Literature DB >> 34779719

Development of the Canadian Spinal Cord Injury Best Practice (Can-SCIP) Guideline: Methods and overview.

Eleni M Patsakos1, Mark T Bayley1,2, Ailene Kua1, Christiana Cheng3, Janice Eng4,5, Chester Ho6, Vanessa K Noonan3, Matthew Querée7, B Catharine Craven1,2.   

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Spinal cord injury (SCI) is a life-altering injury that leads to a complex constellation of changes in an individual's sensory, motor, and autonomic function which is largely determined by the level and severity of cord impairment. Available SCI-specific clinical practice guidelines (CPG) address specific impairments, health conditions or a segment of the care continuum, however, fail to address all the important clinical questions arising throughout an individual's care journey. To address this gap, an interprofessional panel of experts in SCI convened to develop the Canadian Spinal Cord Injury Best Practice (Can-SCIP) Guideline. This article provides an overview of the methods underpinning the Can-SCIP Guideline process.
METHODS: The Can-SCIP Guideline was developed using the Guidelines Adaptation Cycle. A comprehensive search for existing SCI-specific CPGs was conducted. The quality of eligible CPGs was evaluated using the Appraisal of Guidelines for Research and Evaluation II (AGREE II) instrument. An expert panel (n = 52) convened, and groups of relevant experts met to review and recommend adoption or refinement of existing recommendations or develop new recommendations based on evidence from systematic reviews conducted by the Spinal Cord Injury Research Evidence (SCIRE) team. The expert panel voted to approve selected recommendations using an online survey tool.
RESULTS: The Can-SCIP Guideline includes 585 total recommendations from 41 guidelines, 96 recommendations that pertain to the Components of the Ideal SCI Care System section, and 489 recommendations that pertain to the Management of Secondary Health Conditions section. Most recommendations (n = 281, 48%) were adopted from existing guidelines without revision, 215 (36.8%) recommendations were revised for application in a Canadian context, and 89 recommendations (15.2%) were created de novo.
CONCLUSION: The Can-SCIP Guideline is the first living comprehensive guideline for adults with SCI in Canada across the care continuum.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Clinical practice guidelines; Evidence-based practice; Knowledge translation; Spinal cord injury

Mesh:

Year:  2021        PMID: 34779719      PMCID: PMC8604491          DOI: 10.1080/10790268.2021.1953312

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Spinal Cord Med        ISSN: 1079-0268            Impact factor:   1.985


Introduction

Spinal cord injury (SCI) is a life-altering injury that leads to complex changes in sensory, motor, and autonomic function, significantly affecting an individual’s emotional wellbeing, quality of life, community participation, functional abilities, health and life expectancy.[1-5] Specialized acute, rehabilitation, and community-based healthcare that necessitates the provision of the best available interprofessional care from time of injury onset and throughout the balance of the individual’s lifetime is required. Further, challenges within the field of SCI internationally include: ongoing difficulties in funding and accruing an adequate sample size within clinical trials, hampering the ability to generate Level I evidence to meet regulatory requirements and inform practice.[6,7] A concern within healthcare settings is the underutilization of research by healthcare professionals[8] and the clinical equipoise regarding how best to diagnose or treat patients with complex biopsychosocial issues and medical morbidity such as individuals living with SCI. Although there is a large and expanding body of clinical research directed toward improving patient care, thirty to forty percent of patients do not receive appropriate evidence-based care.[9,10] As the volume of research evidence is rapidly increasing, it is challenging for healthcare professionals to remain informed on the latest research and related clinical recommendations across care domains.[8] Clinical Practice Guidelines (CPGs) play an important role in bridging this knowledge gap. CPGs are knowledge tools that assist evidence-based decision-making and are comprised of systematically developed statements that promote high-quality practice across the continuum of care. Evidence-informed practice recommendations within CPGs can reduce practice variation, improve the quality of care, and assist healthcare professionals in making clinical decisions based on evidence and advancing practice.[11-13] Within the field of SCI research, existing CPGs focus on specific individual impairments (i.e. skin integrity, bowel management) or a single segment of the care continuum (i.e. prehospital care, MRI diagnosis, surgical intervention, community participation) and do not address all the important clinical questions which arise for individuals throughout an individual’s care journey. Furthermore, few guidelines provide recommendations for all members of the interprofessional care team that are tailored to the individual’s level of injury and severity of injury (i.e. American Spinal Injury Association Impairment Scale, AIS). A CPG that identifies best practices across the entire SCI care continuum is needed. CPGs with the greatest potential to influence systems of care, in addition to quality care recommendations, should contain recommendations tailored for specific stakeholders including but not limited to healthcare administrators, policymakers and individuals with lived experience. Although well intended, CPGs can adversely affect public policy for patients. For example, recommendations against an intervention may lead service providers and or healthcare funders to reduce access to the intervention and/or withdraw funding for the product or service in a single payer health system. Also, recommendations for costly interventions that are hardly feasible may displace the resources needed for other services (across the care continuum) of greater value to patients in a single payer health system. Recognizing these aforementioned challenges and limitations, we sought to develop a living guideline that is continuously updated. The Can-SCIP Guideline is the first comprehensive living guideline for adults with SCI in Canada. This article describes the methodology used for the development of the Can-SCIP Guideline intended to highlight its’ unique features and rigor throughout development.

