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      Using numerical results from systematic reviews in clinical practice.

      1 ,
      Annals of internal medicine
      American College of Physicians

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          Abstract

          Systematic reviews summarize large amounts of information and are more likely than individual trials to describe the true clinical effect of an intervention. Traditional statistical outputs from systematic reviews cannot immediately be applied to clinical practice. The number needed to treat (NNT) has that clinical immediacy. This number can be calculated easily from raw data or from statistical outputs, and the principle involved in its calculation can be applied to different outcomes: treatment efficacy, adverse events (harm), or other end points. The NNT defines the treatment-specific effect of an intervention, and we suggest it as a currency for making decisions about individual patients. Knowing the NNT for different interventions that have the same outcome for the same disorder can help shape individual and institutional practice. Knowing or estimating the number needed to harm is also an important part of the equation. Knowing or estimating an individual patient's risk can, with the NNT, be a guide to the overall or net value of a prophylactic intervention. We advocate an approach to systematic reviews that distills information into, in effect, one number: the NNT. This is simple to remember and directly supports efforts to work with patients to make the best possible clinical decisions for their care.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Ann Intern Med
          Annals of internal medicine
          American College of Physicians
          0003-4819
          0003-4819
          May 01 1997
          : 126
          : 9
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Pain Research Unit, University of Oxford, Oxford Radcliffe Hospital, Headington, United Kingdom.
          Article
          10.7326/0003-4819-126-9-199705010-00007
          9139558
          f1f6df72-40cc-419c-8c40-00e4db930130
          History

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