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GRADE guidelines 6. Rating the quality of...
Journal article

GRADE guidelines 6. Rating the quality of evidence—imprecision

Abstract

GRADE suggests that examination of 95% confidence intervals (CIs) provides the optimal primary approach to decisions regarding imprecision. For practice guidelines, rating down the quality of evidence (i.e., confidence in estimates of effect) is required if clinical action would differ if the upper versus the lower boundary of the CI represented the truth. An exception to this rule occurs when an effect is large, and consideration of CIs alone suggests a robust effect, but the total sample size is not large and the number of events is small. Under these circumstances, one should consider rating down for imprecision. To inform this decision, one can calculate the number of patients required for an adequately powered individual trial (termed the "optimal information size" [OIS]). For continuous variables, we suggest a similar process, initially considering the upper and lower limits of the CI, and subsequently calculating an OIS. Systematic reviews require a somewhat different approach. If the 95% CI excludes a relative risk (RR) of 1.0, and the total number of events or patients exceeds the OIS criterion, precision is adequate. If the 95% CI includes appreciable benefit or harm (we suggest an RR of under 0.75 or over 1.25 as a rough guide) rating down for imprecision may be appropriate even if OIS criteria are met.

Authors

Guyatt GH; Oxman AD; Kunz R; Brozek J; Alonso-Coello P; Rind D; Devereaux PJ; Montori VM; Freyschuss B; Vist G

Journal

Journal of Clinical Epidemiology, Vol. 64, No. 12, pp. 1283–1293

Publisher

Elsevier

Publication Date

January 1, 2011

DOI

10.1016/j.jclinepi.2011.01.012

ISSN

0895-4356

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