Search and retrieve clinical practice guidelines across 12+ authoritative sources including NICE, WHO, ADA, AHA/ACC, NCCN, SIGN, CPIC, CMA, CTFPHC, GIN, MAGICapp, PubMed, EuropePMC, TRIP, and OpenAlex. Use when users ask about clinical guidelines, treatment recommendations, standard of care, evidence-based medicine, or drug-gene dosing recommendations.
Not all guidelines carry equal weight. Evaluate sources in this order:
NICE and WHO — Evidence-graded, regularly updated, rigorous systematic review process. NICE guidelines include explicit recommendation strength (e.g., "offer" vs "consider").
Society guidelines (AHA, ADA, NCCN, SIGN) — Expert-consensus panels within a specialty. May lag behind the latest evidence by 1-3 years. Strong within their domain but narrower scope.
Aggregator databases (GIN, TRIP, OpenAlex) — Index guidelines from multiple societies. Good for breadth and discovery, but you must verify the original source.
Literature databases (PubMed, EuropePMC) — Return guideline-related publications, not curated guideline text. Useful as a fallback, not a primary source.
Always check publication date. A 2015 guideline may be superseded by a 2024 update. When presenting results, include the year prominently and note if newer guidance may exist.
COMPUTE, DON'T DESCRIBE
相關技能
When analysis requires computation (statistics, data processing, scoring, enrichment), write and run Python code via Bash. Don't describe what you would do — execute it and report actual results. Use ToolUniverse tools to retrieve data, then Python (pandas, scipy, statsmodels, matplotlib) to analyze it.
Search Strategy
Step 1: Start Narrow, Then Broaden
Search the condition name + "guideline" in NICE, TRIP, and GIN simultaneously (parallel calls).
If the question targets a specialty, add the society tool: AHA for cardiology, ADA for diabetes, NCCN for oncology, CPIC for pharmacogenomics.
If initial searches return nothing, broaden to the disease category (e.g., "heart failure" instead of "HFpEF with SGLT2 inhibitors").
If society-specific tools fail, fall back to PubMed/EuropePMC with [condition] guideline [year].
Step 2: Search at Least 3 Sources
Always query a minimum of 3 databases to catch guidelines that one source may miss. Prioritize: NICE > GIN > TRIP > Society-specific > Literature databases.
Step 3: Retrieve Full Text When Available
After identifying relevant guidelines from search results, use full-text tools to get recommendation details before synthesizing.
Diagnostic Test Selection Reasoning
When a clinical question asks "which test should be ordered?" or "what is the most appropriate next diagnostic step?", apply this reasoning framework BEFORE searching guidelines.
Step 1: What Is the Clinical Question Actually Asking?
Diagnostic tests serve different purposes. Identify which one the question demands:
Screening: Detect disease in an asymptomatic population. Prioritize SENSITIVITY (minimize false negatives). Example: ANA for SLE screening.
Confirmation: Confirm a suspected diagnosis. Prioritize SPECIFICITY (minimize false positives). Example: anti-dsDNA or anti-Smith for SLE confirmation.
Differentiation: Distinguish between two diagnoses that look similar. Choose the test that is POSITIVE in one and NEGATIVE in the other. Example: ASO titers to distinguish PSGN from SLE nephritis (both have low complement and hematuria, but only PSGN has elevated ASO).
Staging/Prognosis: Determine disease severity after diagnosis is established. Example: renal biopsy ISN/RPS class for lupus nephritis.
Monitoring: Track response to treatment. Example: anti-dsDNA titers and complement levels in SLE.
Step 2: Match the Test to the Diagnostic Gap
Ask: "What piece of information am I MISSING that would change management?"
Step 3: Sensitivity vs Specificity Decision Matrix
Scenario
Prioritize
Reasoning
Ruling OUT a dangerous condition
High sensitivity
A negative result reliably excludes the disease
Confirming before invasive treatment
High specificity
A positive result reliably confirms the disease
Differentiating two similar conditions
Test unique to one
Choose marker present in condition A but absent in condition B
Emergency with life-threatening DDx
Fastest available test
Speed trumps perfect accuracy in acute settings
Step 4: Common Test Selection Pitfalls
Ordering a test that is positive in BOTH conditions on the differential — C3/C4 is low in both SLE and PSGN; it does not differentiate. Always ask: "Would this test result change my differential?"
Ordering a screening test when a confirmatory test is needed — ANA is sensitive but not specific for SLE. If you already suspect SLE, order anti-dsDNA or anti-Smith (specific).
Skipping the simple test for the exotic one — ASO titers are cheap and fast. Do not jump to renal biopsy before checking whether streptococcal infection explains the presentation.
