Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine 51-2 | Page 17

92 W.-J. Kim et al. Table IV. Ratings of the included clinical practice guidelines according to the AGREE II Instrument Domain and items NICE, ACN, 2006 2009 (26) (25) 1. Overall objective(s) 6 2. Health question(s) 3 3. Target patient population 5 4. Development group representative 7 5. Patient views and preferences 6 6. Target users defined 5 7. Systematic method for evidence search 3 8. Criteria for selecting evidence 2 9. Strengths and limitations of body of evidence 2 10. Formulation of recommendations explicit 6 6 11. Benefits, side-effects, and risks described 5 12. Explicit link between evidence and recommendations 6 13. External review 3 14. Procedure for updating guidelines 6 15. Specific and unambiguous recommendations 5 16. Different treatment options 4 17. Key recommendations easily identified 6 18. Facilitators and barriers to implementation are discussed 5 19. Advice and/or tools on recommendations 6 20. Resource implications are discussed 6 21. Review/monitoring criteria defined 3 22. Editorial independent from funding body 6 23. Conflicts of interest are stated 1 TOTAL SCORE 107 Global score (1 = lowest quality, 7 = highest quality) 5 Applicability to practice (y = yes, M = yes with modification, N = no) M 6 3 5 7 6 5 2 2 3 6 5 6 6 6 7 4 7 6 6 1 4 6 6 115 5 M AGREE II: Appraisal of Guidelines, Research and Evaluation Instrument; NICE: National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence; ACN: Australian Cancer Network. Domain 2: Stakeholder involvement (AGREE Items 4–6). Both CPGs included individuals from all relevant professional groups in the guideline development, including patient advocacy groups, community group representatives, and specific details including their roles. Although the views and preferences of the target population were stated adequately, the description of relevant target-users was not sufficiently reported in either guideline. Domain 3: Rigour of development (AGREE Items 7–14). The strength and limitations of the body of evidence, consideration of health benefits, side-effects and risks when formulating the recommendations were not well described. There were explicit links between the recommendations and the supporting evidence in both CPGs, as well as procedures for updating the gui- delines. However, NICE does not provide information on the external review process, while ACN does not report the process of reviewers’ selection. Domain 4: Clarity of presentation (AGREE Items 15–17). Recommendations in both CPGs were specific and unambiguous, with key recommendations clearly stated. However, different options were not sufficiently described for different BT populations. The importance of the rehabilitation process was highlighted in both CPGs, but without clear recommendations concerning treatment options. www.medicaljournals.se/jrm Domain 5: Applicability (AGREE Items 18–21). Both guidelines failed to describe clearly the barriers and facilitators for implementation of the CPG in practice; only a few items were mentioned vaguely. Implications of resources and associated costs were not mentioned in the ACN guidelines; however, the NICE made attempts to describe costs related to hiring specialized medical staff. Both guidelines briefly mentioned tools and advice on how to apply recommendations in clinical practice; however, reviewing and monitoring criteria were not comprehensively well-defined by either of the guidelines. Domain 6: Editorial independence (AGREE Items 22–23). The influence of the funding body on the content of the guidelines was described clearly by both CPGs. However, the conflict of interest was not provided in the NICE guidelines. A summary of the guidelines assessment AGREE II scores is given in Table IV. Summary of rehabilitation interventions in the clinical practice guidelines Despite the recognition of rehabilitation as an integral component of management of BT survivors in both in- cluded CPGs, recommendations for specific rehabilita- tion interventions were described ambiguously in both. The best-evidence synthesis for various rehabilitation interventions for the management of BT provided in the included CPGs are summarized below and in Table V. Multidisciplinary rehabilitation. Both guidelines re- commend a comprehensive multidisciplinary approach with individually selected goals for the longer-term management of BT. The ACN outlines rehabilitation programmes as associated with improved mobility, cognitive-communication and participation. NICE states effective and timely provision rehabilitation services in optimizing function and participation; ho- wever, without specific recommendations. Physiotherapy (PT) and occupational therapy (OT). ACN recommends PT for patients with residual motor deficits (strength, coordination, balance) and occupa- tional therapy for residual problems in personal care and independent activities of daily living (Level III evidence). ACN describes steroid-induced myopathy, characterized by proximal muscle weakness, as a pos- sible negative side-effect of treatment, which can be improved with a combination of PT exercise and OT. NICE mentions that PT and OT should be involved as a part of rehabilitation team; however, without specific recommendations or evidence. Exercise. ACN recommends aerobic and resistance training for all patients with BT to enhance muscle