| Literature DB >> 35160312 |
Rosa Pérez-Morales1, Juan Manuel Buades-Fuster2,3, Vicent Esteve-Simó4, Manuel Macía-Heras1, Carmen Mora-Fernández5,6, Juan F Navarro-González1,5,6,7.
Abstract
The success of hemodialysis (HD) treatments has been evaluated using objective measures of analytical parameters, or machine-measured parameters, despite having available validated instruments that assess patient perspective. There is an emerging interest regarding the use and relevance of patient-related outcomes (PROs). Electronic PROs (ePROs) involve the use of electronic technology, provide rapid access to this information, and are becoming more widely used in clinical trials and studies to evaluate efficacy and safety. Despite the scarce literature, this review suggests that ePROs are useful in providing a more customized and multidimensional approach to patient management and in making better clinical decisions in relevant aspects such as vascular access, duration and frequency of dialysis sessions, treatment of anemia, mental health, fatigue, and quality of life. The purpose of this review is to raise interest in the systematic use of ePROs in HD and to promote the development of studies in this field, which can respond to the gaps in knowledge and contribute to the implementation of the use of ePROs through new technologies, helping to improve the quality of health care.Entities:
Keywords: PREMs; PROMs; ePRO; hemodialysis
Year: 2022 PMID: 35160312 PMCID: PMC8836773 DOI: 10.3390/jcm11030861
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Main current patient-reported outcomes measures developed for adults with chronic kidney disease (CKD).
| STUDY Ref. | Assessments | Item Number | Burden Rating Scale | Population/Validation | Recall |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CKD-SBI [ | Prevalence, severity and frequency of symptoms | 33 | 11 point Likert scale | CKD/ESRD | 4 weeks |
| CHEQ [ | Health perception, physical, | 80 | 2–7 point Likert scale | ESRD/CKD | 4 weeks/3 months/in general |
| DSI [ | Physical symptom burden, | 30 | 5 point Likert scale | ESRD/CKD | 1 week |
| KDQOL-SF [ | Symptoms, burden of kidney disease, work situation, cognitive impairement, social aspects, sexual disorder, | 82 | 2–10 point Likert scale | ESRD/CKD | 4 weeks |
| KDQOL-36 [ | Includes the SF-12 as generic core plus the burden, symptoms/problems, and effects of kidney disease scales from the KDQOL-SF™v1.3. | 36 | 5 point Likert scale | ESRD/CKD | 4 weeks/in general |
CKD: chronic kidney disease; CKD-SBI: Chronic Kidney Disease-Symptom Burden Index; CHEQ: CHOICE Health Experience Questionnaire; CKD QOL: Chronic Kidney Disease Quality of Life; DSI: Dialysis Symptom Index: KDQOL-SF: Kidney Disease Quality of Life—Short Form: KDQOL-36: Kidney Disease Quality of Life-36. References [14,15,16,17,18] are included.
Summary of the studies included in the review on the evidence of PROM in hemodialysis and its contribution.
| Author Ref | Year | Contribution |
|---|---|---|
| Flythe et al. | 2019 | Laid the foundations of the methodology for developing dialysis-specific PROM questionnaires. |
| Schick-Makaroff, K. et al. | 2019 | Proved that the use of ePROs is useful in home dialysis techniques. |
| Staibano, P. et al. | 2020 | Proposed the standardization of research methods and the reporting of PROMs in HD. |
| Schick-Makaroff, K. et al. | 2017 | Demonstrated that there is general satisfaction with the ePROs registry among patients receiving HD at home. |
| Schick-Makaroff, K. et al. | 2021 | Suggested that PROM questionnaires (ESAS-r: Renal/EQ-5D-5L) can quickly identify mental health problems. |
| Jacobson, J. et al. | 2019 | Proved that PROMs in clinical and research settings can improve the detection and treatment of fatigue in HD. |
| Verberne, W.R. et al. | 2021 | Advanced that the use of PROMs in selected patients has the potential to reach a similar QoL in patients on CC or dialysis. |
| Cirillo, L. et al. | 2021 | Proved the relationship between satisfaction with care and QoL, highlighting the central role of nephrologist-patient communication in the QoL of dialysis patients. |
| Fotheringham, J. et al. | 2021 | Demonstrated the importance of the patient preferences in the selection of more frequent or longer HD or regimens. |
| Quinn, R.R. et al. | 2008 | Proved that information on catheter and fistula care decreases the number of complications and increase patient satisfaction with their vascular access. |
CC: conservative care; HRQoL: health-related quality of life; QoL: quality of life, [22,28,29,30,31,32,33,34,35,36].