| Literature DB >> 24379886 |
Mary-Ann Fitzcharles1, Yoram Shir2, Jacob N Ablin3, Dan Buskila4, Howard Amital5, Peter Henningsen6, Winfried Häuser7.
Abstract
Objectives. Fibromyalgia syndrome (FMS), characterized by subjective complaints without physical or biomarker abnormality, courts controversy. Recommendations in recent guidelines addressing classification and diagnosis were examined for consistencies or differences. Methods. Systematic searches from January 2008 to February 2013 of the US-American National Guideline Clearing House, the Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network, Guidelines International Network, and Medline for evidence-based guidelines for the management of FMS were conducted. Results. Three evidence-based interdisciplinary guidelines, independently developed in Canada, Germany, and Israel, recommended that FMS can be clinically diagnosed by a typical cluster of symptoms following a defined evaluation including history, physical examination, and selected laboratory tests, to exclude another somatic disease. Specialist referral is only recommended when some other physical or mental illness is reasonably suspected. The diagnosis can be based on the (modified) preliminary American College of Rheumatology (ACR) 2010 diagnostic criteria. Discussion. Guidelines from three continents showed remarkable consistency regarding the clinical concept of FMS, acknowledging that FMS is neither a distinct rheumatic nor mental disorder, but rather a cluster of symptoms, not explained by another somatic disease. While FMS remains an integral part of rheumatology, it is not an exclusive rheumatic condition and spans a broad range of medical disciplines.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24379886 PMCID: PMC3860136 DOI: 10.1155/2013/528952
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evid Based Complement Alternat Med ISSN: 1741-427X Impact factor: 2.629
Comparison of the composition of the guideline groups and the funding of the Canadian, German, and Israeli guidelines.
| Canada | Germany | Israel | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nomination of members of the guideline group | Nominated by Canadian scientific societies | Nominated by German scientific societies or self-help organisations | Nominated by Israeli scientific societies or self-help organisations |
| Number of members in steering committee | 11 | 12 | 11 |
| Clinical expertise of members of steering committee | |||
| Rheumatology/internal medicine | 3 | 2 | 9 |
| Pain therapy | 1 | 1 | 0 |
| Orthopedics/rehabilitation | 1 | 2 | 0 |
| Neurology | 1 | 1 | 0 |
| Pediatrics | 0 | 1 | 0 |
| Family medicine | 1 | 0 | 1 |
| Pharmacology | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Psychiatry | 0 | 1 | 1 |
| Psychological pain therapy | 1 | 1 | 0 |
| Psychosomatic medicine | 0 | 1 | |
| Self-help organisations/patient representative | 1 | 2 | 0 |
| Physiatry/physiotherapy | 1 | 0 | |
| Others | 1 | 0 | |
| Competing interests of members of steering committee | 9 | 10 | 9 |
| Sources of financial support | Louise and Alan Edwards Foundation, Valeant | Scientific medical and psychological societies; self-help organisations | Pfizer; scientific medical and psychological societies |
Comparison of the methodology of the Canadian, German, and Israeli guidelines.
| Canada | Germany | Israel | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Needs assessment | Structured consultation with 139 healthcare professionals from relevant disciplines | Structured consultation within the guideline group (50 persons building 8 working groups) | Structured consultation within the guideline group |
| Databases | EMBASE, MEDLINE, PSYCHINFO, PUBMED, and Cochrane Library | Medline, PsychINFO, SCOPUS, and Cochrane Library | Medline, Cochrane Library |
| Dates of search strategy | Until July 2010 | Until December 2010 | Until April 2012 |
| Sources of evidence | Systematic reviews, meta-analyses, and clinical trials | Systematic reviews with meta-analyses of pain, fatigue, sleep problems, quality of life, and drop out for any reasons in randomised controlled trials conducted by guideline group; harms of therapies as reported in RCTs and in the literature | Systematic reviews, meta-analyses, and clinical trials |
| Sources of recommendations | Systematic reviews, meta-analyses, RCTs, panel consensus, and approval by ≥80% of 35 members of the National Fibromyalgia Guidelines Advisory Panel (NFGAP) | Systematic reviews with meta-analyses conducted by guideline group; structured consensus conference* | Systematic reviews, meta-analyses, and RCTs; panel consensus |
| Number of references in the guideline document | 336 | 608 | 30 |
| Classification of evidence | Oxford criteria | Oxford criteria | Oxford criteria |
| Classification of recommendations | Oxford criteria | German national guidelines | Recommendations based on strength of evidence |
| External review | One international expert | Boards of scientific societies involved | Chairman of Israel Rheumatology Society |
| Publication | In press | April 13, 2012 | In press |
| Internet access |
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*Strong consensus: >95% of the participants consented; consensus: 75–95% of the participants consented; majority: 50–75% of the participants consented. A minority statement and an explanatory statement were possible.