Methods

Scope and purpose of the Can-SCIP guideline

The Can-SCIP Guideline process was initiated by formation of an interprofessional steering committee who through a collaborative process defined the scope and target audience for the Guideline. The Can-SCIP steering committee was comprised of clinicians, program leaders, knowledge translation experts, researchers, and administrators. The Can-SCIP Guideline is designed to provide evidence-based recommendations for adults 18 years and older with a SCI in all phases of care (from pre-hospital emergency care through acute and rehabilitation care and on to community care), across an individual’s lifetime. The majority of the identified recommendations were obtained from the traumatic SCI literature, acknowledging that some recommendations would only be applicable to the care of individuals with SCI of either traumatic or non-traumatic etiology, within the latter parts of the care continuum such as the rehabilitation and community care aspects of the guideline. The Can-SCIP steering committee agreed that the selected recommendations should be divided into two sections: (1) Components of the Ideal SCI Care System; and (2) Management of Secondary Health Conditions. The key secondary health conditions identified for recommendation development was derived from a 2017 national consensus process.[14] The Spinal Cord Injury-High Performance Indicator (SCI-HIGH) Project team identified 11 domains of rehabilitation care where gaps between knowledge generation and clinical practice implementation that were important to clinicians and people with SCI for enhancing care and developing quality indicators existed.[14] Neuropathic pain was an additional health condition among the top health conditions in SCI considered.[15]

Target users

The intended audience of the Can-SCIP Guideline are clinicians, allied healthcare providers, support workers, persons with SCI and their caregivers, administrators, and policy makers. The primary users of the Components of the Ideal SCI Care System section are policy makers and administrators, while the primary users of the Management of Secondary Health Conditions section are healthcare providers, individuals with lived experience and their caregivers. The recommendations are intended to specify feasible single or multimodal interventions that are evidence-informed for an individual based on their spinal cord impairment (neurologic level of injury, AIS, cord syndrome and type of bowel and bladder impairment) within the Canadian healthcare context.

Guideline development cycle

The Can-SCIP Guideline was developed using the Guidelines Adaptation Cycle (ADAPTE) (www.adapte.org) originally derived and modified from a process developed by Graham & Harrison (2005). The steps involved in the process are outlined in Figure 1 and were as follows:
Figure 1

Can-SCIP recommendations adaptation and development cycle.

The Can-SCIP expert panel includes clinicians, individuals with lived experience, program directors, knowledge translation experts, researchers, and administrators and other relevant stakeholders (Appendix 1). A systematic scoping review was undertaken for CPGs focused on treatment and evidence-based recommendations in the field of SCI. The Can-SCIP steering committee consulted with the Health Sciences Librarian at University of British Columbia to assist with construction of the search. The following databases were searched: PubMed, Medline, Embase, CINAHL, and PsycINFO. In addition, indexes and databases that specifically archive clinical guidelines and medical evidence were also included in the search (NCCIH Clearinghouse,[16] Clinical Key,[17] Trip Medical Database,[18] DynaMed Plus,[19] Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network,[20] CADTH Grey Matters tool,[21] Guidelines International Network,[22] and Physiotherapy Evidence Database Ratings).[23] The key search terms included ‘spinal cord injury’, ‘spinal cord dysfunction’, ‘tetraplegia’, ‘quadriplegia’, ‘paraplegia’, ‘spinal cord impaired’, ‘spinal cord lesion’ (including truncations of these SCI terms) and ‘clinical practice guidelines’. CPGs published between 2011 and 2018 in English or French, written by four or more authors, applicable to the Canadian health care setting, including evidence-based recommendations for adults over 18 years of age were considered for inclusion. Systematic reviews were excluded, and shorter evidence-based documents were excluded, but their reference lists were hand-searched to find any additional clinical practice guidelines for inclusion. The Can-SCIP steering committee reviewed the existing SCI guidelines to ensure the content of the guideline would be consistent with planned scope of the CPG and to ensure the extracted recommendations could be adapted to the Canadian healthcare context (i.e. health system structure, payor model, available expertise etc.). In addition, the Can-SCIP steering committee reached out to stakeholder organizations to identify CPGs that were currently in development. Each eligible CPG was then evaluated individually by two to four appraisers from the expert panel and/or Can-SCIP steering committee, using the Appraisal of Guidelines for Research and Evaluation II instrument (AGREE II; https://www.agreecollaboration.org). The AGREE II instrument evaluates the guideline development process and quality of the guideline across six domains including: (1) scope and purpose, (2) stakeholder involvement, (3) rigor of development, (4) clarity of presentation, (5) applicability, and (6) editorial independence. Training sessions were held by one of the authors (MB) to ensure all experts were familiar with using the AGREE instrument. Each CPG was given a standardized score ranging from 1 to 100 (100 representing a strong score) by the reviewing appraiser from the expert panel. The AGREE ratings for the selected CPGs are shown elsewhere in this issue.[24] As the AGREE User Manual does not specify a minimum score that is considered ‘low-quality,’ the Can-SCIP steering committee set a benchmark of 40% for inclusion; whereby scores higher than 40% represent higher quality, and scores below 40% represent poorer quality. CPGs with an AGREE score below 40% were excluded from the recommendation review process. A recommendations matrix was created to facilitate a comparison of the similar or overlapping recommendations across all included CPGs. The CPG recommendations and evidence statements obtained from SCIRE were divided into twenty-four domains relevant to SCI care and treatment within the matrix (Table 1). As various evidence grading systems were used across the different selected CPGs, the Can-SCIP steering committee used a standardized grading system (Table 2) also used in previous CPG development projects.[25]
Table 1

Section 1 & 2 domains.

