“GRADE-ing typhoid fever vaccination

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Steve Schofield Force Health Protection Department of National Defence (DND) Canada “GRADE-ing typhoid fever vaccination

Transcript of “GRADE-ing typhoid fever vaccination

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Steve Schofield

Force Health Protection

Department of National Defence (DND)

Canada

“GRADE-ing” typhoid fever vaccination

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Disclosure

I have no conflict(s) of interest to declare

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Acknowledgements (“Team Typhoid”)

• A. Henteleff (chair)

• C. Greenaway

• S. Schofield

• P. Plourde

(CATMAT mbrs)

• J. Geduld

• M. Abdel-Motagally

• M. Bryson

(CATMAT secretariat)

CATMAT = Committee to Advise on Tropical Medicine and Travel

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CATMAT (Committee to Advise on Tropical Medicine and Travel)

Current Membership (voting, liaison, ex-officio): ...a bunch of really smart people (McCarthy, Libman, Boggild, Greenaway, Brophy, Crockett, Teitelbaum, Bui, Vaughan, McDonald, Tepper, Marion, Audcent, Pernica, Gershman [US CDC]) + an entomologist (Schofield)

P011.09: Canada's Recommendations for Travel Health: The Role of the Committee to Advise on Tropical Medicine and Travel

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Never disagree with Dr. Guyatt, i.e. travel-medicine guidelines can be

evidence-based

Conclusion

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Objective (ISTM)

Describe the GRADE process applied in a travel medicine framework including its strengths and weaknesses. Review the process of using GRADE to produce the

CATMAT guideline on international travellers and typhoid vaccine, and outline the challenges encountered

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Objective (mine)

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Outline

• Timeline

• The evidence

– interventions, but emphasis on baseline risk

• The recommendations

– rationale & terminology

• Strengths and Challenges (GRADE)

• Since statement…

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2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2008

1994/5 Statement

Needs update

WG + plan

EBM “course” (w/ G. Guyatt)

Initial draft

“on hold”

GRADE

Updated draft

CATMAT Evidence-based Medicine Statement

2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2008

1994 Statement

Typhoid as a trial + WG + RQ’s

Systematic review

GRADE CATMAT approval

CATMAT Typhoid Statement

Initial draft

SOFs + EPs

Statement published

G. Guyatt consult Draft to

CATMAT

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The Evidence (Does typhoid vaccine versus no vaccine decrease the incidence

of typhoid and associated morbidity and mortality among Canadian travellers?)

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2007 version

• “Typhoid fever” and “travel” • 227 studies identified, 147 included • Three trials for each of Vi polysaccharide and Ty21a (three & two for AEs)

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“Middling” efficacy…consistent

across groups

Absolute risk not relevant (i.e. not the

baseline risk for travellers)

Moderate confidence in

EOF…indirectness as no traveller specific data

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↑risk for mild AE (+ nausea and

pain)

Absolute risk more relevant (still not

travellers)

Moderate confidence in

EOF…indirectness as no traveller specific data

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Moderate risk of bias

Low risk of bias

For other risk factors (age, VFR, length of stay, etc)

very low quality data

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Moderate risk of imprecision

Assessment by outcome (geographic region)

Moderate risk of bias

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Attack rate/region

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Why only for South Asia?

• Threshold-based (risk > 1/10,000 travellers) • Only South Asia meets this threshold; other regions ca. 5 X or more less “risky” • “Only” does not mean “only” (is a conditional recommendation)

For other risk factors (age, VFR, length of stay, etc.) very low quality evidence

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Why a conditional recommendation? • Evidence for and magnitude of vaccine efficacy = strong recommendation?

The “buts” • Paucity of evidence for values and preferences of travellers (likely variable) • Very low confidence in estimates of effect for risk factors other than destination • Absolute benefit is “pretty low” • The “buts” apply to many other travel medicine interventions?

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3 yrs, 2 GRADE recommendations 1.5 yrs, 10 GRADE recommendations

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Summary - Strengths • GRADE can be used to develop TM

recommendations

• Transparent and rigorous (for interventions)

• ↑ used by guideline developers (e.g., WHO, ACIP, Cochrane)

• Overt consideration of values and preferences

• Outcome-based, separation of quality assessment and recommendations

• Flexible...one groups yes can be another’s no

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Summary – Challenges (1) • Resource/knowledge intensive:

– If resources constrain, then careful selection of EBM questions

– ↓ to # guidelines/time period?

• Learning curve including learning not to GRADE everything

• Establishing and “GRADEing” baseline risk

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Summary – Challenges (2) • Scant evidence for:

– Itinerary & traveller-specific risk factors

– Patient values and preferences

• Given above, translating evidence into recommendations, e.g., what are appropriate thresholds for action (or non-action)

• Not black and white for end-user

• Can make people mad

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Is GRADE “worth” it?

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Questions?