Systematic review on outcomes used in clinical research on autosomal recessive polycystic kidney disease—are patient-centered outcomes our blind spot?
-
Published:2021-08-12
Issue:12
Volume:36
Page:3841-3851
-
ISSN:0931-041X
-
Container-title:Pediatric Nephrology
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:Pediatr Nephrol
Author:
Gimpel CharlotteORCID, Liebau Max ChristophORCID, Schaefer Franz
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Autosomal recessive polycystic kidney disease (ARPKD) is a rare severe hepatorenal disease. Survivors of pulmonary hypoplasia and patients with milder presentations often achieve long-term survival but frequently require kidney and/or liver transplantation.
Objective
To examine the use of clinical, surrogate and patient-centered outcomes in studies on ARPKD with special attention to core outcomes of the Standardized Outcomes in NephroloGy project for children with chronic kidney disease (SONG-Kids).
Data sources and study eligibility criteria
A systematic MEDLINE literature search identified 367 ARPKD studies published since 1990; however, of these 134 were excluded because they did not report any clinical outcomes (e.g. only histopathological, genetic, protein structure or radiological markers), 19 studies because they only included prenatal patients and 138 because they were case reports with ≤ 3 patients.
Study appraisal
Seventy-six eligible studies were examined for study type, size, intervention, and reported outcomes by organ system and type, including all SONG-kids tier 1–3 outcomes.
Participants
There were 3231 patient-reports of children and adults with ARPKD.
Results
The overwhelming majority of studies reported clinical and surrogate outcomes (75/76 (98%) and 73/76 (96%)), but only 11/76 (14%) examined patient-centered outcomes and only 2/76 (3%) used validated instruments to capture them. Of the SONG-Kids core outcomes, kidney function was reported almost universally (70/76 (92%), infection and survival in three quarters (57/76 (75%), 55/76 (72%)) and measures of life participation (including neurological impairment) only rarely and inconsistently (16/76 (21%)).
Limitations
Thirty studies (39%) were of low quality as they were either narrative case reports (n = 14, 18%) and/or patients with ARPKD were an indistinguishable subgroup (n = 18, 24%). Only 28 trials compared interventions, but none were randomized.
Conclusions and implications
Studies that reported clinical outcomes in ARPKD usually covered the core outcome domains of kidney function, infections, and survival, but measures of life participation and patient-centered outcomes are distinctly lacking and require more attention in future trials.
Graphical abstract
Funder
Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung Bundesministerium für Bildung, Wissenschaft, Forschung und Technologie Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft European Commission
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Nephrology,Pediatrics, Perinatology, and Child Health
Reference33 articles.
1. Shuster S, Keunen J, Shannon P, Watkins N, Chong K, Chitayat D (2019) Prenatal detection of isolated bilateral hyperechogenic kidneys: etiologies and outcomes. Prenat Diagn 39:693–700. https://doi.org/10.1002/pd.5418 2. Burgmaier K, Kunzmann K, Ariceta G, Bergmann C, Buescher AK, Burgmaier M, Dursun I, Duzova A, Eid L, Erger F, Feldkoetter M, Galiano M, Geßner M, Goebel H, Gokce I, Haffner D, Hooman N, Hoppe B, Jankauskiene A, Klaus G, König J, Litwin M, Massella L, Mekahli D, Melek E, Mir S, Pape L, Prikhodina L, Ranchin B, Schild R, Seeman T, Sever L, Shroff R, Soliman NA, Stabouli S, Stanczyk M, Tabel Y, Taranta-Janusz K, Testa S, Thumfart J, Topaloglu R, Weber LT, Wicher D, Wühl E, Wygoda S, Yilmaz A, Zachwieja K, Zagozdzon I, Zerres K, ESCAPE Study Group, GPN Study Group, Dötsch J, Schaefer F, Liebau MC, ARegPKD consortium (2018) Risk factors for early dialysis dependency in autosomal recessive polycystic kidney disease. J Pediatr 199:22-28.e6. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jpeds.2018.03.052 3. Bergmann C, Senderek J, Windelen E, Küpper F, Middeldorf I, Schneider F, Dornia C, Rudnik-Schöneborn S, Konrad M, Schmitt CP, Seeman T, Neuhaus TJ, Vester U, Kirfel J, Büttner R, Zerres K, APN (Arbeitsgemeinschaft für Pädiatrische Nephrologie) (2005) Clinical consequences of PKHD1 mutations in 164 patients with autosomal-recessive polycystic kidney disease (ARPKD). Kidney Int 67:829–848. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1523-1755.2005.00148.x 4. Büscher R, Büscher AK, Cetiner M, Treckmann JW, Paul A, Vester U, Hoyer PF (2015) Combined liver and kidney transplantation and kidney after liver transplantation in children: indication, postoperative outcome, and long-term results. Pediatr Transplant 19:858–865. https://doi.org/10.1111/petr.12595 5. Zerres K, Mücher G, Becker J, Steinkamm C, Rudnik-Schöneborn S, Heikkilä P, Rapola J, Salonen R, Germino GG, Onuchic L, Somlo S, Avner ED, Harman LA, Stockwin JM, Guay-Woodford LM (1998) Prenatal diagnosis of autosomal recessive polycystic kidney disease (ARPKD): molecular genetics, clinical experience, and fetal morphology. Am J Med Genet 76:137–144
Cited by
3 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|