Recommendations for the Components of the Ideal SCI Care SystemRecommendations for the Management of SCI Health Conditions
Pre-hospital and Emergency
Activity-Based Therapy
Diagnostic Imaging
Autonomic Dysreflexia
Early Acute Care
Bladder
Education and Support of People with SCI and their Families Across the Continuum
Bone Health
Cross Continuum Education of Clinicians and Staff Working with People with SCI
Bowel Health
Specialized Inpatient Rehabilitation
Cardiometabolic Health
Specialized Inpatient Rehabilitation
Emotional Wellbeing
Community-Based Rehabilitation
Mobility & Walking
Vocational RehabilitationNeuropathic Pain
Comprehensive Health and Wellness
Respiratory Health
 
Sexual Health, Relationships & Fertility
 
Skin Integrity
 Upper Limb
 VTE Prophylaxis
Table 2

Summary of criteria for levels of evidence reported in the Can-SCIP guideline.

Grade of recommendationDescriptor
ARecommendation supported by at least 1 meta-analysis, systematic review, or randomized controlled trial of appropriate size with relevant control group.
BRecommendation supported by cohort studies that at minimum have a comparison group, well-designed single-subject experimental designs, or small sample size randomized controlled trials.
CRecommendations supported primarily by expert opinion based on their experience through uncontrolled case series without comparison groups that support the recommendations are also classified here.

Notes: Adapted from Hebert et al.[40]

The search processes were enhanced by systematic searches of the SCI literature conducted by the Spinal Cord Injury Research Evidence (SCIRE) project team (https://scireproject.com/) to ensure the incorporated recommendations are based on the most current evidence. Evidence statements formulated by the SCIRE project team were added to the synthesized materials prior to convening the entire expert panel to facilitate the formulation of de novo recommendations when there were not existing recommendations, or where the existing guidelines were outdated, insufficient or not relevant to the Canadian context. The expert panel was convened in a two-day meeting prior to the Canadian Spinal Cord Injury Rehabilitation Association (CSCI-RA) 8th National Conference in Niagara Falls, Ontario, Canada, in October 2019. All expert panel members completed declarations of conflicts of interests. The expert panel members were invited to review domains in which they had established expertise or a unique perspective to contribute. Fifty expert panel members reviewed the recommendations matrix independently prior to the consensus meeting and in small working groups during the meeting. At least two individuals with lived experience with SCI were included within each working group to ensure their views were considered. The key activities undertaken by the expert panel members at the consensus conference were to: Review the quality assessment of previously published best practice guidelines in the SCI field. Consider the evidence tables derived from the SCIRE systematic review. Draft or refine recommendations: Each working group selected recommendations from existing CPGs for inclusion, modification or refinement of existing recommendations based on current evidence (i.e. rewording with Canadian terminology, separated some lengthy recommendations into two separate recommendations), or developed new recommendations based on the most current evidence provided by the SCIRE Project. New recommendations with consensus support were also articulated by the experts in each working group. The working groups reviewed recommendations within each domain. In summary, the recommendations were either adopted with the original wording or revised/reworded based on current evidence/settings. Assign a level of evidence: The experts reviewed the recommendations and supporting evidence and assigned one of 3 levels of evidence as outlined in Table 2. Individualize guidance: For each selected recommendation, the working group specified (i) the section of the care continuum the recommendations applies to (pre-hospital, acute & surgical, tertiary rehabilitation, community), (ii) the neurological level of injury and AIS to which the recommendation applies, (iii) whether the recommendation applies to an individual with a specific cord syndrome – central cord syndrome, anterior cord syndrome, posterior cord syndrome, Brown-Séquard syndrome or cauda equina syndrome; and, (iv) whether the recommendation applies to a person with an upper motor neuron neurogenic bowel or bladder, and (v) whether there were any groups for whom the recommendation does not apply (Appendix 2). Identify potential implementation toolkits/resources to assist with implementation. Experts were asked to provide lists of websites, publications, decision rules and other implementation tools that could be used to facilitate recommendation uptake. The expert panel voted on all the recommendations using an online survey tool (Survey Monkey®) (Appendix 2). For each recommendation, the expert panel selected whether the recommend should be included within the Can-SCIP Guideline, whether the recommendation should not be included in the Can-SCIP Guideline, or whether the recommendation should be included in the Can-SCIP Guideline but that further modifications were necessary. Recommendations with less than 80% agreement were excluded from the Can-SCIP Guideline. : The Can-SCIP steering committee adapted and refined each draft recommendation based on the feedback received from the expert panel and the established format for the recommendations based on the weight of the evidence underpinning the recommendation. : As part of the validation process, the Can-SCIP Guideline was externally reviewed by recognized international experts in SCI who did not participate in the Can-SCIP Guideline development process (n = 8) (Appendix 3). The purpose of conducting the external review was to gather information on both the reviewer’s overall impression of the Guideline and specific comments addressing the following issues: validity, relevance, awareness of new information, evidence or concerns, scope and purpose, stakeholder involvement, rigor of the methods and clarity of presentation according to some questions from the AGREE II instrument. The steering committee considered revisions to the Can-SCIP Guideline based on the suggestions and comments from the external reviewers, feedback from the expert panel and the CPG aims and structure. Can-SCIP recommendations adaptation and development cycle. Section 1 & 2 domains. Summary of criteria for levels of evidence reported in the Can-SCIP guideline. Notes: Adapted from Hebert et al.[40]

