Clinical practice guidelines in India: quality appraisal and the use of evidence in their development

Article type
Authors
Bhaumik S1, Jagadesh S1, Ellatar M1, Kohli N1, Riedha M2, Moi M1
1Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine
2Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine
Abstract
Background: Guideline development has changed internationally with greater stress on the use of rigorous, transparent and evidence-based methods, but not much is known about these issues in India.

Objectives:
1. To appraise the quality of Indian guidelines for 4 conditions with the highest disease burden.
2. To understand the guideline development process in India and how evidence is used in it.

Methods: Guidelines for 4 leading causes of disability-adjusted life years in India, published on or after 1 January 2010, were searched in multiple electronic databases, related websites, and by contacting experts and checking reference lists, and were quality appraised using the AGREE-II appraisal tool.
In-depth, semi-structured interviews with 15 people involved in the development of the included guidelines were conducted and analysed using the framework approach

Results: The median AGREE II domain scores for the 11 included guidelines were highest for 'scope and purpose' (81%) and 'clarity of presentation' (76%), and lowest for 'rigour of development' (31%) and ‘editorial independence’ (33%).
Four main themes emerged: (1) guideline development is undergoing a transition towards the adoption of systematic, transparent and evidence-based approaches but several barriers in the form of attitudes towards use of evidence, lack of methodological capacity, inadequate governance structure and funding exist; (2) guideline development is an academic activity restricted to elite institutions and this affects the panel composition, the consultative process and the implementation of guidelines; (3) there are mixed views on patient involvement; and, (4) there are taboos and poor understanding of issues surrounding conflicts of interest.

Conclusions: Progress towards better-quality guidelines in India requires governance, planning and dedicated funding, changes to the medical curriculum and capacity-building efforts. Issuing agencies need to make panels more representative, search and appraise evidence appropriately, and have formal processes for formulation of recommendations and disclosure of conflict of interest.