Heather Limburg’s research while affiliated with Public Health Agency of Canada and other places

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Publications (13)


Prévention des méfaits dès la première prescription d’opioïdes
  • Article
  • Full-text available

April 2025

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1 Read

Canadian Medical Association Journal

Donna L. Reynolds

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Raoul Daoust

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Melissa Subnath

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Heather Limburg
Download


Logic model of interest‐holder engagement in guideline development.
Protocol: Assessing the impact of interest‐holder engagement on guideline development: A systematic review

October 2024

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35 Reads

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4 Citations

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[...]

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Peter Tugwell

This is the protocol for a Campbell systematic review. The objectives are as follows. The objective of this review is to identify and synthesize empirical research on the impacts of interest‐holder engagement on the guideline development process and content. Our research questions are as follows: (1) What are the empirical examples of impact on the process in health guideline development across any of the 18 steps of the GIN‐McMaster checklist? (2) What are the empirical examples of impact on the content in health guideline development across any of the 18 steps of the GIN‐McMaster checklist?



Recommendations on screening for primary prevention of fragility fractures

May 2023

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49 Reads

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21 Citations

Canadian Medical Association Journal

Background: Fragility fractures are a major health concern for older adults and can result in disability, admission to hospital and long-term care, and reduced quality of life. This Canadian Task Force on Preventive Health Care (task force) guideline provides evidence-based recommendations on screening to prevent fragility fractures in community-dwelling individuals aged 40 years and older who are not currently on preventive pharmacotherapy. Methods: We commissioned systematic reviews on benefits and harms of screening, predictive accuracy of risk assessment tools, patient acceptability and benefits of treatment. We analyzed treatment harms via a rapid overview of reviews. We further examined patient values and preferences via focus groups and engaged stakeholders at key points throughout the project. We used the Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development and Evaluation (GRADE) approach to determine the certainty of evidence for each outcome and strength of recommendations, and adhered to Appraisal of Guidelines for Research and Evaluation (AGREE), Guidelines International Network and Guidance for Reporting Involvement of Patients and the Public (GRIPP-2) reporting guidance. Recommendations: We recommend "risk assessment-first" screening for prevention of fragility fractures in females aged 65 years and older, with initial application of the Canadian clinical Fracture Risk Assessment Tool (FRAX) without bone mineral density (BMD). The FRAX result should be used to facilitate shared decision-making about the possible benefits and harms of preventive pharmacotherapy. After this discussion, if preventive pharmacotherapy is being considered, clinicians should request BMD measurement using dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry (DXA) of the femoral neck, and re-estimate fracture risk by adding the BMD T-score into FRAX (conditional recommendation, low-certainty evidence). We recommend against screening females aged 40-64 years and males aged 40 years and older (strong recommendation, very low-certainty evidence). These recommendations apply to community-dwelling individuals who are not currently on pharmacotherapy to prevent fragility fractures. Interpretation: Risk assessment-first screening for females aged 65 years and older facilitates shared decision-making and allows patients to consider preventive pharmacotherapy within their individual risk context (before BMD). Recommendations against screening males and younger females emphasize the importance of good clinical practice, where clinicians are alert to changes in health that may indicate the patient has experienced or is at higher risk of fragility fracture.



Analytical Framework – Screening for prostate cancer among adults ≥18 years
Screening for prostate cancer: protocol for updating multiple systematic reviews to inform a Canadian Task Force on Preventive Health Care guideline update

