Strong versus weak recommendations have an impact on health care policy, Dr. Inadomi added. Those measuring quality of care might, in some cases, evaluate the frequency with which patients receive guideline-based care that has been given a 1A rating, which identifies the strongest recommendation. Weak recommendations encourage a greater emphasis on shared decision making that recognizes alternative treatment strategies in the context of patient preferences and values.
A reorientation that considers the limits of objective data by itself is reflected in a less restrictive view on the source of the data used in guideline deliberations, according to Dr. Inadomi. “It was once thought that all RCTs are good and observational studies are bad,” he said, adding that this view has changed with greater appreciation of publication bias and RCT study limitations, such as enrollment of nonrepresentative patient populations. While RCT data are preferred, he contended that observational studies are influential to guideline committees when there is a large effect size and there is consistency of evidence.
The move away from evidence-only guidelines is driven by a greater appreciation of value, Dr. Inadomi suggested. For entrepreneurs who hope to shepherd their devices or tools into a central position in clinical medicine, safety and efficacy are critical but may no longer be sufficient.
Dr. Inadomi has no disclosures relevant to this topic.