| Literature DB >> 30578228 |
Elissa R Weitzman1,2,3, Kara M Magane1, Lauren E Wisk1,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Collection of patient-reported outcomes measures (PROs) may augment clinical data and inform health research, improving care, yet approaches to sustaining interest among patient cohorts in research participation are needed. One approach may involve returning aggregate research results (ARRs), which may help patients contextualize personal experiences, prompt conversations with providers or family, and encourage information seeking. This model has been demonstrated for Web-based patient-centered registries. Studies with clinical cohorts may further elucidate the model, its impacts on interest in research participation and planned actions, and potential for participants to experience this as helpful or harmful-gap areas.Entities:
Keywords: aggregate research results; decision making; juvenile idiopathic arthritis; patient engagement; patient-reported outcome measures; rheumatic disease
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30578228 PMCID: PMC6320417 DOI: 10.2196/10647
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 5.428
Figure 1Example content from aggregate research results returned to parents.
The parent-reported sample characteristics by receipt of aggregate research results (ARRs).
| Characteristic | Total (N=202) | Received ARRs (n=111) | Did not receive ARRs (n=91) | |||
| Child age (years), mean (SD) | 12.0 (3.6) | 11.7 (3.6) | 12.3 (3.7) | .29 | ||
| .87 | ||||||
| Female | 161 (79.7) | 88 (79.3) | 73 (80.2) | —a | ||
| Male | 41 (20.3) | 23 (20.7) | 18 (19.8) | — | ||
| .63 | ||||||
| White, non-Hispanic | 152 (75.2) | 85 (76.6) | 67 (73.6) | — | ||
| Non-white or Hispanic | 50 (24.8) | 26 (23.4) | 24 (26.4) | — | ||
| .79 | ||||||
| High school graduate or less | 58 (28.7) | 31 (27.9) | 27 (29.7) | — | ||
| Any college | 144 (71.3) | 80 (72.1) | 64 (70.3) | — | ||
| .50 | ||||||
| Juvenile idiopathic arthritis | 187 (92.6) | 104 (93.7) | 83 (91.2) | — | ||
| Systematic lupus erythematosus or mixed connective tissues disease | 15 (7.4) | 7 (6.3) | 8 (8.8) | — | ||
| Disease duration (in years), mean (SD) | 7.7 (3.5) | 7.7 (3.5) | 7.7 (3.6) | .99 | ||
| .65 | ||||||
| No methotrexate use | 103 (51.0) | 59 (53.2) | 44 (48.4) | — | ||
| Use with no intolerance | 60 (29.7) | 30 (27.0) | 30 (33.0) | — | ||
| Methotrexate intolerance | 39 (19.3) | 22 (19.8) | 17 (18.7) | — | ||
| Overall healthb, mean (SD) | 8.1 (2.0) | 8.2 (1.8) | 8.0 (2.3) | .45 | ||
| .30 | ||||||
| >15 | 36 (17.8) | 17 (15.3) | 19 (20.9) | — | ||
| ≤15 | 166 (82.2) | 94 (84.7) | 72 (79.1) | — | ||
| .64 | ||||||
| One or more | 52 (25.7) | 30 (27.0) | 22 (24.2) | — | ||
| None | 150 (74.3) | 81 (73.0) | 69 (75.8) | — | ||
| Total score | 75.7 (18.3) | 74.9 (18.4) | 76.7 (18.4) | .50 | ||
| Psychosocial score | 76.1 (18.0) | 75.2 (18.2) | 77.1 (17.8) | .46 | ||
| Physical score | 75.1 (22.6) | 74.4 (22.3) | 75.9 (23.1) | .65 | ||
| Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System Pain Interferencee, mean (SD) | 50.5 (10.9) | 51.2 (11.0) | 49.7 (10.9) | .35 | ||
| Time in cohort (days), mean (SD) | 95.8 (100.9) | 105.1 (100.7) | 84.3 (100.4) | .14 | ||
aNot applicable.
bParents’ rating of their child’s overall health from 1 to 10, where higher scores indicate better health.
cParents’ report of the number of minutes of morning stiffness their child experiences on a typical day over the past 2 weeks.
dThe possible range of scores is from 0 to 100, with higher score indicating better quality of life.
eRaw pain interference scores were transformed into a “t score” for each participant. The t score rescales the raw score into a standardized score with a mean of 50, SD of 10, and the possible range of 38-78, with higher score indicating more pain interference.
Figure 2Parents’ ratings of the value of each patient-reported topic presented in aggregate research results for understanding and making decisions regarding their child’s condition and care.
Figure 3Percentages and factor loadings of response items regarding reactions to the return of aggregate research results.
