The GRADE approach (Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation) is a method of assessing the certainty in evidence (also known as quality of evidence or confidence in effect estimates) and the strength of recommendations in health care.[1] It provides a structured and transparent evaluation of the importance of outcomes of alternative management strategies, acknowledgment of patients and the public values and preferences, and comprehensive criteria for downgrading and upgrading certainty in evidence. It has important implications for those summarizing evidence for systematic reviews, health technology assessments, and clinical practice guidelines as well as other decision makers.[2]
Background and history
The GRADE began in the year 2000 as a collaboration of methodologists, guideline developers, biostatisticians, clinicians, public health scientists and other interested members. GRADE developed and implemented a common, transparent and sensible approach to grading the quality of evidence (also known as certainty in evidence or confidence in effect estimates) and strength of recommendations in healthcare.[3][4]
GRADE components
The GRADE approach separates recommendations following from an evaluation of the evidence as strong or weak. A recommendation to use, or not use an option (e.g. an intervention), should be based on the trade-offs between desirable consequences of following a recommendation on the one hand, and undesirable consequences on the other. If desirable consequences outweigh undesirable consequences, decision makers will recommend an option and vice versa. The uncertainty associated with the trade-off between the desirable and undesirable consequences will determine the strength of recommendations.[5] The criteria that determine this balance of consequences are listed in Table 2. Furthermore, it provides decision-makers (e.g. clinicians, other health care providers, patients and policy makers) with a guide to using those recommendations in clinical practice, public health and policy. To achieve simplicity, the GRADE approach classifies the quality of evidence in one of four levels—high, moderate, low, and very low:
There is a lot of confidence that the true effect lies close to that of the estimated effect.
Moderate
There is moderate confidence in the estimated effect: The true effect is likely to be close to the estimated effect, but there is a possibility that it is substantially different.
Low
There is limited confidence in the estimated effect: The true effect might be substantially different from the estimated effect.
Very low
There is very little confidence in the estimated effect: The true effect is likely to be substantially different from the estimated effect.
The GRADE working group has developed a software application that facilitates the use of the approach, allows the development of summary tables and contains the GRADE handbook. The software is free for non-profit organizations and is available online.[8]
The GRADE approach to assess the certainty in evidence is widely applicable, including to questions about diagnosis,[9][10] prognosis,[11][12] network meta-analysis[13] and public health.[14]
Strength of recommendation
Factors and criteria that determine the direction and strength of a recommendation:
Factor and criteria*
How the factor influences the direction and strength of a recommendation
Problem
This factor can be integrated with the balance of the benefits and harms and burden.
The problem is determined by the importance and frequency of the health care issue that is addressed (burden of disease, prevalence or baseline risk). If the problem is of great importance a strong recommendation is more likely.
Values and preferences
This describes how important health outcomes are to those affected, how variable they are and if there is uncertainty about this. The less variability or uncertainty there is about values and preferences for the critical or important outcomes, the more likely is a strong recommendation.
Quality of the evidence
The confidence in any estimate of the criteria determining the direction and strength of the recommendation will determine if a strong or conditional recommendation is offered. However, the overall quality that is assigned to the recommendation is that of the evidence about effects on population-important outcomes. The higher the quality of evidence the more likely is a strong recommendation.
Benefits and harms and burden
This requires an evaluation of the absolute effects of both the benefits and harms and their importance. The greater the net benefit or net harm the more likely is a strong recommendation for or against the option.
Resource implications
This describes how resource intense an option is, if it is cost-effective and if there is incremental benefit. The more advantageous or clearly disadvantageous these resource implications are the more likely is a strong recommendation.
Equity
This factor is often addressed under values preferences, and frequently also includes resource considerations
The greater the likelihood to reduce inequities or increase equity and the more accessible an option is, the more likely is a strong recommendation.
Acceptability
This factor can be integrated with the balance of the benefits and harms and burden.
The greater the acceptability of an option to all or most stakeholders, the more likely is a strong recommendation.
Feasibility
This factor includes considerations about values and preferences, and resource implications.
The greater the acceptability of an option to all or most stakeholders, the more likely is a strong recommendation.
Factors for which overlap is described are often not shown separately in a decision table.
When used to summarize evidence from nutritional science, dietary, lifestyle, and environmental exposure, the use of the GRADE approach has been criticized. That is because the GRADE system only allows for randomized controlled trials (RCT) to be rated as high evidence and rates all observational studies as low evidence because of their potential for confounding. This dismisses the strength of observational studies when it comes to long-term effects of dietary and lifestyle factors and does not reflect the key limitations that RCTs have when it comes to long-term effects.[17][18] One example of a slowly progressing disease that should preferably be studied with observational studies but not RCTs is atherosclerosis.[19]
References
^Schünemann, HJ; Best, D; Vist, G; Oxman, AD (2003). "Letters, numbers, symbols, and words: How best to communicate grades of evidence and recommendations?". Canadian Medical Association Journal. 169 (7): 677–80.
^Guyatt, GH; Oxman, AD; Schünemann, HJ; Tugwell, P; Knotterus, A (2011). "GRADE guidelines: A new series of articles in the Journal of Clinical Epidemiology". Journal of Clinical Epidemiology. 64 (4): 380–382. doi:10.1016/j.jclinepi.2010.09.011. PMID21185693.
^"GRADE home". Gradeworkinggroup.org. Retrieved 16 August 2019.
^Andrews, J; Guyatt, GH; Oxman, AD; Alderson, P; Dahm, P; Falck-Ytter, Y; Nasser, M; Meerpohl, J; Post, PN; Kunz, R; Brozek, J; Vist, G; Rind, D; Akl, EA; Schünemann, HJ (2013). "GRADE guidelines: 15. Going from evidence to recommendations: the significance and presentation of recommendations". Journal of Clinical Epidemiology. 66 (7): 719–725. doi:10.1016/j.jclinepi.2012.03.013. PMID23312392.