Upcoming steps and plans for implementation

To facilitate clinical implementation, multiple algorithms will be drafted to provide clinicians with relevant recommendations for the individual patient based on considerations such as neurological level of injury, AIS and nature of bladder impairment. These algorithms will be incorporated into a web-based application formatted for computers, tablets, and smartphones, displaying the recommendations. The Can-SCIP 2 Implementation website will be the first of its kind within SCI and provide clinicians and learners with a valuable user-friendly and easy to follow tool to find best-practice treatments for the patient sitting in front of them. The application will link users to relevant implementation tools and resources (i.e. SCI-FX fracture risk assessment tool, SCI-U, Canadian C-Spine Rule tip card, International Standards for Neurological Classification of SCI (ISNCSCI) algorithm) and rehabilitation and community stakeholders to relevant structure, process and outcome health indicators developed by the SCI-HIGH project.[26]

Results

As shown in the PRISMA flow diagram (Fig. 2), the systematic search identified 41 SCI-specific CPGs that met our inclusion criteria (see Table 3). Following expert review and vetting of recommendations, the Can-SCIP Guideline includes 585 total recommendations, 96 recommendations that pertain to the Components of the Ideal SCI Care System (Table 4) and 489 recommendations that pertain to the Management of Secondary Health Conditions section (Table 5). Tables 4 and 5 provide an overview of each domain and subheadings, the associated number of recommendations, and provides a summary of both the level of evidence and whether the recommendations were adopted, revised, or newly derived. The majority of recommendations 281 (48%) were adopted from other CPGs without revision, 215 (36.8%) recommendations were revised to ensure application in a Canadian context and 89 (15.2%) were created de novo during the expert panel discussions from the SCIRE statements and or reflections on current established best practices. The majority of the recommendations (n = 382, 65.3%) are based on level C evidence, 126 (21.5%) are based on level B evidence, and a minority 77 (13.2%) are based on level A evidence.
Figure 2

PRISMA study flow diagram.

Table 3

SCI clinical practice guidelines selected for inclusion.

Guideline nameAbbreviationYearPhase of careTopic area(s) coveredCountry of origin
Spinal Cord Injury (2009) Evidence-Based Nutrition Practice Guideline[41]
NUTR
2009
Cross-Continuum
Nutrition
United States
Sexuality and Reproductive Health in Adults with SCI[42]
CSCM
2010
Rehab/Community
Sexuality
United States
Home Mechanical Ventilation: A Canadian Thoracic Society CPG[43]
CTS
2011
Community
Respiratory
Canada
Evidence-Based Guideline Update: Intraoperative Spinal Monitoring with Somatosensory and Transcranial Electrical Motor Evoked Potentials[44]
NUWER
2011
Acute Care
Surgical Monitoring
United States
Urinary Incontinence in Neurological Disease: Management of Lower Urinary Tract Dysfunction in Neurological Disease[45]
NICE
2012
Cross-Continuum
Bladder
United Kingdom
Canadian BPG for the Prevention and Management of Pressure Ulcers in People with SCI: A Resource Handbook for Clinicians[46]
PU-ONF
2013
Cross-Continuum
Skin
Canada
Clinical Guideline for Standing in Adults Following Spinal Cord Injury[47]
CGFS
2013
Rehab/Community
Standing Therapy
United Kingdom & Ireland
Development of Clinical Guidelines for the Prescription of a Seated Wheelchair or Mobility Scooter for People with TBI or SCI[48]
OTA
2013
Cross-Continuum
Wheelchair/ Mobility Device
Australia
Management of Acute Combination Fractures of the Atlas and Axis in Adults[49]
ATL-ATX
2013
Acute
Surgical Management
United States
Initial Closed Reduction of Cervical Spinal Fracture-Dislocation Injuries[50]
CNS-FXDIS
2013
Acute
Fracture Treatment
United States
Deep Venous Thrombosis and Thromboembolism in Patients with Cervical SCI[51]
CNS-DVT
2013
Cross-Continuum
Venous Thrombo-Embolism (VTE)
United States
Guidelines for the Management of Acute Cervical Spine and Spinal Cord Injuries: 2013 Update[52]
CNS
2013
Acute
Medical/Surgical Management
United States
Pressure Ulcer Prevention and Treatment Following SCI, 2nd edition[53]
PU-PVA
2014
Cross-Continuum
Skin/Nutrition
United States
The Prevention and Management of Pressure Ulcers in Primary and Secondary Care[54]
NICE PU
2014
Community
Skin
United Kingdom
Prevention and Treatment of Pressure Ulcers: Individuals with Spinal Cord Injury[55]
NPUAP
2014
Cross-Continuum
Skin
United States
Prevention of Venous Thromboembolism in Individuals with SCI[56]
CSCM
2016
Cross-Continuum
VTE
United States
The CanPain SCI CPG for Rehab Management of Neuropathic Pain after SCI: Recommendations Treatment[57]
CANPAIN TREAT
2016
Cross Continuum
Pain
Canada
The CanPain SCI CPG for Rehab Management of Neuropathic Pain after SCI: Screening and Diagnosis Recommendations[58]
CANPAIN DIAG
2016
Cross-Continuum
Pain
Canada
The CanPain SCI CPG for Rehab Management of Neuropathic Pain after SCI: Recommendations for Model Systems of Care[59]
CANPAIN SYS CARE
2016
Cross-Continuum
Pain
Canada
Provincial Guidelines for Spinal Cord Assessment[60]
CCO
2016
Cross-Continuum
Medical
Canada
Spinal injury: Assessment and Initial Management[61]
NICE
2016
Acute
Medical/Surgical
United Kingdom
A Review and Update on the Guidelines for the Acute Management of Cervical SCI – Part II[62]REVIEW PAR2016AcuteMedical/SurgicalUnited States
Evidence-based Scientific Exercise Guidelines for Adults with SCI: An Update and a New Guideline[63]
GINIS
2017
Rehab/Community
Exercise
Canada & United Kingdom
CPG for the Management of Patients With Acute SCI and Central Cord Syndrome: Recommendations on the Timing (≤24 h Versus >24 h) of Decompressive Surgery[64]
DECOM
2017
Acute
Surgical
International
CPG for the Management of Patients With Acute SCI: Recommendations on the Use of Methylprednisolone Sodium Succinate[65]
MSS
2017
Acute
Medical Management
International
CPG for the Management of Patients With Acute SCI: Recommendations on the Type and Timing of Anticoagulant Thromboprophylaxis[66]
ANTICOAG
2017
Acute
VTE
International
CPG for the Management of Patients With Acute SCI: Recommendations on the Role of Baseline Magnetic Resonance Imaging in Clinical Decision Making and Outcome Prediction[67]
MRI
2017
Acute
Diagnostic Imaging
International
CPG for the Management of Patients With Acute SCI: Recommendations on the Type and Timing of Rehabilitation[68]
TIME
2017
Cross-Continuum
Rehabilitation
International
Rehabilitation in Health Systems[69]
WHO
2017
Cross-Continuum
Rehabilitation
International
International Perspectives on SCI[70]
WHO INT
2013
Cross-Continuum
Rehabilitation
International
Urodynamics in Patients with SCI: A Clinical Review and Best Practice Paper[71]
URO
2017
Cross-Continuum
Urinary Tract
International
Guidelines for the Rehabilitation of Patients with Metastatic Spinal Cord Compression[72]
MSCC
2017
Acute
Surgical/Medical Decompression
United Kingdom
Norwegian Guidelines for the Prehospital Management of Adult Trauma Patients with Potential Spinal Injury[73]
NOR
2017
Pre-Hospital
Spinal Immobilization
Norway
Wounds Canada Best Practice Recommendations[74]
WOUNDCAN
2017
Cross-Continuum
Skin Care
Canada
Neuropathic Pain in Adults: Pharmacological Management in Non-Specialist Settings (CG173)[75]
PALRM
2018
Community
Pain
United Kingdom
Identification and Management of Cardiometabolic Risk after Spinal Cord Injury: Clinical Practice Guideline for Health Care Providers[76]
NASH
2018
Cross-Continuum
Cardiometabolic Diabetes
United States
Diagnosis, Management and Surveillance Neurogenic Lower Urinary Tract Dysfunction[77]
CUA
2019
Cross-Continuum
Urinary Tract
Canada
Bone Mineral Density Testing in Spinal Cord Injury: The 2019 ISCD Official Positions[33]
BMD
2019
Cross-Continuum
Bone Health
International
Evaluation and Management of Autonomic Dysreflexia and Other Autonomic Dysfunctions: Preventing the Highs and Lows[78]
PVA AD
2020
Cross-Continuum
Autonomic Dysreflexia
United States
Management of Neurogenic Bowel Dysfunction in Adults after Spinal Cord Injury: Clinical Practice Guideline for Health Care Providers[79]
PVA BOWEL
2020
Cross-Continuum
Bowel
United States
Management of Mental Health Disorders, Substance Use Disorders, and Suicide in Adults with Spinal Cord Injury: Clinical Practice Guideline for Healthcare Providers[80]PVA EWB2020Cross-ContinuumMental Health & Substance Use DisordersUnited States
Table 4

