Optimising Clinical Epidemiology in Disease Outbreaks: Analysis of ISARIC-WHO COVID-19 Case Report Form Utilisation

Author:

Merson Laura12ORCID,Duque Sara13,Garcia-Gallo Esteban13ORCID,Yeabah Trokon Omarley4ORCID,Rylance Jamie5ORCID,Diaz Janet5,Flahault Antoine2ORCID,

Affiliation:

1. ISARIC, Pandemic Sciences Institute, University of Oxford, Oxford OX37LF, UK

2. Institute of Global Health, Faculty of Medicine, University of Geneva, 1202 Geneva, Switzerland

3. Infectious Diseases Department, Universidad de La Sabana, Chia 250001, Colombia

4. National Public Health Institute, Monrovia 1000, Liberia

5. Health Emergencies Program, World Health Organization, 1211 Geneva, Switzerland

Abstract

Standardised forms for capturing clinical data promote consistency in data collection and analysis across research sites, enabling faster, higher-quality evidence generation. ISARIC and the World Health Organization have developed case report forms (CRFs) for the clinical characterisation of several infectious disease outbreaks. To improve the design and quality of future forms, we analysed the inclusion and completion rates of the 243 fields on the ISARIC-WHO COVID-19 CRF. Data from 42 diverse collaborations, covering 1886 hospitals and 950,064 patients, were analysed. A mean of 129.6 fields (53%) were included in the adapted CRFs implemented across the sites. Consistent patterns of field inclusion and completion aligned with globally recognised research priorities in outbreaks of novel infectious diseases. Outcome status was the most highly included (95.2%) and completed (89.8%) field, followed by admission demographics (79.1% and 91.6%), comorbidities (77.9% and 79.0%), signs and symptoms (68.9% and 78.4%), and vitals (70.3% and 69.1%). Mean field completion was higher in severe patients (70.2%) than in all patients (61.6%). The results reveal how clinical characterisation CRFs can be streamlined to reduce data collection time, including the modularisation of CRFs, to offer a choice of data volume collection and the separation of critical care interventions. This data-driven approach to designing CRFs enhances the efficiency of data collection to inform patient care and public health response.

Funder

Wellcome

UK Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office

Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation

Publisher

MDPI AG

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