October 2022

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100 Reads

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7 Citations

Systematic Reviews

Purpose To inform updated recommendations by the Canadian Task Force on Preventive Health Care on screening for prostate cancer in adults aged 18 years and older in primary care. This protocol outlines the planned scope and methods for a series of systematic reviews. Methods Updates of two systematic reviews and a de novo review will be conducted to synthesize the evidence on the benefits and harms of screening for prostate cancer with a prostate-specific antigen (PSA) and/or digital rectal examination (DRE) (with or without additional information) and patient values and preferences. Outcomes for the benefits of screening include reduced prostate cancer mortality, all-cause mortality, and incidence of metastatic prostate cancer. Outcomes for the harms of screening include false-positive screening tests, overdiagnosis, complications due to biopsy, and complications of treatment including incontinence (urinary or bowel), and erectile dysfunction. The quality of life or functioning (overall and disease-specific) and psychological effects outcomes are considered as a possible benefit or harm. Outcomes for the values and preferences review include quantitative or qualitative information regarding the choice to screen or intention to undergo screening. For the reviews on benefits or harms, we will search for randomized controlled trials, quasi-randomized, and controlled studies in MEDLINE, Embase, and the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials. For the review on values and preferences, we will search for experimental or observational studies in MEDLINE, Embase, and PsycInfo. For all reviews, we will also search websites of relevant organizations, gray literature, and reference lists of included studies. Title and abstract screening, full-text review, data extraction, and risk of bias assessments will be completed independently by pairs of reviewers with any disagreements resolved by consensus or by consulting with a third reviewer. The GRADE (Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation) approach will be used to assess the certainty of the evidence for each outcome. Discussion The series of systematic reviews will be used by the Canadian Task Force on Preventive Health Care to update their 2014 guideline on screening for prostate cancer in adults aged 18 years and older. Systematic review registration This review has been registered with PROSPERO (CRD42022314407) and is available on the Open Science Framework (osf.io/dm32k).


Logic model of the effects of stakeholder engagement in guideline development
PROTOCOL: Barriers and facilitators to stakeholder engagement in health guideline development: A qualitative evidence synthesis

April 2022

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291 Reads

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8 Citations

Background There is a need for the development of comprehensive, global, evidence‐based guidance for stakeholder engagement in guideline development. Stakeholders are any individual or group who is responsible for or affected by health‐ and healthcare‐related decisions. This includes patients, the public, providers of health care and policymakers for example. As part of the guidance development process, Multi‐Stakeholder Engagement (MuSE) Consortium set out to conduct four concurrent systematic reviews to summarise the evidence on: (1) existing guidance for stakeholder engagement in guideline development, (2) barriers and facilitators to stakeholder engagement in guideline development, (3) managing conflicts of interest in stakeholder engagement in guideline development and (4) measuring the impact of stakeholder engagement in guideline development. This protocol addresses the second systematic review in the series. Objectives The objective of this review is to identify and synthesise the existing evidence on barriers and facilitators to stakeholder engagement in health guideline development. We will address this objective through two research questions: (1) What are the barriers to multi‐stakeholder engagement in health guideline development across any of the 18 steps of the GIN‐McMaster checklist? (2) What are the facilitators to multi‐stakeholder engagement in health guideline development across any of the 18 steps of the GIN‐McMaster checklist? Search Methods A comprehensive search strategy will be developed and peer‐reviewed in consultation with a medical librarian. We will search the following databases: MEDLINE, Cumulative Index to Nursing & Allied Health Literature (CINAHL), EMBASE, PsycInfo, Scopus, and Sociological Abstracts. To identify grey literature, we will search the websites of agencies who actively engage stakeholder groups such as the AHRQ, Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) Strategy for Patient‐Oriented Research (SPOR), INVOLVE, the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) and the PCORI. We will also search the websites of guideline‐producing agencies, such as the American Academy of Pediatrics, Australia's National Health Medical Research Council (NHMRC) and the WHO. We will invite members of the team to suggest grey literature sources and we plan to broaden the search by soliciting suggestions via social media, such as Twitter. Selection Criteria We will include empirical qualitative and mixed‐method primary research studies which qualitatively report on the barriers or facilitators to stakeholder engagement in health guideline development. The population of interest is stakeholders in health guideline development. Building on previous work, we have identified 13 types of stakeholders whose input can enhance the relevance and uptake of guidelines: Patients, caregivers and patient advocates; Public; Providers of health care; Payers of health services; Payers of research; Policy makers; Program managers; Product makers; Purchasers; Principal investigators and their research teams; and Peer‐review editors/publishers. Eligible studies must describe stakeholder engagement at any of the following steps of the GIN‐McMaster Checklist for Guideline Development. Data Collection and Analysis All identified citations from electronic databases will be imported into Covidence software for screening and selection. Documents identified through our grey literature search will be managed and screened using an Excel spreadsheet. A two‐part study selection process will be used for all identified citations: (1) a title and abstract review and (2) full‐text review. At each stage, teams of two review authors will independently assess all potential studies in duplicate using a priori inclusion and exclusion criteria. Data will be extracted by two review authors independently and in duplicate according to a standardised data extraction form. Main Results The results of this review will be used to inform the development of guidance for multi‐stakeholder engagement in guideline development and implementation. This guidance will be official GRADE (Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation) Working Group guidance. The GRADE system is internationally recognised as a standard for guideline development. The findings of this review will assist organisations who develop healthcare, public health and health policy guidelines, such as the World Health Organization, to involve multiple stakeholders in the guideline development process to ensure the development of relevant, high quality and transparent guidelines.