Reactions to aggregate research results (ARRs) by demographic and clinical characteristics (n=111).
| Characteristic | Factor 1: Validation/affirmationa | Factor 2: Information burdenb | ||||||||
| Child age (years), correlation coefficient | 0.12 | .21 | 0.00 | .98 | ||||||
| Female | –0.05 (1.02) | .29 | 0.07 (1.02) | .15 | ||||||
| Male | 0.20 (0.92) | —c | –0.27 (0.89) | — | ||||||
| White, non-Hispanic | –0.01 (1.05) | .92 | –0.06 (0.96) | .24 | ||||||
| Non-white or Hispanic | 0.02 (0.81) | — | 0.20 (1.11) | — | ||||||
| High school graduate or less | 0.07 (0.89) | .67 | 0.41 (1.10) | .007 | ||||||
| Any college | –0.03 (1.04) | — | –0.16 (0.92) | — | ||||||
| Juvenile idiopathic arthritis | –0.02 (1.02) | .52 | 0.01 (0.99) | .69 | ||||||
| Systematic lupus erythematosus or mixed connective tissues disease | 0.24 (0.70) | — | –0.15 (1.15) | — | ||||||
| Disease duration (years), correlation coefficient | 0.11 | .27 | 0.05 | .57 | ||||||
| No methotrexate use | –0.01 (0.96) | .27 | 0.07 (0.97) | .54 | ||||||
| Use with no intolerance | 0.20 (0.82) | — | –0.17 (1.01) | — | ||||||
| Methotrexate intolerance | –0.25 (1.28) | — | 0.04 (1.08) | — | ||||||
| Overall healthd, correlation coefficient | −0.07 | .48 | −0.03 | .73 | ||||||
| >15 | 0.11 (1.05) | .61 | 0.05 (1.02) | .83 | ||||||
| ≤15 | –0.02 (1.00) | — | –0.01 (1.00) | — | ||||||
| One or more | 0.27 (0.95) | .09 | –0.25 (0.78) | .10 | ||||||
| None | –0.10 (1.01) | — | 0.09 (1.06) | — | ||||||
| Total | –0.09 | .34 | –0.11 | .24 | ||||||
| Psychosocial Score | –0.11 | .25 | –0.10 | .29 | ||||||
| Physical Score | –0.05 | .61 | –0.11 | .26 | ||||||
| Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System Pain Interferenceg, correlation coefficient | 0.06 | .54 | –0.02 | .82 | ||||||
| Time in Cohort (days), correlation coefficient | –0.02 | .80 | 0.08 | .43 | ||||||
aReflects the extent to which parents feel their experience is validated or affirmed when viewing ARRs; higher scores indicate greater agreement.
bReflects the extent to which parents experienced information burden when viewing; higher scores indicate greater agreement.
cNot applicable.
dParent’s rating of their child’s overall health from 1 to 10, where higher scores indicate better health.
eParent’s report of the number of minutes of morning stiffness their child experiences on a typical day over the past 2 weeks.
fThe possible range of scores is from 0 to 100, with higher score indicating better quality of life.
gRaw pain interference scores were transformed into a “t score” for each participant. The t score rescales the raw score into a standardized score with a mean of 50, SD of 10, and the possible range of 38-78. A higher score indicates more pain interference.
Associations between reactions to aggregate research results and engagement outcomes.
| Outcomea | Outcome prevalence, n (%) | Unadjusted models, OR (95% CI) | Adjusted models, OR (95% CI) | ||
| Validation/affirmation | 58 (52.3) | 1.97 (1.21-3.18) | 1.97 (1.18-3.30) | ||
| Information burden | 1.33 (0.89-1.98) | 1.36 (0.89-2.09) | |||
| Validation/affirmation | 35 (31.5) | 1.22 (0.79-1.87) | 1.18 (0.75-1.86) | ||
| Information burden | 0.69 (0.45-1.07) | 0.59 (0.36-0.95) | |||
| Validation/affirmation | 20 (18.0) | 0.93 (0.58-1.47) | 0.87 (0.54-1.41) | ||
| Information burden | 0.68 (0.39-1.17) | 0.64 (0.36-1.15) | |||
| Validation/affirmation | 17 (15.3) | 0.69 (0.43-1.11) | 0.69 (0.42-1.13) | ||
| Information burden | 1.63 (0.98-2.71) | 1.75 (1.02-3.00) | |||
| Validation/affirmation | 11 (9.9) | 1.03 (0.54-1.98) | 1.06 (0.53-2.10) | ||
| Information burden | 1.15 (0.63-2.11) | 1.31 (0.69-2.52) | |||
aFrequency and unadjusted prevalence of engagement outcomes among those who received aggregate research results (n=111). Planned action prevalence did not sum to 100% as participants could endorse multiple actions. “Unadjusted” models controlled for validation/affirmation and information burden scales only. Adjusted models controlled for the child’s age, race/ethnicity, and highest education attained in the family in addition to both validation/affirmation and information burden scales.