RCT: randomized controlled trial.
Comparison of the categorisation of evidence (treatment) and recommendations of the Canadian, German, and Israeli guidelines.
| Canada | Germany | Israel | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Evidence level I | SR of randomised controlled trials or n-of-1 trial* | Ia-SR (with homogenity) of RCTs** | SR of randomised controlled trials with large number of participants (over 1000) |
| Evidence level II | Randomized trial or (exceptionally) observational studies with dramatic effect* | IIa-SR (with homogeneity) of cohort studies** | SR of observational studies, cohort studies, or small randomized studies |
| Evidence level III | Nonrandomized controlled cohort/follow-up study* | IIIa-SR (with homogenity) of case-control studies** | Nonrandomized controlled studies |
| Evidence level IV | SR of case-control studies, historically controlled studies* | Case-series (and poor quality cohort and case-control studies)** | SR of case-control studies, open studies, and case reports |
| Evidence level V | Expert opinion | Expert opinion without explicit critical appraisal or based on physiology, bench research, or “first principles”** | Expert opinion |
| Recommendation strength A | Consistent level I studies | Directly based on evidence level I*** | “Strong evidence”: based on level I evidence |
| Recommendation strength B | Consistent level 2 or 3 studies | Directly based on evidence level II or extrapolated recommendation evidence level I*** | “Medium evidence”: based on level II evidence |
| Recommendation strength C | Level 4 studies | Directly based on evidence levels III, IV, and V*** | “Weak evidence”: |
| Recommendation strength D | Level 5 evidence | ||
| Panel consensus | Opinion supported by entire Canadian Fibromyalgia Guidelines Committee | Recommendation supported by majority of guideline group**** | Recommendation supported by entire Israeli fibromyalgia group panel |
RCT: randomised controlled trial; SR: systematic review or meta-analysis.
*Level may be graded down on the basis of study quality, imprecision, and indirectness, because of inconsistency between studies or because the absolute effect size is very small; level may be graded up if there is a large or very large effect size.
**Level may be graded down on the basis of study quantity (<4 RCTs of <200 patients), study quality (low study quality according to van Tulder score), low external validity (exclusion of patients with inflammatory rheumatic diseases and/or anxiety or depressive disorders), and evidence of publication bias.
***An up- or downgrading of recommendations is possible depending on the consistency of the results of the studies, the clinical relevance of the outcomes and effect sizes of the studies, the benefit-harm ratio, ethical considerations, patients' preferences, and the applicability of the therapies.
****The strength of consensus was classified as follows: strong consensus: consent of >95%, consensus: consent of 75–95%, majority consent: consent of 50–75%, and no consent: consent of <50% of the participants. A minority vote with a substantial rationale was possible.
Comparison of the recommendations of the Canadian, German, and Israeli guidelines on the clinical diagnosis of FMS.
| Canada | Germany | Israel | |
|---|---|---|---|
| History of a typical cluster of symptoms | Diffuse body pain that has been present for at least 3 months, with symptoms of fatigue, sleep disturbance, cognitive changes, mood disorder, and other somatic symptoms to variable degree | Chronic widespread pain and fatigue (physical and/or mental) and sleeping problems/unrefreshed sleep | Presence of pain in muscles, joints, connective tissues, various areas of the upper and lower limbs, neck, shoulders, and upper and lower back |
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| Exclusion | Other illness explaining the symptoms | Somatic disease sufficiently explaining the symptoms; the diagnosis of a mental disorder does not exclude the diagnosis of FMS | Other disorders explaining the symptoms have been ruled out. FMS may develop in coexistence with additional disorders, be they somatic, inflammatory, psychiatric, or otherwise |
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| Recommended methods | Complete physical examination | Obtaining history of pharmacological agents used | Complete physical examination |
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| Further tests | Any additional laboratory or radiographic testing should depend on the clinical evaluation in an individual patient that may suggest some other medical condition | Only in case of clinical hints pointing at a somatic disease | At the discretion of the physician performing the evaluation, based on clinical hints pointing at a somatic disease. (low threshold for serological tests e.g., ANA and RF) |
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| Tender point examination | Specific tender point examination is not required, but examination of soft tissues for generalized tenderness should be done | Facultative | No requirement to document number of tender points; however, assessment of tenderness recommended as part of physical examination |
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| Screening for mental disorders | Mental disorder can be expected in three quarters of persons with FMS | Recommended | Recommended |
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| Diagnostic criteria | American College of Rheumatology (ACR) 2010 preliminary diagnostic criteria | ACR 1990 classification criteria or ACR 2010 modified diagnostic criteria | Clinical diagnosis, based on above evaluation |