An Official ATS Statement: Grading the Quality of Evidence and Strength of Recommendations in ATS Guidelines and Recommendations

2006 American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine 576 citations

Abstract

Grading the strength of recommendations and the quality of underlying evidence enhances the usefulness of clinical practice guidelines. Professional societies and other organizations, including the American Thoracic Society (ATS), should reach consensus about whether they will use one common grading system and which of the numerous grading systems they would apply across all guidelines. The profusion of guideline grading systems confuses consumers of guidelines, and undermines the value of the grading exercise in conveying a transparent message. In response to this dilemma, the international GRADE working group has developed an approach that is useful for many guideline contexts, and that several national and international organizations have adopted. The GRADE system classifies recommendations as strong or weak, according to the balance of the benefits and downsides (harms, burden, and cost) after considering the quality of evidence. The quality of evidence reflects the confidence in estimates of the true effects of an intervention, and the system classifies quality of evidence as high, moderate, low, or very low according to factors that include the study methodology, the consistency and precision of the results, and the directness of the evidence. On recommendation of the ATS Documents Development and Implementation Committee, the ATS adopted the GRADE approach for its guidelines in line with many other organizations that have recently chosen the GRADE approach. This article informs ATS guideline developers, investigators, and those interpreting future ATS guidelines that follow the GRADE approach about the methodology and applicability of ATS guidelines and recommendations.

Keywords

MedicineGrading (engineering)Statement (logic)Quality of evidenceMEDLINEMeta-analysisPathologyLaw

Related Publications

Publication Info

Year
2006
Type
article
Volume
174
Issue
5
Pages
605-614
Citations
576
Access
Closed

External Links

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

576
OpenAlex

Cite This

Holger J. Schünemann, Roman Jaeschke, Richard J. Cook et al. (2006). An Official ATS Statement: Grading the Quality of Evidence and Strength of Recommendations in ATS Guidelines and Recommendations. American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine , 174 (5) , 605-614. https://doi.org/10.1164/rccm.200602-197st

Identifiers

DOI
10.1164/rccm.200602-197st