison intervention’ and ‘practitioner adherence’ domains. Most disagreement on ‘eligibility criteria’ and ‘participant compliance’. |
| Witt (2012) | 1-5 | 10 | X | 5 | YES (individual scoring then consensus score) | “PRECIS useful but needs further development”. CONSORT guidelines for reporting pragmatic trials should be expanded. Recognised that PRECIS originally intended for trial design but useful tool for appraising published RCTs for systematic reviews. |
| Selby (2012) | 1-20 | X | 1 | 6 | YES (individual scoring then consensus score) | PRECIS useful to help interdisciplinary co-investigators rate their study design. Used two rounds of Modified Delphi process used to reach consensus. 20-point numerical scale approximated a continuous scale allowing ‘easier, more accurate and more stable coding of the response using e-mail’ - extreme anchor points 1–20, discouraged rating the domains beyond the numbers provided. |