| Literature DB >> 31955922 |
Karine E Manera1, David W Johnson2, Jonathan C Craig3, Jenny I Shen4, Talia Gutman5, Yeoungjee Cho6, Angela Yee-Moon Wang7, Edwina A Brown8, Gillian Brunier9, Jie Dong10, Tony Dunning11, Rajnish Mehrotra12, Saraladevi Naicker13, Roberto Pecoits-Filho14, Jeffrey Perl15, Martin Wilkie16, Allison Tong5.
Abstract
Outcomes reported in randomized controlled trials in peritoneal dialysis (PD) are diverse, are measured inconsistently, and may not be important to patients, families, and clinicians. The Standardized Outcomes in Nephrology-Peritoneal Dialysis (SONG-PD) initiative aims to establish a core outcome set for trials in PD based on the shared priorities of all stakeholders. We convened an international SONG-PD stakeholder consensus workshop in May 2018 in Vancouver, Canada. Nineteen patients/caregivers and 51 health professionals attended. Participants discussed core outcome domains and implementation in trials in PD. Four themes relating to the formation of core outcome domains were identified: life participation as a main goal of PD, impact of fatigue, empowerment for preparation and planning, and separation of contributing factors from core factors. Considerations for implementation were identified: standardizing patient-reported outcomes, requiring a validated and feasible measure, simplicity of binary outcomes, responsiveness to interventions, and using positive terminology. All stakeholders supported inclusion of PD-related infection, cardiovascular disease, mortality, technique survival, and life participation as the core outcome domains for PD.Entities:
Keywords: PD failure; PD-related infection; Peritoneal dialysis (PD); cardiovascular disease (CVD); caregiver; consensus workshop; core outcome set; dialysis; fatigue; life participation; mortality; nephrology research; outcomes; patient perspective; patient-centered care; patient-reported outcome (PRO); quality of life (QoL); technique survival; trial design; trials
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31955922 DOI: 10.1053/j.ajkd.2019.09.017
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Kidney Dis ISSN: 0272-6386 Impact factor: 8.860