Thursday, January 8, 2026

Fall 2025 Scholars Propose Innovative Projects in Cancer Care and Global GRADE Dissemination

Recently, the U.S. GRADE Network and Evidence Foundation had the privilege of welcoming three new scholars to the fall 2025 virtual GRADE Guideline Development Workshop. Scholars hailed from around the world, from the U.S. to Pakistan and Germany. 

Alexander Brooks, a Ph.D. candidate in exercise science at the University of South Carolina, presented a systematic review project in development to assess the long-term effectiveness of exercise interventions in cancer survivors. "Despite the growing number of clinical trials and guidelines in this area," says Brooks, "few systematic reviews have applied structured approaches to assess the certainty of the evidence underpinning these collective recommendations." Brooks' project directly addresses this gap in the literature while examining the trajectory of health and fitness markers in this population in the short- and long-term period after cancer treatment.

Attending the GRADE workshop "strengthened my ability to critically evaluate research and better understand how evidence is synthesized to inform recommendations," said Brooks. "The hands-on exercises were particularly valuable, and I found the workshop directly applicable to my own work."






Dr. Anna-Sophie Strauss, a resident physician at University Hospital Ulm in Germany and a Cochrane Urology review author, discussed her current review of the diagnostic test accuracy of prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA) imaging for the staging of primary prostate cancer. The aim of this review is to inform evidence-based guidelines for this testing strategy, ultimately "supporting more informed and unbiased decision-making in urological healthcare."

"Taking part in the GRADE Guideline Development Workshop improved my understanding of how structured evidence appraisal can be used to create transparent, patient-centered recommendations," said Strauss. "I also appreciated the opportunity to exchange global perspectives, which demonstrated how rigorous methods such as GRADE can be adapted to different clinical and health system contexts." 

Finally, Dr. Muhammad Tayyab Qureshi presented from Pakistan. A House Officer in the Pakistan Air Force Hospital Islamabad, Dr. Qureshi discussed the need for the dissemination of locally relevant guidelines in Lower- and Middle-Income Countries such as Pakistan. These efforts, he believes, will strengthen "health systems through practical, evidence-informed solutions that lead to measurable improvements in health outcomes and resource use."

The training provided in the three-day GRADE workshop will allow the scholars to apply the GRADE framework to the certainty and evidence assessment and formulation of recommendations within their specific projects. 


Interested in becoming a scholar? Applications to join us for the spring 2026 workshop in Kansas City, Missouri, May 18-20, 2026, close Saturday, January 31. See application details at evidencefoundation.org/scholarships.html.