Author/Authors :
Gupta, Samir Department of Medicine - Division of Respirology - University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada , Paolucci, Emily Department of Kinesiology - McMaster University, Hamilton, Canada , Kaplan, Alan University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada , Boulet, Louis-Philippe Institut Universitaire de Cardiologie et de Pneumologie de Quebec - Universite Laval, Canada
Abstract :
Background. Several international groups develop asthma guidelines. Conflicting recommendations across guidelines have been
described in several disease areas and may contribute to practice variability. Accordingly, we compared the latest CanadianThoracic
Society (CTS) asthma guideline with contemporaneous international asthma guidelines to evaluate conflicting recommendations
and their causes. Methods. We identified the latest CTS asthma guideline update (2012) and the following societies which also
updated their guidelines in 2012: the British Thoracic Society and Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network and the Global
Initiative for Asthma. We compared these three guidelines on (1) key methodological factors and (2) adult pharmacotherapy
recommendations. Results. Methods used and documentation provided for literature search strategy and dates, evidence synthesis,
outcomes considered, evidence appraisal, and recommendation formulation varied between guidelines. Criteria used to define
suboptimal asthma control varied widely between guidelines. Inhaled corticosteroid dosing recommendations diverged, as did
recommendations surrounding use of budesonide/formoterol as a reliever and controller and recommendations in the subsequent
step. Conclusions. There are important differences between recommendations provided in contemporaneous asthma guidelines.
Causes include differences in methods used for interpreting evidence and formulating recommendations. Adopting a common
set of valid and explicit methods across international societies could harmonize recommendations and facilitate guideline
implementation.