Can-SCIP domain summary – Section 1.

Recommendations for the components of the Ideal SCI care systemTotal recommendationsRecommendation derivationLevel of evidence
 Adopted as isRevisedNewly derivedLevel ALevel BLevel C
PRE-HOSPITAL AND EMERGENCY391524021918
 Extrication & Transportation of Patients with Acute Cervical SCI10280091
 Assessment and Management in Pre-Hospital Settings2110002
 Assessment for Thoracic or Lumbosacral SCI1100001
 When to Carry Out Full In-Line Spinal Immobilization2110002
 How to Carry Out Full In-Line Spinal Immobilization2110011
 Receiving Information in Hospital Settings2110002
 Emergency Department Assessment and Management12750282
 Neurological Exam Following Acute Cervical SCI1010010
 Recording Information in Hospital Settings1010001
 Timing of Decompressive Surgery (≤24 h After Injury) in Patients with Acute Spinal Cord Injury3120003
 Providing Information on Transfer from an Emergency Department1010001
 Communication with Tertiary Services2020002
DIAGNOSTIC IMAGING1811526210
 Introductory Recommendations2020002
 Suspected Spinal Cord or Cervical Column Injury4310004
 Suspected Thoracic or Lumbosacral Column Injury Only2020020
 Diagnostic of Vertebral Artery Injuries Following Non-Penetrating Cervical Trauma2200101
 Radiographic Assessment in Awake, Asymptomatic Patient4301301
 Radiographic Assessment in Obtunded or Unevaluable Patient4301202
EARLY ACUTE CARE9234243
 Early Medical Management6114033
 Role of the Registered Dietitian1010010
 Nutrition Assessment: Energy Needs in the Acute Phase1100100
 Preventing Pressure Injuries During the Acute Care Phase1010100
EDUCATION AND SUPPORT OF PEOPLE WITH SCI AND THEIR FAMILIES ACROSS THE CONTINUUM6060006
CROSS CONTINUUM EDUCATION OF CLINICIANS AND STAFF WORKING WITH PEOPLE WITH SCI4121121
SPECIALIZED INPATIENT REHABILITATION8224107
COMMUNITY-BASED REHABILITATION7006007
 Community-Based Rehabilitation3111003
 Community Care4004004
VOCATIONAL REHABILITATION2002101
COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH & WELLNESS3003003
TOTAL96324321132756
Table 5

Can-SCIP domain summary – Section 2.

