Measuring clinical uncertainty and equipoise by applying the agreement study methodology to patient management decisions

Abstract Background Clinical uncertainty and equipoise are vague notions that play important roles in contemporary problems of medical care and research, including the design and conduct of pragmatic trials. Our goal was to show how the reliability study methods normally used to assess diagnostic te...

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Main Authors: Robert Fahed, Tim E. Darsaut, Behzad Farzin, Miguel Chagnon, Jean Raymond
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-08-01
Series:BMC Medical Research Methodology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12874-020-01095-8
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spelling doaj-c9759aa3e66041279cae88f51fb96f0d2020-11-25T03:38:20ZengBMCBMC Medical Research Methodology1471-22882020-08-0120111210.1186/s12874-020-01095-8Measuring clinical uncertainty and equipoise by applying the agreement study methodology to patient management decisionsRobert Fahed0Tim E. Darsaut1Behzad Farzin2Miguel Chagnon3Jean Raymond4Division of Neurology, The Ottawa HospitalMackenzie Health Sciences Centre, Department of Surgery, Division of Neurosurgery, University of Alberta HospitalDepartment of Radiology, Service of Interventional Neuroradiology, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Montréal – CHUMDepartment of Mathematics and Statistic, Pavillion André-Aisenstadt, Université de MontréalDepartment of Radiology, Service of Interventional Neuroradiology, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Montréal – CHUMAbstract Background Clinical uncertainty and equipoise are vague notions that play important roles in contemporary problems of medical care and research, including the design and conduct of pragmatic trials. Our goal was to show how the reliability study methods normally used to assess diagnostic tests can be applied to particular management decisions to measure the degree of uncertainty and equipoise regarding the use of rival management options. Methods We first use thrombectomy in acute stroke as an illustrative example of the method we propose. We then review, item by item, how the various design elements of diagnostic reliability studies can be modified in order to measure clinical uncertainty. Results The thrombectomy example shows sufficient disagreement and uncertainty to warrant the conduct of additional randomized trials. The general method we propose is that a sufficient number of diverse individual cases sharing a similar clinical problem and covering a wide spectrum of clinical presentations be assembled into a portfolio that is submitted to a variety of clinicians who routinely manage patients with the clinical problem. Discussion Clinicians are asked to independently choose one of the predefined management options, which are selected from those that would be compared within a randomized trial that would address the clinical dilemma. Intra-rater agreement can be assessed at a later time with a second evaluation. Various professional judgments concerning individual patients can then be compared and analyzed using kappa statistics or similar methods. Interpretation of results can be facilitated by providing examples or by translating the results into clinically meaningful summary sentences. Conclusions Measuring the uncertainty regarding management options for clinical problems may reveal substantial disagreement, provide an empirical foundation for the notion of equipoise, and inform or facilitate the design/conduct of clinical trials to address the clinical dilemma.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12874-020-01095-8EquipoiseUncertaintyRandomized trialsMethodologyClinical decision-makingAgreement
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Robert Fahed
Tim E. Darsaut
Behzad Farzin
Miguel Chagnon
Jean Raymond
spellingShingle Robert Fahed
Tim E. Darsaut
Behzad Farzin
Miguel Chagnon
Jean Raymond
Measuring clinical uncertainty and equipoise by applying the agreement study methodology to patient management decisions
BMC Medical Research Methodology
Equipoise
Uncertainty
Randomized trials
Methodology
Clinical decision-making
Agreement
author_facet Robert Fahed
Tim E. Darsaut
Behzad Farzin
Miguel Chagnon
Jean Raymond
author_sort Robert Fahed
title Measuring clinical uncertainty and equipoise by applying the agreement study methodology to patient management decisions
title_short Measuring clinical uncertainty and equipoise by applying the agreement study methodology to patient management decisions
title_full Measuring clinical uncertainty and equipoise by applying the agreement study methodology to patient management decisions
title_fullStr Measuring clinical uncertainty and equipoise by applying the agreement study methodology to patient management decisions
title_full_unstemmed Measuring clinical uncertainty and equipoise by applying the agreement study methodology to patient management decisions
title_sort measuring clinical uncertainty and equipoise by applying the agreement study methodology to patient management decisions
publisher BMC
series BMC Medical Research Methodology
issn 1471-2288
publishDate 2020-08-01
description Abstract Background Clinical uncertainty and equipoise are vague notions that play important roles in contemporary problems of medical care and research, including the design and conduct of pragmatic trials. Our goal was to show how the reliability study methods normally used to assess diagnostic tests can be applied to particular management decisions to measure the degree of uncertainty and equipoise regarding the use of rival management options. Methods We first use thrombectomy in acute stroke as an illustrative example of the method we propose. We then review, item by item, how the various design elements of diagnostic reliability studies can be modified in order to measure clinical uncertainty. Results The thrombectomy example shows sufficient disagreement and uncertainty to warrant the conduct of additional randomized trials. The general method we propose is that a sufficient number of diverse individual cases sharing a similar clinical problem and covering a wide spectrum of clinical presentations be assembled into a portfolio that is submitted to a variety of clinicians who routinely manage patients with the clinical problem. Discussion Clinicians are asked to independently choose one of the predefined management options, which are selected from those that would be compared within a randomized trial that would address the clinical dilemma. Intra-rater agreement can be assessed at a later time with a second evaluation. Various professional judgments concerning individual patients can then be compared and analyzed using kappa statistics or similar methods. Interpretation of results can be facilitated by providing examples or by translating the results into clinically meaningful summary sentences. Conclusions Measuring the uncertainty regarding management options for clinical problems may reveal substantial disagreement, provide an empirical foundation for the notion of equipoise, and inform or facilitate the design/conduct of clinical trials to address the clinical dilemma.
topic Equipoise
Uncertainty
Randomized trials
Methodology
Clinical decision-making
Agreement
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12874-020-01095-8
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