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Evidence based case reports will help
At the heart of clinical medicine is an
unresolved conflict To help readers develop the increasingly necessary art of using
research evidence in practice, the BMJ is launching a
new type of article Evidence based case reports will attempt to show how evidence can be
applied at all stages of patient care. Information from cohort studies
about the frequency of different conditions can suggest the most likely
diagnosis. Decisions about which tests to order can be guided by
information on the sensitivity and specificity of different tests and,
in the case of invasive tests, their adverse effects and acceptability
to patients. Decisions about which interventions to advise, if any, can
be informed by randomised controlled trials and systematic reviews
looking at the comparative effectiveness, safety, and acceptability of
the various options. Information on long term or rare side effects can
be gleaned from well designed cohort or case control studies. When a
thorough search of the literature fails to find appropriate, high
quality evidence, the case reports' contributors are encouraged to say
so, since it may be helpful to know that the gaps are in the evidence
rather than in your own knowledge.
Case reports have long been used to report new findings and to give
educational impact to review articles. Evidence based case reports will
not report new findings. General medical journals have largely stopped
publishing original case reports of this sort,6
recognising that these can give a clinical audience no reliable
information on the cause of a condition, its prognosis, the usefulness
of a diagnostic test, or the effectiveness and safety of an
intervention. Exceptions to this rule are reports dealing with adverse
events, where journals have a duty to report any reasonable information
they receive. This includes case reports in which the adverse event
might be reasonably linked to an intervention on the basis of temporal
relation, dose response relation, reversibility on withdrawal,
recurrence on rechallenge, or physiological rationale.
Instead of presenting new findings, evidence based case reports are
intended to illustrate a process. Contributors are being asked to take
an approach now familiar to students of critical appraisal The first few evidence based case reports have been commissioned, but
we hope many others will be submitted. All published contributions will
be peer reviewed. We prefer reports on common or important conditions
relevant to a general clinical audience. Guidance to contributors will
shortly be appearing on the BMJ's website
(www.bmj.com).
BMJ
between the essentially case based nature of
clinical practice and the mainly population based nature of the
research evidence. While clinicians are exhorted to use up to date
research evidence to give patients the best possible care, actually
doing so in individual patients is difficult. The reasons are well
known.1 The research literature is poorly
organised,2 largely of poor quality and irrelevant to
clinical practice,3 often conflicting, and often not there
at all.4 The most valid and, at first sight, relevant
information may be based on highly selected groups of patients bearing
little resemblance to the patient in front of you. And statistical
probabilities may mean little to you or your patient. Steering your way
through the evidence jungle takes time, skill, and perseverance.
the evidence based case report. In the first of these (p 1660), Glasziou describes how searching and interpreting the
published literature helped him to reach an informed diagnosis in a
woman with a chronic cough.5
to define
the clinical question; search the literature for studies of appropriate
relevance, design, and quality; apply the information; and audit the
result.7 Explicit methods will allow readers to see how
the authors reach their conclusions. Because they will be based on real
patients seen by generalist clinicians in primary and secondary care,
the case reports will also, we hope, provide reliable updates on the
management of common clinical problems.
© BMJ 1998
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