Recommendations for the SCI health conditionsTotal # of recommendationsRecommendation derivationLevel of evidence 
 Adopted as isRevisedNewly derivedLevel ALevel BLevel C 
ACTIVITY BASED THERAPY6150204 
AUTONOMIC DYSREFLEXIA (AD)88800801078 
 Blood Pressure Following SCI1100001 
 AD42340801032 
 AD & Sexuality9900009 
 AD And Cystoscopic (Transurethral and Suprapubic) Urological Procedures and Sperm Retrieval Procedures Performed in the Clinic Setting1111000011 
 AD In Pregnancy, Labor and Delivery, and the Postpartum Period6600006 
 Induced AD (“Boosting”)1100001 
 Orthostatic Hypotension4400004 
 Thermodysregulation1010000010 
 Hyperhidrosis4400004 
BLADDER451724491423 
 Screening, History and Physical Assessment Voiding Diary6330006 
 Urodynamics4400112 
 Urinary Tract Infection7151133 
 Bladder Management2110020 
  - Genitourinary Sequelae of Neurogenic Lower Urinary Tract Dysfunction5140014 
  - Conservative Therapy3300003 
  - Medical Therapy5131122 
  - Intravesicular Botox6231510 
  - Surveillance6150042 
  - Surgery1001001 
BONE HEALTH10406532 
 Assessment of Fracture Risk1100010 
 DXA Testing2200020 
 Prevention of Osteoporosis1100001 
 Treatment of Osteoporosis6006501 
BOWEL40400022216 
 Assessment of Neurogenic Bowel Dysfunction (NBD)8800044 
 Basic Bowel Management (BBM)6600042 
 Adaptive Equipment2200011 
 Diet, Supplements, Fiber, Fluids, and Probiotics7700115 
 Oral Medications1100001 
 Use of Suppositories, Enemas, and Irrigation6600141 
 Impact of Posture and Activity on NBD2200020 
 Use of Functional Electrical Stimulation (FES)1100010 
 Surgical Intervention to Manage NBD4400040 
 Managing Medical Complications of NBD3000012 
CARDIOMETABOLIC177822213 
 CMD risk management and Exercise6312114 
  - Nutrition Screening for People Living in the Community1010010 
 Obesity – Nutrition Assessment, Treatment, Bariatric Surgery2110101 
 Hypertension4130004 
 Dyslipidemia2110002 
 Diabetes Nutritional Support After SCI2110002 
EMOTIONAL WELLBEING54440105049 
 Screening, Assessment and Treatment8008008 
 Diagnostic-Specific Disorders: Anxiety Disorders6600006 
 Diagnosis-Specific Disorders: Major Depressive Disorder9702504 
 Diagnosis-Specific Disorders: Substance Use Disorders7700007 
 Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) and Acute Stress Disorder (ASD)8800008 
 Suicide1616000016 
MOBILITY AND WALKING5104122 
NEUROPATHIC PAIN2532118215 
 Introduction and Screening for Neuropathic Pain2020101 
 Diagnosis of Neuropathic Pain Clinical Assessment7160007 
 Treatment of Neuropathic Pain and Delivery of Care5050005 
 Recommendations for Neuropathic Pain Treatment10280622 
 Non-Pharmacological Therapies1001100 
RESPIRATORY10046019 
 Lung Volume Recruitment1001001 
 Abdominal Binder and Abdominal Muscle Simulation2002002 
 Pharmacological Agents for Respiratory Function1001010 
 Respiratory Muscle Training1001001 
 Home Mechanical Ventilation5041005 
SEXUAL HEALTH, RELATIONSHIPS AND FERTILITY53342841138 
 Introductory Recommendations5050005 
 Education7061016 
 Relationships3120003 
 Sexual History & Assessment6033114 
 Optimizing Sexual Well-Being, Body Image and Sensuality5131113 
 Physical and Practical Considerations – Bladder4040040 
 Physical and Practical Considerations – Bowel2020002 
 Physical and Practical Considerations – Sensation2002002 
 Physical and Practical Considerations – Mobility, Spasticity & Contractures2020002 
 Physical and Practical Considerations – Skin Integrity1010001 
 Physical and Practical Considerations – Autonomic Dysreflexia1010100 
 Treatment of Sexual Dysfunction7061007 
 Fertility – Men1100100 
 Fertility – Women2020020 
 Fertility – Men & Women1010010 
 Contraception1010001 
 Pregnancy3030012 
SKIN INTEGRITY9742487192355 
 Prevention7061142 
 Human Factors Affecting Pressure Injury Prevention6051042 
 Prevention Strategies Across the Continuum of Care7160313 
 Wheelchair Pressure Redistribution and Support Surfaces - Other Pressure Redistribution and Support Surfaces3120111 
 Recumbent Positioning8440008 
 Support Surfaces – Mattress5500005 
 Sitting Support Surfaces & Other Seating1610600412 
 Self-Management0000000 
 Education and the Person with SCIs Involvement in Care3300003 
 Risk & Risk Assessment1100100 
 Body Weight & Nutrition4310220 
 Assessment of the Person with a Pressure Ulcer4031013 
 Assessment Using the 24-hour Approach2110101 
 Reassessment of Seating Systems2020002 
 Assessment of Mobility9081027 
 Treatment Principles2200002 
 Non-Surgical Treatment3210201 
  - Creating a Physiologic Wound Environment1100100 
  - Debridement1100010 
  - Selection of Wound Care Dressing1100100 
  - Electrical Stimulation2110200 
 Surgical Treatment7313223 
 Hematologic and Biochemical Parameters of Healing2110110 
 Nutrition Intervention for Prevention of Pressure Ulcers1100100 
UPPER LIMB120111453 
VTE PROPHYLAXIS8530017 
 Prophylaxis1010001 
 Screening Patients for Asymptomatic Deep-Vein Thrombosis1100010 
 Diagnosis1010001 
 Mechanical Methods of Thromboprophylaxis1100001 
 Thromboprophylaxis3210003 
 Thromboprophylaxis in Hospitalized Chronic SCI Patients1100001 
WHEELED MOBILITY1921613412 
TOTAL489249172686499326 
PRISMA study flow diagram. SCI clinical practice guidelines selected for inclusion. Can-SCIP domain summary – Section 1. Can-SCIP domain summary – Section 2. Within the Components of the Ideal SCI Care System, 39 recommendations (40.6%) pertain to prehospital care, 18 (18.8%) that pertain to diagnostic imaging, 9 (9.4%) pertain to early acute care, 20 (20.8%) that pertain to specialized rehabilitation and community transitions, and 10 (10.4%) that pertain to education for clinicians, patients and caregivers across the care continuum. In the health systems portion of the guideline, the majority of the 21 new recommendations pertain to community-based rehabilitation. In the Secondary Health Conditions section, there were over 68 new recommendations. There was a total of 249 recommendations that were adopted without revision and 172 recommendations that were revised. Across the Secondary Health Conditions section, the aspects of care with the most recommendations, pertain to common and severe complications including skin integrity (97 recommendations), autonomic dysreflexia (88 recommendations), emotional well-being (54 recommendations) and sexual health, relationships, and fertility (53 recommendations). A substantial proportion of the recommendations (86%) were felt to be generic for application to the entire SCI community regardless of impairment. The majority of the recommendations are applicable across the rehabilitation and community settings; whereas for prehospital care and surgical interventions there was greater specificity based on the mechanism of injury and associated impairments (data not shown). This data will be used to inform the design of the Can-SCIP Guideline website and will be presented in a future manuscript with the associated algorithms.

