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. 2012 Dec 10;36(Suppl 1):S11–S66. doi: 10.2337/dc13-S011

Table 1.

ADA evidence grading system for clinical practice recommendations

Level of evidence Description
A Clear evidence from well-conducted, generalizable RCTs that are adequately powered, including:

• Evidence from a well-conducted multicenter trial
• Evidence from a meta-analysis that incorporated quality ratings in the analysis
Compelling nonexperimental evidence, i.e., “all or none” rule
developed by the Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine at the University of Oxford
Supportive evidence from well-conducted RCTs that are adequately powered, including:
• Evidence from a well-conducted trial at one or more institutions
• Evidence from a meta-analysis that incorporated quality ratings in the analysis
B Supportive evidence from well-conducted cohort studies
• Evidence from a well-conducted prospective cohort study or registry
• Evidence from a well-conducted meta-analysis of cohort studies
Supportive evidence from a well-conducted case-control study
C Supportive evidence from poorly controlled or uncontrolled studies
• Evidence from randomized clinical trials with one or more major or three or more minor methodological flaws that could invalidate the results
• Evidence from observational studies with high potential for bias (such as case series with comparison with historical controls)
• Evidence from case series or case reports
Conflicting evidence with the weight of evidence supporting the recommendation
E Expert consensus or clinical experience