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. 2011 Jan 13;6:2. doi: 10.1186/1749-7922-6-2

Table 1.

Grading of recommendations from Guyatt and colleagues [2]

Grade of recommendation Clarity of risk/benefit Quality of supporting evidence Implications
1A
Strong recommendation, high-quality evidence Benefits clearly outweigh risk and burdens, or vice versa RCTs without important limitations or overwhelming evidence from observational studies Strong recommendation, can apply to most patients in most circumstances without reservation
1B
Strong recommendation, moderate-quality evidence Benefits clearly outweigh risk and burdens, or vice versa RCTs with important limitations (inconsistent results, methodological flaws, indirect or imprecise) or exceptionally strong evidence from observational studies Strong recommendation, can apply to most patients in most circumstances without reservation
1C
Strong recommendation, low-quality or very low-quality evidence Benefits clearly outweigh risk and burdens, or vice versa Observational studies or case series Strong recommendation but may change when higher quality evidence becomes available
2A
Weak recommendation, high-quality evidence Benefits closely balanced with risks and burden RCTs without important limitations or overwhelming evidence from observational studies Weak recommendation, best action may differ depending on circumstances or patient or societal values
2B
Weak recommendation, moderate-quality evidence Benefits closely balanced with risks and burden RCTs with important limitations (inconsistent results, methodological flaws, indirect or imprecise) or exceptionally strong evidence from observational studies Weak recommendation, best action may differ depending on circumstances or patient or societal values
2C
Weak recommendation, Low-quality or very low-quality evidence Uncertainty in the estimates of benefits, risks, and burden; benefits, risk and burden may be closely balanced Observational studies or case series Very weak recommendation; other alternatives may be equally reasonable