Discussion

SCI results in a complex constellation of impairments that require tertiary care across the health system and the individual’s lifespan[27,28] to reduce morbidity and mortality and augment functional recovery, health and well-being. The Can-SCIP Guideline is the first comprehensive guideline for adults with SCI in Canada that has integrated recommendations from 41 guidelines and has validated the guideline content for implementation in Canada. A total of 585 recommendations were explicitly adopted (n = 281), adapted (n = 215) or newly developed (n = 89) to align with the Canadian healthcare environment, providing a set of recommendations that cover the continuum from pre-hospital to community-based care that are customized for the individual based on their impairment. Due to the sheer number of recommendations, and the diverse audiences for sections of the Guideline content, the Can-SCIP steering committee a priori elected to divide the recommendations into two sections: the first section addressing recommendations for the components of the ideal SCI care system and the second section addressing the management of secondary health conditions. The target audience for this section is health system leaders who make decisions about human resources, capital equipment, staff training, physical space, and specialized equipment needed for optimal care. The second section provides recommendations to address secondary health conditions within prioritized domains for rehabilitation care deemed important by SCI stakeholders. The target audiences for this section are individuals with SCI and their regulated healthcare professionals. There are gaps in the number and complexity of recommendations in the latter part of the healthcare continuum that in part reflect the design and resourcing of the health system and existence of available community sector administrative data sources.[29] Areas in which new recommendations were developed to reflect burgeoning science. also reflect the presence of local champions in Canada who are leading the development of innovations in SCI care including: hemodynamic monitoring,[30] early surgical spinal cord decompression,[31] upper limb rehabilitation including the selection of patient appropriate for tenodesis or peripheral nerve transplant surgery,[32] bone health,[33] autonomic dysreflexia,[34] respiratory care,[35,36] and sexual health.[37] Not surprisingly, the greatest number of recommendations pertain to skin integrity, autonomic dysreflexia and neurogenic bladder management that are the most frequent secondary health conditions which have a profound adverse impact on an individual’s health, resource requirements and mortality. As discussed above, there are fewer recommendations supported by high-quality randomized controlled trials, reflecting the low proportion of level A recommendations. This reflects the nature of the SCI evidence, the relatively low incidence and prevalence and the challenge of studying complex interventions in this population with heterogeneous impairments. Further, challenges within the field of SCI internationally include: ongoing difficulties in funding and accruing an adequate sample size within clinical trials, restricting our ability to generate Level I evidence to inform practice.[6,7] The Can-SCIP Guideline development process had multiple benefits: The Can-SCIP Guideline has some limitations. Research in SCI is typically based on small sample sizes and tested in a pre–post design. There are comparatively few research studies with stronger research designs such as prospective randomized controlled trials, matched-control designs, and longitudinal designs. Treatments tested in studies with small sample sizes and emerging technologies have little chance of appearing in CPGs, until they have been more widely tested, a process that takes many years. The recommendations within the Can-SCIP Guideline are informed by the best evidence available at the time of publication. Future versions of the Can-SCIP Guideline will be highly influenced by new level A or high-quality level B evidence. Clinicians should consider patient preferences, their clinical judgment, and context-dependent factors (i.e. availability of resources) in their clinical decision-making process. Instead of duplicating the solid work of other guideline groups, it allowed for the Can-SCIP group to conduct a quality assessment of existing SCI CPGs that allowed the expert panel members to adopt the highest quality recommendations for inclusion. This process allowed for many important clinical questions which arise for individuals throughout an individual’s care journey to be addressed and may be used by all members of an interprofessional care team. Each working group had access to the SCIRE systematic literature review evidence tables to ensure all evidence that had not been incorporated into previous guidelines were considered for each domain. We adhered to the processes for engaging individuals with lived experience described by Gainforth and colleagues[38] throughout the guideline development process. The expert panel members specified which recommendations apply to specific impairments groups which will allow clinicians to quickly identify recommendations relevant to the patient in front of them. As the current model used to update CPGs involves revising the entire CPG within a specific time interval (e.g. every two years), some recommendations may be out of date by the time the CPG is updated, thereby affecting the validity of specific recommendations.[39] Further, the evidence base for some recommendations may not vary significantly between CPG updates; thereby, slowing the efficiency of the update process. To overcome these challenges, living guidelines are an alternative to standard guideline development methods which will allow recommendations within a CPG to be updated as new and relevant evidence is published.[39] The Can-SCIP Guideline Living Guideline Panel will adopt a living guideline process to provide target users with up-to-date and high-quality advice. This process will involve a living systematic review, living evidence profiles, living evidence-to-decision tables, ongoing participation from a living guideline panel, timely peer review processes, with routine publication and dissemination, with a sustainable source of funding. These processes and associated work plan will be discussed in a subsequent publication. In brief, Can-SCIP Guideline recommendations will be prioritized for revision and dissemination based on the following criteria[39]: The Can-SCIP Guideline will be posted on an interactive website (https://canscip.com), and all recommendations will be updated in real-time. For expediency, a push notification will be sent to followers notifying them that specific recommendations have been revised. “The recommendation is a priority for decision-making”[39] which may be affected by increased prevalence of morbidity and mortality or emergent interventions or therapies. There is a moderate-to-high probability that emerging evidence may improve the level of a particular intervention (i.e. in instances when the level of evidence is a “B” or “C” within the Guideline). There is active research within a particular topic area of interest to the field.

