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Introduction: Interventions commonly used in social disciplines that aim to prevent health disparities and enhance population
quality of life, such as community-based nutrition and lifestyle interventions, are most frequently complex. These interventions
typically operate via a sequence of changes in psychosocial, behavioural, and/or structural processes, targeting multiple
outcomes while interacting with local contexts and the mode of intervention delivery. In this light, several researchers argue
that evidence synthesis of these complex interventions need to go beyond traditional meta-analysis that yield overall effect
estimates. Specifically, reviews of complex interventions should assemble evidence of different types to explore variation in
effects across populations, contexts and intervention implementation. This approach may be better suited to tackle health
disparities and facilitate policy-relevant evidence synthesis. The Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and
Evaluation (GRADE) approach is the most widely adopted system worldwide for rating the quality of evidence and making
healthcare recommendations. This paper outlines the specific challenges of applying GRADE to synthesise and assess the quality
of evidence of complex interventions, and describes an ongoing project to extend, i.e. adapt GRADE for these interventions.
Methods: We retrieved forty systematic reviews from the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews (only those published
from 2013 to May 2014 in CDPLPG, CCDAN and CPH), and we analysed their application of GRADE and the quality of
evidence ratings. We then contacted the review authors to explore the challenges they encountered when applying GRADE to
complex interventions.
Results: Specific challenges were identified in applying GRADE to complex interventions, namely assessments of heterogeneity,
indirectness, performance bias and use of non-randomised studies in complex interventions. Authors perceived these
challenges to contribute to frequent downgrading of the â??best evidence possibleâ? for these interventions. Meanwhile, GRADE
was found to lack an analytic approach to integrate additional â??parallelâ? evidence on intervention implementation and context.
Conclusions: An extension to the GRADE approach is needed to address identified challenges and enhance its value for
evidence syntheses of complex interventions. To extend GRADE for complex interventions, we will use formal consensus
methods. This will include an online expert panel to elicit the criteria for the new methodology, followed by a consensus
meeting to finalise the criteria and build consensus on the GRADE guidance for complex interventions. We invite interested
researchers to participate in this project and help us achieve the best-informed consensus on this guidance.
Biography
Ani Movsisyan is a doctoral student at the Department of Social Policy and Intervention, University of Oxford. Ani also works as a Research Officer on the newly launched project on the GRADE extension for complex interventions at the Centre for Evidence-Based Intervention. Ani earned an MPH from the School of Public Health at the American University of Armenia in 2013, and an MSc in Evidence-Based Social Intervention in 2014 at the University of Oxford.