PROTOCOL: Conflict of interest issues when engaging stakeholders in health and healthcare guideline development: a systematic review

April 2022

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176 Reads

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8 Citations

This is the protocol for a Campbell systematic review. The overall objective of this study is to gather and summarize the existing literature on conflict of interest issues when engaging stakeholders in guideline development.


Selected summary of evidence-based guideline recommendations
KQ4 eligibility criteria (patient values and preferences of screening)
Screening for prostate cancer: protocol for updating multiple systematic reviews to inform a Canadian Task Force on Preventive Health Care guideline update

March 2022

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59 Reads

Purpose: To inform updated recommendations by the Canadian Task Force on Preventive Health Care on screening for prostate cancer in adults aged 18 years and older in primary care. This protocol outlines the planned scope and methods for a series of systematic reviews. Methods: Updates of two systematic reviews and a de novo review will be conducted to synthesize the evidence on the benefits and harms of screening for prostate cancer with prostate specific antigen (PSA) and/or digital rectal examination (DRE) (with or without additional information) and patient values and preferences. Outcomes for the benefits of screening include reduced prostate cancer mortality, all-cause mortality, and incidence of metastatic prostate cancer. Outcomes for the harms of screening include false positive screening tests, overdiagnosis, complications due to biopsy, and complications of treatment including incontinence (urinary or bowel), and erectile dysfunction. Quality of life or functioning (overall and disease-specific) and psychological effects outcomes are considered as a possible benefit or harm. Outcomes for the values and preferences review include quantitative or qualitative information regarding choice to screen or intention to undergo screening. For the reviews on benefits or harms, we will search for randomized controlled trials, quasi-randomised, and controlled studies in MEDLINE, Embase, and the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials. For the review on values and preferences, we will search for experimental or observational studies in MEDLINE, Embase, and PsycInfo. For all reviews, we will also search websites of relevant organizations, grey literature, and reference lists of included studies. Title and abstract screening, full-text review, data extraction, and risk of bias assessments will be completed independently by pairs of reviewers with any disagreements resolved by consensus or by consulting with a third reviewer. The GRADE (Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation) approach will be used to assess the certainty of the evidence for each outcome. Discussion: The series of systematic reviews will be used by the Canadian Task Force on Preventive Health Care to update their 2014 guideline on screening for prostate cancer in adults aged 18 years and older. Systematic review registration: This review has been registered with PROSPERO (ref# pending) and is available on the Open Science Framework (osf.io/dm32k).


Citations (9)


... As an extension of the RIGHT reporting guideline, RIGHT-MuSE will build upon existing items to focus specifically on reporting interest-holder engagement throughout the guideline development process. Currently, researchers are actively developing guidance for interest-holder engagement in the creation and implementation of practice guidelines and analyzing facilitators and barriers to interest-holder engagement, which emphasizes the importance of developing RIGHT-MuSE [2][19] [20]. The collaboration between the RIGHT and MuSE working groups, application of the rigorous methodology recommended by the EQUATOR Network, and the particular focus on equity in the development process will guarantee the high quality of the RIGHT-MuSE All rights reserved. ...