Conclusion

The Can-SCIP Guideline recommendations were developed using a systematic and rigorous process of evaluating previously published rigorously developed CPGs. The recommendations are pertinent to the care of individuals with SCI over their lifespan from injury onset to healthy aging in the community. The 585 guideline recommendations are intended to assist clinicians, administrators, and policy makers within interdisciplinary teams to provide evidence-informed multidisciplinary care to individuals with SCI within the Canadian healthcare context. Click here for additional data file.
  52 in total

1.  A prospective evaluation of hemodynamic management in acute spinal cord injury patients.

Authors:  C Y Kong; A M Hosseini; L M Belanger; J J Ronco; S J Paquette; M C Boyd; N Dea; J Street; C G Fisher; M F Dvorak; B K Kwon
Journal:  Spinal Cord       Date:  2013-06       Impact factor: 2.772

2.  The challenge of moving evidence-based measures into clinical practice: lessons in knowledge translation.

Authors:  Marjolijn Ketelaar; Dianne J Russell; Jan Willem Gorter
Journal:  Phys Occup Ther Pediatr       Date:  2008-05       Impact factor: 2.360

3.  Community participation for individuals with spinal cord injury living in Queensland, Australia.

Authors:  J J Carr; M B Kendall; D I Amsters; K J Pershouse; P Kuipers; P Buettner; R N Barker
Journal:  Spinal Cord       Date:  2016-11-29       Impact factor: 2.772

Review 4.  Adaptive trial designs for spinal cord injury clinical trials directed to the central nervous system.

Authors:  James D Guest; John D Steeves; M J Mulcahey; Linda A T Jones; Frank Rockhold; Rϋediger Rupp; John L K Kramer; Steven Kirshblum; Andrew Blight; Daniel Lammertse
Journal:  Spinal Cord       Date:  2020-09-16       Impact factor: 2.772

5.  Validation of the Reintegration to Normal Living Index for community-dwelling persons with chronic spinal cord injury.

Authors:  Sander L Hitzig; E Manolo Romero Escobar; Luc Noreau; B Catharine Craven
Journal:  Arch Phys Med Rehabil       Date:  2012-01       Impact factor: 3.966

6.  Prevention of Venous Thromboembolism in Individuals with Spinal Cord Injury: Clinical Practice Guidelines for Health Care Providers, 3rd ed.: Consortium for Spinal Cord Medicine.

Authors: 
Journal:  Top Spinal Cord Inj Rehabil       Date:  2016

Review 7.  Problems of sexual function after spinal cord injury.

Authors:  Stacy L Elliott
Journal:  Prog Brain Res       Date:  2006       Impact factor: 2.453

8.  Survival and regeneration of rubrospinal neurons 1 year after spinal cord injury.

Authors:  Brian K Kwon; Jie Liu; Corrie Messerer; Nao R Kobayashi; John McGraw; Loren Oschipok; Wolfram Tetzlaff
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2002-02-26       Impact factor: 11.205

9.  Monitoring Cough Effectiveness and Use of Airway Clearance Strategies: A Canadian and UK Survey.

Authors:  Louise Rose; Douglas McKim; David Leasa; Mika Nonoyama; Anu Tandon; Marta Kaminska; Colleen O'Connell; Andrea Loewen; Bronwen Connolly; Patrick Murphy; Nicholas Hart; Jeremy Road
Journal:  Respir Care       Date:  2018-09-11       Impact factor: 2.258

Review 10.  Living systematic reviews: 4. Living guideline recommendations.

Authors:  Elie A Akl; Joerg J Meerpohl; Julian Elliott; Lara A Kahale; Holger J Schünemann
Journal:  J Clin Epidemiol       Date:  2017-09-11       Impact factor: 6.437

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