| Literature DB >> 28728574 |
Joel J Gagnier1,2, Matthew J Page3,4, Hsiaomin Huang5, Arianne P Verhagen6, Rachelle Buchbinder7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The selection of appropriate outcomes or domains is crucial when designing clinical trials, to appreciate the effects of different interventions, pool results, and make valid comparisons between trials. If the findings are to influence policy and practice, then the chosen outcomes need to be relevant and important to key stakeholders, including patients and the public, healthcare professionals and others making decisions about health care. There is a growing recognition that insufficient attention has been paid to the outcomes measured in clinical trials. Recent reviews of the measurement properties of patient-reported outcome measures for shoulder disorders revealed a large selection of diverse measures, many with questionable validity, reliability, and responsiveness. These issues could be addressed through the development and use of an agreed standardized collection of outcomes, known as a core outcome set (COS), which should be measured and reported in all trials of shoulder disorders. The purpose of the present project is to develop and disseminate a COS for clinical trials in shoulder disorders. METHODS/Entities:
Keywords: Adhesive capsulitis; Clinical trials; Core outcome set; Osteoarthritis; Outcome measures; Pain; Rotator cuff; Shoulder
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28728574 PMCID: PMC5520329 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-017-2054-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Definitions of concepts [39]
| Concept | Definition |
|---|---|
| Health condition | A situation of impaired health |
| Health intervention | An activity performed by, for, with, or on behalf of a client(s) the purpose of which is to improve individual or population health, to alter or diagnose the course of a health condition, or to improve functioning |
| Core area | An aspect of health or a health condition that needs to be measured to appropriately assess the effects of a health intervention (core areas are broad concepts consisting of a number of more specific concepts called domains) |
| Domain or subdomain | Component of core area: a concept to be measured, a further specification of an aspect of health, categorized within a core area |
| Outcome | Any identified result in a (sub)domain arising from exposure to a causal factor or a health intervention |
| Measurement instrument | A tool to measure a quality or quantity of a variable, in this context a (sub)domain or a contextual factor |
| Outcome measurement instrument | A measurement instrument chosen to assess outcome(s) |
| Core domain set | For study of health interventions, the minimum set of domains and subdomains necessary to adequately cover all core areas (fully measure all relevant concepts of a specific health condition within a specified scope); it describes what to measure |
| Core outcome measurement set | The minimum set of outcome measurement instruments that must be administered in each intervention study of a certain health condition within a specified setting to adequately cover a corresponding core domain set; it describes how to measure |
| Scope | The set of factors that describes the studies and circumstances to which the core outcome set will apply. This is determined by the study questions and includes the health condition(s), target population, interventions, and so forth |
| Contextual factor | Variable that is not an outcome of the study, but needs to be recognized (and measured) to understand the study results. This includes potential confounders and effect modifiers |
Fig. 1Conceptual framework of core areas for outcome measurement in health intervention studies [38]. ICF International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health
Description of core area outlined in OMERACT Filter 2.0 [33–35]
| Core Area | Description |
|---|---|
| Death | Includes possible specifications of death, such as generic or disease-specific (all-cause versus disease-specific mortality), and intervention-specific (for example, death due to surgery) |
| Life impact | Can include domains such as activity and participation and domains within the concept of health-related quality of life such as functional status, general health perceptions, and overall quality of life |
| Resource use/economic impact | Economic impact of health conditions on both society and the individual |
| Pathophysiological manifestations | This core area is meant to assess whether or not the effect of the intervention specifically targets the pathophysiology of the health condition and may include psychosocial manifestations. Example domains include: body function, reversible manifestations (including modifiable risk factors and actual manifestations of ill health), and irreversible manifestations (including non-modifiable risk factors and damage). This can also include biomarkers and surrogate outcomes |