Reference:

Protocol for the development of reporting guidance for interest-holder engagement in practice guidelines: the RIGHT-MuSE checklist
Protocol: Assessing the impact of interest‐holder engagement on guideline development: A systematic review

... Una editorial publicada junto a la recomendación resumida en este artículo señala la complejidad de evaluar en forma clínica el riesgo de fracturas en las mujeres menores de 65 años y menciona la escasa evidencia sobre los efectos a largo plazo del tratamiento de la osteoporosis 9 . En el mismo sentido, la guía de la Fuerza de Tareas de Cuidados Preventivos canadiense, publicada en 2023, recomienda en contra del tamizaje de osteoporosis en esa población, debido a la falta de evidencia directa acerca de sus beneficios, el riesgo de sobrediagnóstico y los efectos adversos relacionados con el tratamiento, haciendo énfasis en evitar el gasto de recursos del sistema de salud en intervenciones sin beneficio demostrado 10 . Cabe destacar que la USPSTF no considera los costos al elaborar sus recomendaciones. ...

Recommendations on screening for primary prevention of fragility fractures

Canadian Medical Association Journal

... As screening for risk of fracture does not result in a "diagnosis" but rather a risk for a future event, overdiagnosis has not been previously defined in the context of fracture risk assessment. However, as with conditions such as osteoporosis, overdiagnosis generally refers to identifying and labelling people with "problems, " or in this case "risks, " that would never have caused harm [59]. Thus, for the purpose of this review, we defined overdiagnosis as the identification of high risk in individuals who, if not screened, would never have known that they were at risk and would never have experienced a fragility fracture [59]. ...

Expanding the measurement of overdiagnosis in the context of disease precursors and risk factors
  • Citing Article
  • January 2023

BMJ evidence-based medicine

... However, there is no recommended unanimous PSA threshold for all males. 5 The American Cancer Society found that the threshold of 4.0 ng/mL PSA can be used for PC screening with 21% of sensitivity and 91% of specificity, while reducing the PSA threshold to 3.0 ng/mL would lead to enhancing sensitivity to 32% and worsening specificity to 85%. 6 In addition, conditions like bacterial prostatitis, benign prostatic hyperplasia, and physical manipulation can explain falsely elevated PSA levels and is noteworthy. 5 Another way to screen PC is digital rectal examinations (DRE). ...

Screening for prostate cancer: protocol for updating multiple systematic reviews to inform a Canadian Task Force on Preventive Health Care guideline update

Systematic Reviews

... To collect the initial list of items for RIGHT-MuSE, we will review the findings of a methodological survey of interest-holder engagement approaches outlined in methodological guidance documents of guideline-producing organizations [16], the findings of a scoping review of the guidance for engagement in health guideline development [17], and the GIN-McMaster guideline development checklist extension for engagement [18]. We will also refer to relevant articles published by the MuSE Consortium regarding interest-holder engagement in practice guidelines [2] [19][20] [21]. ...

PROTOCOL: Barriers and facilitators to stakeholder engagement in health guideline development: A qualitative evidence synthesis

... We will look to update our reporting template to comply with the new Reporting Conflicts of Interest and Funding in Health Care Guidelines: The RIGHT-COI&F Checklist, when it is available [40]. An on-going systematic review of existing literature on conflict of interest issues when engaging with stakeholders (including public involvement) in healthcare guideline development, which is part of a wider research project undertaken by the Multistakeholder Engagement (MuSE) working group, will also help address the need for new guidance in this area [41,42]. Further research is needed to assess the impact of using various methodological short cuts on the validity of rapid review findings. ...

PROTOCOL: Conflict of interest issues when engaging stakeholders in health and healthcare guideline development: a systematic review

... Patients with alarm symptoms such as dysphagia, odynophagia, anemia, weight loss, recurrent vomiting, loss of appetite, or GI bleeding should be evaluated. Risk factors for EAC include male sex, older age, White race, Barrett esophagus, nocturnal reflux, abdominal obesity, and tobacco use (23,24). Risk factors for ESCC include low socioeconomic status, tobacco or alcohol use, consumption of hot or pickled foods, low consumption of fruits and vegetables, and radiation exposure (25). ...

Guideline on screening for esophageal adenocarcinoma in patients with chronic gastroesophageal reflux disease
  • Citing Article
  • July 2020

Canadian Medical Association Journal

... 6 Many interventions aimed at identifying and improving fragility fracture prevention in routine primary care settings have had little impact. [18][19][20] Therefore, novel interventions are needed in clinical settings that deliver acute ambulatory healthcare services, such as the Emergency Department (ED). ...

Screening to prevent fragility fractures among adults 40 years and older in primary care: protocol for a systematic review

Systematic Reviews