Review and evaluation of the methodological quality of the existing guidelines and recommendations for inherited neurometabolic disorders

Linda Cassis, Elisenda Cortès-Saladelafont, Marta Molero-Luis, Delia Yubero, Maria Julieta González, Aida Ormazabal Herrero, Carme Fons, Cristina Jou, Cristina Sierra, Esperanza Castejon Ponce, Federico Ramos, Judith Armstrong, M Mar O'Callaghan, Mercedes Casado, Raquel Montero, Silvia Maria Meavilla Olivas, Rafael Artuch, Ivo Barić, Franco Bartoloni, Cinzia Maria BellettatoFedele Bonifazi, Adriana Ceci, Ljerka Cvitanović-Šojat, Christine I. Dali, Francesca D'Avanzo, Ksenija Fumic, Viviana Giannuzzi, Christina Lampe, Maurizio Scarpa, Ángels Garcia-Cazorla

18 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Inherited neurometabolic disorders (iNMDs) represent a group of almost seven hundred rare diseases whose common manifestations are clinical neurologic or cognitive symptoms that can appear at any time, in the first months/years of age or even later in adulthood. Early diagnosis and timely treatments are often pivotal for the favorable course of the disease. Thus, the elaboration of new evidence-based recommendations for iNMD diagnosis and management is increasingly requested by health care professionals and patients, even though the methodological quality of existing guidelines is largely unclear. InNerMeD-I-Network is the first European network on iNMDs that was created with the aim of sharing and increasing validated information about diagnosis and management of neurometabolic disorders. One of the goals of the project was to determine the number and the methodological quality of existing guidelines and recommendations for iNMDs.

METHODS: We performed a systematic search on PubMed, the National Guideline Clearinghouse (NGC), the Guidelines International Network (G-I-N), the Scottish Intercollegiate Guideline Network (SIGN) and the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) to identify all the published guidelines and recommendations for iNMDs from January 2000 to June 2015. The methodological quality of the selected documents was determined using the AGREE II instrument, an appraisal tool composed of 6 domains covering 23 key items.

RESULTS: A total of 55 records met the inclusion criteria, 11 % were about groups of disorders, whereas the majority encompassed only one disorder. Lysosomal disorders, and in particular Fabry, Gaucher disease and mucopolysaccharidoses where the most studied. The overall methodological quality of the recommendation was acceptable and increased over time, with 25 % of the identified guidelines strongly recommended by the appraisers, 64 % recommended, and 11 % not recommended. However, heterogeneity in the obtained scores for each domain was observed among documents covering different groups of disorders and some domains like 'stakeholder involvement' and 'applicability' were generally scarcely addressed.

CONCLUSIONS: Greater efforts should be devoted to improve the methodological quality of guidelines and recommendations for iNMDs and AGREE II instrument seems advisable for new guideline development. The elaboration of new guidelines encompassing still uncovered disorders is badly needed.

Original languageEnglish
JournalOrphanet Journal of Rare Diseases
Volume10
Pages (from-to)164
ISSN1750-1172
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 30 Dec 2015

Keywords

  • Brain Diseases, Metabolic
  • Evidence-Based Medicine
  • Humans
  • Practice Guidelines as Topic
  • Journal Article
  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
  • Review

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