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International Survey to Establish Prioritized Outcomes for Trials in People With Coronavirus Disease 2019

Evangelidis, Nicole; Tong, Allison; Howell, Martin; Teixeira-Pinto, Armando; Elliott, Julian H.; Azevedo, Luciano Cesar; Bersten, Andrew; Cervantes, Lilia; Chew, Derek P.; Crowe, Sally; Douglas, Ivor S.; Flemyng, Ella; Horby, Peter; Lee, Jaehee; Lorca, Eduardo; Lynch, Deena; Marshall, John C.; McKenzie, Anne; Mehta, Sangeeta; Mer, Mervyn; Conway Morris, Andrew; Nseir, Saad; Povoa, Pedro; Reid, Mark; Sakr, Yasser; Shen, Ning; Smyth, Alan R.; Snelling, Tom; Strippoli, Giovanni F. M.; Torres, Antoni; Turner, Tari; Webb, Steve; Williamson, Paula R.; Woc-Colburn, Laila; Zhang, Junhua; Baumgart, Amanda; Cabrera, Sebastian; Cho, Yeoungjee; Cooper, Tess; Guha, Chandana; Liu, Emma; Gonzalez, Andrea Matus; McLeod, Charlie; Natale, Patrizia; Saglimbene, Valeria; Viecelli, Andrea K.; Craig, Jonathan C.

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Authors

Nicole Evangelidis

Allison Tong

Martin Howell

Armando Teixeira-Pinto

Julian H. Elliott

Luciano Cesar Azevedo

Andrew Bersten

Lilia Cervantes

Derek P. Chew

Sally Crowe

Ivor S. Douglas

Ella Flemyng

Peter Horby

Jaehee Lee

Eduardo Lorca

Deena Lynch

John C. Marshall

Anne McKenzie

Sangeeta Mehta

Mervyn Mer

Andrew Conway Morris

Saad Nseir

Pedro Povoa

Mark Reid

Yasser Sakr

Ning Shen

Alan R. Smyth

Tom Snelling

Giovanni F. M. Strippoli

Antoni Torres

Tari Turner

Steve Webb

Paula R. Williamson

Laila Woc-Colburn

Junhua Zhang

Amanda Baumgart

Sebastian Cabrera

Yeoungjee Cho

Tess Cooper

Chandana Guha

Emma Liu

Andrea Matus Gonzalez

Charlie McLeod

Patrizia Natale

Valeria Saglimbene

Andrea K. Viecelli

Jonathan C. Craig



Abstract

Objectives:

There are over 4,000 trials conducted in people with coronavirus disease 2019. However, the variability of outcomes and the omission of patient-centered outcomes may diminish the impact of these trials on decision-making. The aim of this study was to generate a consensus-based, prioritized list of outcomes for coronavirus disease 2019 trials.

Design:

In an online survey conducted in English, Chinese, Italian, Portuguese, and Spanish languages, adults with coronavirus disease 2019, their family members, health professionals, and the general public rated the importance of outcomes using a 9-point Likert scale (7–9, critical importance) and completed a Best-Worst Scale to estimate relative importance. Participant comments were analyzed thematically.

Setting:

International.

Subjects:

Adults 18 years old and over with confirmed or suspected coronavirus disease 2019, their family members, members of the general public, and health professionals (including clinicians, policy makers, regulators, funders, and researchers).

Interventions:

None.

Measurements:

None.

Main Results:

In total, 9,289 participants from 111 countries (776 people with coronavirus disease 2019 or family members, 4,882 health professionals, and 3,631 members of the public) completed the survey. The four outcomes of highest priority for all three groups were: mortality, respiratory failure, pneumonia, and organ failure. Lung function, lung scarring, sepsis, shortness of breath, and oxygen level in the blood were common to the top 10 outcomes across all three groups (mean > 7.5, median ≥ 8, and > 70% of respondents rated the outcome as critically important). Patients/family members rated fatigue, anxiety, chest pain, muscle pain, gastrointestinal problems, and cardiovascular disease higher than health professionals. Four themes underpinned prioritization: fear of life-threatening, debilitating, and permanent consequences; addressing knowledge gaps; enabling preparedness and planning; and tolerable or infrequent outcomes.

Conclusions:

Life-threatening respiratory and other organ outcomes were consistently highly prioritized by all stakeholder groups. Patients/family members gave higher priority to many patient-reported outcomes compared with health professionals.

Citation

Evangelidis, N., Tong, A., Howell, M., Teixeira-Pinto, A., Elliott, J. H., Azevedo, L. C., …Craig, J. C. (2020). International Survey to Establish Prioritized Outcomes for Trials in People With Coronavirus Disease 2019. Critical Care Medicine, 48(11), 1612-1621. https://doi.org/10.1097/ccm.0000000000004584

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Aug 14, 2020
Online Publication Date Aug 25, 2020
Publication Date Aug 25, 2020
Deposit Date Oct 7, 2020
Publicly Available Date Oct 7, 2020
Journal Critical Care Medicine
Print ISSN 0090-3493
Publisher Lippincott, Williams & Wilkins
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 48
Issue 11
Pages 1612-1621
DOI https://doi.org/10.1097/ccm.0000000000004584
Keywords Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/4945450
Publisher URL https://journals.lww.com/ccmjournal/Fulltext/2020/11000/International_Survey_to_Establish_Prioritized.9.aspx

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