Guidelines in cardiac clinical practice: evaluation of their methodological quality using the AGREE II instrument

Author:

Sabharwal Sanjeeve1,Patel Vanash1,Nijjer Sukhjinder S2,Kirresh Ali1,Darzi Ara1,Chambers John C3,Malik Iqbal4,Kooner Jaspal S2,Athanasiou Thanos1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Surgery and Cancer, Imperial College, London W2 1NY, UK

2. National Heart and Lung Institute, Imperial College, London W2 1NY, UK

3. School of Public Health, Imperial College, London W2 1NY, UK

4. Cardiovascular Sciences and the Renal Institute, Imperial College, London W2 1NY, UK

Abstract

Although clinical guidelines have an influential role in healthcare practice, their development process and the evidence they cite has been subject to criticism. This study evaluates the quality of guidelines in cardiac clinical practice by examining how they adhere to validated methodological standards in guideline development. A structured review of cardiac clinical practice guidelines published in seven cardiovascular journals between January 2001 and May 2011 was performed. The AGREE II assessment tool was used by two researchers to evaluate guideline quality. A total of 101 guidelines were identified. Assessment of guidelines using AGREE II found methodological quality to be highly variable (median score, 58.70%; range, 45.34–76.40%). ‘Scope and purpose’ (median score, 86.1%) and ‘clarity of development’ (median score, 83.3 %) were the two domains within AGREE II that received the highest scores. Applicability (median score, 20.80%; range, 4.20–54.20%) and editorial independence (median score, 33.30%; range, 0–62.50%) had the lowest scores. There is considerable variability in the quality of cardiac clinical practice guidelines and this has not improved over the last 10 years. Incorporating validated guideline assessment tools, such as AGREE II, may improve the quality of guidelines.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Medicine

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