Abstract

IN 1990, THE INSTITUTE OF MEDICINE PROPOSED GUIDEline development to reduce inappropriate health care variation by assisting patient and practitioner decisions. Unfortunately, too many current guidelines have become marketing and opinion-based pieces, delivering directive rather than assistive statements. Current use of the term guideline has strayed far from the original intent of the Institute of Medicine. Most current articles called “guidelines” are actually expert consensus reports. It is not surprising, then, that the article by Tricoci et al in this issue of JAMA demonstrates that revisions of the American College of Cardiology (ACC)/American Heart Association (AHA) guidelines have shifted to more class II recommendations (conflicting evidence and/or divergence of opinion about the usefulness/efficacy of a procedure or treatment) and that 48% of the time, these recommendations are based on the lowest level of evidence (level C: expert opinion, case studies, or standards of care). This trend is especially disconcerting given the quantity of cardiovascular scientific literature published during the last decade. The overreliance on expert opinion in guidelines is problematic. All guideline committees begin with implicit biases and values, which affects the recommendations they make. However, bias may occur subconsciously and, therefore, go unrecognized. Converting data into recommendations requires subjective judgments; the value structure of the panel members molds those judgments. Guideline consumers could adjust for these biases if guideline panels made their values and goals explicit, but usually they remain opaque. The most widely recognized bias is financial. Guidelines often have become marketing tools for device and pharmaceutical manufacturers. While the ACC and AHA receive no industry funding for guideline development, they do receive industry support to disseminate guideline products such as pocket guides. Financial ties between guideline panel members and industry are common. “Experts” on guideline panels are more likely to receive industry funding for research, consulting fees, and speakers’ honoraria. In 1 study of 44 guidelines, 87% of the guideline authors had some form of industry tie. Other biases are also important. The specialty composition of a guideline panel likely influences guideline development. Specialty societies can use guidelines to enlarge that specialty’s area of expertise in a competitive medical marketplace. Federal guideline committees may focus on limiting costs; committees influenced by industry are more likely to shape recommendations to accord with industry needs. Guidelines have other limitations. Guidelines are often too narrowly focused on single diseases and are not patient focused. Patients seldom have single diseases, and few if any guidelines help clinicians in managing complexity. Paradoxically, guidelines are also often too comprehensive, covering every possible intervention that could be appropriate for a patient with that single disease. Tricoci et al found that in ACC/AHA guidelines with at least 1 revision, the number of recommendations increased 48% from the first guideline to the most recent version. If there is a main message in such guidelines, it is likely to be lost in the minutiae. Guidelines are not patient-specific enough to be useful and rarely allow for individualization of care. Most guidelines have a one-size-fits-all mentality and do not build flexibility or contextualization into the recommendations. There are simply too many guidelines, often on the same topic. For instance, clinicians really do not need 10 different adult pharyngitis guidelines. Moreover, guidelines are often out of date. The evidence base used to create guidelines changes quickly. Most guidelines become outdated after 5 years, and most guideline developers lack formal procedures for updating their guidelines. The ACC/AHA guidelines are periodically updated, with updates taking a mean of 4.6 to 8.2 years until publication. As a result, many clinicians do not use guidelines. An even greater concern, however, is that some of these consensus statements are being turned into performance measures and other tools to critique the quality of physician care. This potential problem could be minimized if performance measures were derived from high-quality guidelines based on the highest level of evidence and applied to patients with a

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