13 mayo, 2013

Antithrombotic Therapy and Prevention of Thrombosis,9th ed: American College of Chest Physicians


Antithrombotic Therapy and Prevention of Thrombosis, 9th ed: American College of Chest Physicians Evidence-Based Clinical Practice Guideline

Gordon H. Guyatt , MD, FCCP ; Elie A. Akl , MD, PhD, MPH ; Mark Crowther , MD ;
David D. Gutterman , MD, FCCP ; Holger J. Schü nemann , MD, PhD, FCCP ; for the American
College of Chest Physicians Antithrombotic Therapy and Prevention of Thrombosis Panel*
 CHEST 2012; 141(2)(Suppl):7S–47S

Full Text




The eighth iteration of the American College of Chest Physicians Antithrombotic Guidelines presented, in a paper version, a narrative evidence summary and rationale for the recommendations, a small number of evidence profiles summarizing bodies of evidence, and some articles with quite extensive summary tables of primary studies. In total, this represented 600 recommendations summarized in 968 pages of text. Many readers responded that the result was too voluminous for their liking or practical use.
Cognizant of this feedback, we worked hard to minimize the length of the text for the ninth iteration of the guidelines Antithrombotic Therapy and Prevention of Thrombosis, 9th ed: American College of Chest Physicians Evidence-Based Clinical Practice Guidelines (AT9) without sacrificing key content. A number of topic editors found our shortening edits draconian, but we were determined to produce the leanest product possible.
There were, however, a number of obstacles. In what we believe is a key advance in AT9, we conducted a systematic review of what is known about patients’ values and preferences regarding antithrombotic therapy and included the results as an article in AT9. In another forward step, we recognized the problems with asymptomatic thrombosis as a surrogate outcome, and devised strategies to estimate reductions in symptomatic DVT and pulmonary embolism with antithrombotic prophylaxis. We felt it important to explain this innovation to users of AT9, and this meant another article.
We included, for the first time, an article on diagnosis addressing patients with symptoms and signs suggesting DVT. We increased the range of interventions we have covered, resulting in additional recommendations. Finally, we produced many summary of findings tables, which offer extremely succinct and informative presentations of best estimates of effect and the confidence associated with those estimates.
If published in the same fashion as the Antithrombotic and Thrombolytic Therapy, 8th ed: American College of Chest Physicians Antithrombotic Guidelines, this would have resulted in a document with > 850 pages of paper text, an unacceptable length. Given this and with the advice of the journal, we decided to adopt a highly focused print version that includes only this executive summary and the following articles:
  • An introduction describing the major innovations in AT9
  • A methods article explaining how we developed the guidelines (a potential model for other guideline groups interested in optimal rigor)
  • Recommendations and grading from each article embedded in the table of contents of each article
Those seeking the rationale for the recommendations, including the supporting evidence, should access the online version of the guideline (http://http://chestjournal.chestpubs.org/content/141/2_suppl) that includes a narrative summaries and supporting summary of findings tables. The numbering indicated beside the recommendations in this summary is aligned with the sections and tables found in the full articles. Those interested in a deeper understanding of the evidence can turn to online data supplements for each of the articles that include recommendations. There, they will find evidence profiles (expanded versions of the summary of findings tables) and some tables summarizing the methods and results, and the risk of bias, associated with the individual studies that contributed to the evidence profiles and summary of findings tables.
The world of medical information is rapidly becoming a world of electronic storage and presentation of primary studies, recommendations, and a wide variety of other information of interest to health care practitioners. Although our abbreviated paper copy presentation represents a necessary response to a challenging situation, it is also a harbinger of the increasingly electronic world of medical information into which future editions of guidelines are destined to move.

Summary of Recommendations

Note on Shaded Text: Throughout this guideline, shading is used within the summary of recommendations sections to indicate recommendations that are newly added or have been changed since the publication of Antithrombotic and Thrombolytic Therapy: American College of Chest Physicians Evidence-Based Clinical Practice Guidelines (8th Edition). Recommendations that remain unchanged are not shaded.

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