| Literature DB >> 34039675 |
Meena Kalluri1,2, Fabrizio Luppi3,2, Ada Vancheri4, Carlo Vancheri5, Elisabetta Balestro6, Francesco Varone7, Nesrin Mogulkoc8, Giulia Cacopardo9, Elena Bargagli10, Elizabeth Renzoni11, Sebastiano Torrisi5, Mariarosaria Calvello7, Alessandro Libra4, Mauro Pavone5, Francesco Bonella12, Vincent Cottin13,14, Claudia Valenzuela15,2, Marlies Wijsenbeek16,2, Elisabeth Bendstrup17,2.
Abstract
Patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs), tools to assess patient self-report of health status, are now increasingly used in research, care and policymaking. While there are two well-developed disease-specific PROMs for interstitial lung diseases (ILD) and idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF), many unmet and urgent needs remain. In December 2019, 64 international ILD experts convened in Erice, Italy to deliberate on many topics, including PROMs in ILD. This review summarises the history of PROMs in ILD, shortcomings of the existing tools, challenges of development, validation and implementation of their use in clinical trials, and the discussion held during the meeting. Development of disease-specific PROMs for ILD including IPF with robust methodology and validation in concordance with guidance from regulatory authorities have increased user confidence in PROMs. Minimal clinically important difference for bidirectional changes may need to be developed. Cross-cultural validation and linguistic adaptations are necessary in addition to robust psychometric properties for effective PROM use in multinational clinical trials. PROM burden of use should be reduced through appropriate use of digital technologies and computerised adaptive testing. Active patient engagement in all stages from development, testing, choosing and implementation of PROMs can help improve probability of success and further growth.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34039675 DOI: 10.1183/16000617.0026-2021
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Respir Rev ISSN: 0905-9180