A Core Outcome Set for Trials in Glomerular Disease

Author:

Carter Simon A.ORCID,Lightstone Liz,Cattran Dan,Tong Allison,Bagga Arvind,Barbour Sean J.,Barratt JonathanORCID,Boletis John,Caster Dawn J.,Coppo Rosanna,Fervenza Fernando C.ORCID,Floege Jürgen,Hladunewich Michelle A.,Hogan Jonathan J.,Kitching A. RichardORCID,Lafayette Richard A.,Malvar Ana,Radhakrishnan Jai,Rovin Brad H.,Scholes-Robertson NicoleORCID,Trimarchi Hernán,Zhang Hong,Anumudu Samaya,Cho Yeoungjee,Gutman TaliaORCID,O’Lone Emma,Viecelli Andrea K.,Au EricORCID,Azukaitis Karolis,Baumgart Amanda,Bernier-Jean Amelie,Dunn Louese,Howell MartinORCID,Ju Angela,Logeman Charlotte,Nataatmadja MelissaORCID,Sautenet Benedicte,Sharma Ankit,Craig Jonathan C.

Abstract

Background and objectivesOutcomes reported in trials in adults with glomerular disease are often selected with minimal patient input, are heterogeneous, and may not be relevant for clinical decision making. The Standardized Outcomes in Nephrology–Glomerular Disease (SONG-GD) initiative aimed to establish a core outcome set to help ensure that outcomes of critical importance to patients, care partners, and clinicians are consistently reported.Design, setting, participants, and measurementsWe convened two 1.5-hour workshops in Melbourne, Australia, and Washington, DC, United States. Attendees were identified purposively with 50 patients/care partners and 88 health professionals from 19 countries; 51% were female. Patients and care partners were from the United States, Australia, and Canada, and had experience of a glomerular disease with systemic features (n=9), kidney-limited nephrotic disease (n=9), or other kidney-limited glomerular disease (n=8). Attendees reviewed the results of the SONG-GD Delphi survey and aims of the workshop and then discussed potential core outcomes and their implementation in trials among moderated breakout groups of eight to 12 people from diverse backgrounds. Transcripts of discussions were analyzed thematically.ResultsThree themes were identified that supported the proposed core outcomes: limiting disease progression, stability and control, and ensuring universal relevance (i.e., applicable across diverse populations and settings). The fourth theme, preparedness for implementation, included engaging with funders and regulators, establishing reliable and validated measures, and leveraging existing endorsements for patient-reported outcomes.ConclusionsWorkshop themes demonstrated support for kidney function, disease activity, death, life participation, and cardiovascular disease, and these were established as the core outcomes for trials in adults with glomerular disease. Future work is needed to establish the core measures for each domain, with funders and regulators central to the uptake of the core outcome set in trials.

Funder

National Health and Medical Research Council

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

American Society of Nephrology (ASN)

Subject

Transplantation,Nephrology,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine,Epidemiology

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