Forgetting temporal context — PSGN complement normalizes in 6-8 weeks; SLE complement stays persistently low. A single complement level is less useful than a trend.
Ignoring pre-test probability — A test with 95% specificity still has a 50% false-positive rate if the pre-test probability is only 5%. Consider the clinical picture first.
Lab Test Interpretation Strategy
Always consider pre-test probability before interpreting any result. A positive test in a low-prevalence population has a high false-positive rate regardless of test accuracy.
SnNOut: A highly Sensitive test, when Negative, rules Out the disease. Use sensitive tests for screening.
SpPIn: A highly Specific test, when Positive, rules In the disease. Use specific tests for confirmation.
For conflicting results (e.g., one test positive, another negative): repeat the discordant test, order a different confirmatory test, or re-evaluate the clinical picture and pre-test probability.
Approach: Choose the least invasive option that achieves the therapeutic goal. Laparoscopic before open, endovascular before surgical, unless contraindicated by anatomy or urgency.
Applying Guidelines to Patients
Guidelines give population-level recommendations. When presenting findings:
Cite the source explicitly — "Per the 2024 ADA Standards of Care, Section 9..." not "guidelines recommend..."
Note patient-specific modifiers — Comorbidities, drug interactions, renal/hepatic function, age, pregnancy, and patient preferences may all change the recommendation.
Flag when evidence is weak — Grade D / expert consensus recommendations should be presented differently from Grade A / high-confidence ones.
Identify conflicts between guidelines — When NICE and ADA disagree, present both positions and note the discrepancy.
State limitations — If the patient's scenario falls outside the guideline's studied population, say so explicitly.
When answer choices include both "prescribe anticoagulant" and "monitor PT/INR": monitoring PT/INR is MORE specific because it implies ongoing anticoagulation management, not just prescribing
Verify pharmacological terminology in answer choices -- if a conceptually correct answer uses a non-existent drug class name, consider whether "none of the above" is more appropriate
Incidental findings:
Do not let an incidental imaging finding override a coherent clinical syndrome. When the clinical picture fits one diagnosis and the imaging finding is commonly benign (e.g., vertebral hemangiomas found on 10-12% of CTs), prioritize the clinical syndrome.
Post-surgical complications:
Always include perioperative MI in the differential for post-surgical hypoxemia, especially after major surgery with blood loss
Complications can present days to weeks post-op — do not assume only acute reactions
3. Answer Verification Checklist
Does my answer explain ALL abnormal findings?
Is there an answer choice that explains findings my choice doesn't?
Am I choosing based on the most common condition, or the condition that best fits THIS patient?
Have I re-read the question stem for qualifiers like "most likely", "next best step", "initial"?
If I calculated a specific value (lesion level, score), is it actually among the choices? If not, consider "none of the above"
Are all pharmacological terms in my chosen answer real and correctly named?
4. Treatment Protocol Verification
Before recommending a specific drug: check contraindications, drug interactions, and patient-specific factors (renal/hepatic function, age, pregnancy, allergies)
For infectious disease: verify the organism-drug sensitivity -- not all antibiotics work for all organisms. Geographic endemic patterns matter (e.g., Coccidioidomycosis in SW US, not Melioidosis)
For emergency medicine: follow ATLS/ACLS protocols step by step. Do not skip crystalloid resuscitation for pharmacologic interventions
For oncology: verify NCCN category and specific biomarker requirements before recommending targeted therapy
For cardiovascular risk: high-dose statin is first-line for established ASCVD -- do not discontinue metformin or other agents as a substitute for lipid management
For psychiatric pharmacotherapy: check herb-drug and supplement-drug interactions
For seizure management: distinguish dietary causes from drug interaction causes -- breakthrough seizures on ketogenic diet may require medication change, not diet adjustment
When multiple interventions are listed: verify the correct SEQUENCE (e.g., stabilize airway before pharmacotherapy, rule out reversible causes before chronic management)
5. Pediatric Medicine Traps
Fluid calculations: use Holliday-Segar formula (100/50/20 mL/kg/day for first 10/next 10/each subsequent kg)
Dehydration correction: deficit volume = weight (kg) x % dehydration x 10 (mL)
Neonatal presentations: consider congenital vs acquired causes first
BSA-based dosing: verify BSA calculation (Mosteller: sqrt(height_cm x weight_kg / 3600)), then dose = mg/m2 x BSA. Always multiply by number of treatment days for total dose
Double-check arithmetic: pediatric dosing errors are the most common clinical MCQ trap (e.g., 25 mg/m2 x 0.8 m2 = 20 mg/day, NOT 43 mg)