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Mechanistic Evidence in Evidence-Based Medicine: A Conceptual Framework

White Paper Jun 19, 2013
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Page Contents

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Structured Abstract

Background

Virtually all current frameworks for the evaluation of the strength of evidence for an intervention’s effect focus on the quality of the design linking the intervention to a given outcome. Knowledge of biological mechanism plays no formal role. In none of the evidence grading schemas, new statistical methodologies or other technology assessment guidelines is there a formal language and structure for how knowledge of how an intervention works.

The objective was to identify and pilot test a framework for the evaluation of the evidential weight of mechanistic knowledge in evidence-based medicine and technology assessment.

Methods

Six steps were used to develop a framework for the evaluation of the evidential weight of mechanistic knowledge: (1) Focused literature review, (2) Development of draft framework, (3) Workshop with technical experts, (4) Refinement of framework, (5) Development of two case studies, (6) Pilot test of framework on case studies.

Results

The final version of the framework for evaluation of mechanistic evidence incorporates an evaluation of the strength of evidence for the:

  1. Intervention’s target effect in nonhuman models.
  2. Clinical impact of target effect in nonhuman models
  3. Predictive power of nonhuman model for an effect in humans
    1. The predictive power of the target effect model
    2. The predictive power of the clinical effect model
  4. Intervention’s target effect in human disease states.
  5. Clinical impact of the target effect in human disease states.

A graphic representation is included in the full report.

Conclusions

This framework has several features combining work from a variety of fields that represent an important step forward in the rigorous assessment of such evidence.

  1. It uses a definition of evidence based on inferential effect, not study design.
  2. It separates evidence based on mechanistic knowledge from that based on direct evidence linking the intervention to a given clinical outcome.
  3. It represents the minimum sufficient set of steps for building an indirect chain of mechanistic evidence.
  4. It is adaptable and generalizable to all forms of interventions and health outcomes.

It mirrors in the evidential framework the conceptual framework for translational medicine, thus linking the fields of basic science, evidence-based medicine and comparative effectiveness research.

Project Timeline

Mechanistic Evidence in Evidence-Based Medicine: A Conceptual Framework

Jun 19, 2013
Topic Initiated
Jun 19, 2013
White Paper
Page last reviewed November 2017
Page originally created November 2017

Internet Citation: White Paper: Mechanistic Evidence in Evidence-Based Medicine: A Conceptual Framework. Content last reviewed November 2017. Effective Health Care Program, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Rockville, MD.
https://effectivehealthcare.ahrq.gov/products/mechanistic-evidence-framework/white-paper

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