| Literature DB >> 29258568 |
Beth K Potter1, Brian Hutton2,3, Tammy J Clifford2,4, Nicole Pallone5, Maureen Smith6, Sylvia Stockler7, Pranesh Chakraborty8, Pauline Barbeau3, Chantelle M Garritty3, Michael Pugliese2, Alvi Rahman2, Becky Skidmore3, Laure Tessier8, Kylie Tingley2, Doug Coyle2, Cheryl R Greenberg9, Lawrence Korngut10, Alex MacKenzie8, John J Mitchell11, Stuart Nicholls12,13, Martin Offringa14, Andreas Schulze14, Monica Taljaard2,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Inherited metabolic diseases (IMD) are a large group of rare single-gene disorders that are typically diagnosed early in life. There are important evidence gaps related to the comparative effectiveness of therapies for IMD, which are in part due to challenges in conducting randomized controlled trials (RCTs) for rare diseases. Registry-based RCTs present a unique opportunity to address these challenges provided the registries implement standardized collection of outcomes that are important to patients and their caregivers and to clinical providers and healthcare systems. Currently there is no core outcome set (COS) for studies evaluating interventions for paediatric IMD. This protocol outlines a study that will establish COS for each of two relatively common IMD in children, phenylketonuria (PKU) and medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (MCAD) deficiency.Entities:
Keywords: Core outcome set; Delphi; Inherited metabolic diseases; MCAD deficiency; PKU; Registry-based randomized trials
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29258568 PMCID: PMC5735866 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-017-2327-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Study eligibility criteria defined according to PICOS
| PICOS component | PKU and MCAD deficiency | Other COMET paediatric projects |
|---|---|---|
| Population | (i) Children (aged 18 years or younger) diagnosed with PKU or MCAD deficiency | Children (aged 18 years or younger) diagnosed with a paediatric condition |
| (ii) For publications focused on long-term follow-up initiatives for newborn screening programmes, children (aged 18 years or younger) diagnosed with inherited metabolic diseases generally (including but not limited to PKU and MCAD deficiency) | ||
| Exclusions: for (ii) above, publications describing long-term follow-up initiatives for newborn screening, we will exclude publications where neither PKU nor MCAD deficiency are encompassed within the set of diseases being studied | ||
| Interventions/comparators/exposures | As the review’s objectives are to establish a listing of reported outcomes, no restrictions will be in place related to specific interventions or exposures | |
| Outcomes | No restrictions will be in place in terms of outcomes, given the objectives of the review; mapping of reported outcomes will be established | |
| Study design | (i) Eligibility will be restricted to non-animal studies of PKU and MCAD deficiency, using any study design | Eligibility will be restricted to publications describing findings from core outcome initiatives related to otherpaediatric conditions (nonspecific to PKU or MCAD) |
| (ii) Publications focused on long-term follow-up initiatives related to newborn screening and IMD (which include PKU and/or MCAD deficiency within a larger group of diseases) | ||
| Exclusions: case reports and case series with fewer than 5 subjects | ||
| Language | English | English |
PICOS patient, population or problem, intervention, comparison, outcomes and study design/setting, PKU phenylketonuria, MCAD medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase, COMET Core Outcome Measures in Effectiveness Trials, IMD inherited metabolic diseases