Measurement Issues in Trials of Pediatric Acute Diarrheal Diseases: A Systematic Review

Author:

Johnston Bradley C.1,Shamseer Larissa2,da Costa Bruno R.3,Tsuyuki Ross T.45,Vohra Sunita25

Affiliation:

1. Department of Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics, McMaster University, Health Sciences Centre, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada;

2. CARE Program, Department of Pediatrics, and

3. Institute of Social and Preventive Medicine, University of Bern, Bern, Switzerland; and

4. EPICORE Centre, Department of Medicine, Edmonton General Hospital, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada;

5. School of Public Health, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Worldwide, diarrheal diseases rank second among conditions that afflict children. Despite the disease burden, there is limited consensus on how to define and measure pediatric acute diarrhea in trials. OBJECTIVES: In RCTs of children involving acute diarrhea as the primary outcome, we documented (1) how acute diarrhea and its resolution were defined, (2) all primary outcomes, (3) the psychometric properties of instruments used to measure acute diarrhea and (4) the methodologic quality of included trials, as reported. METHODS: We searched CENTRAL, Embase, Global Health, and Medline from inception to February 2009. English-language RCTs of children younger than 19 years that measured acute diarrhea as a primary outcome were chosen. RESULTS: We identified 138 RCTs reporting on 1 or more primary outcomes related to pediatric acute diarrhea/diseases. Included trials used 64 unique definitions of diarrhea, 69 unique definitions of diarrhea resolution, and 46 unique primary outcomes. The majority of included trials evaluated short-term clinical disease activity (incidence and duration of diarrhea), laboratory outcomes, or a composite of these end points. Thirty-two trials used instruments (eg, single and multidomain scoring systems) to support assessment of disease activity. Of these, 3 trials stated that their instrument was valid; however, none of the trials (or their citations) reported evidence of this validity. The overall methodologic quality of included trials was good. CONCLUSIONS: Even in what would be considered methodologically sound clinical trials, definitions of diarrhea, primary outcomes, and instruments employed in RCTs of pediatric acute diarrhea are heterogeneous, lack evidence of validity, and focus on indices that may not be important to participants.

Publisher

American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)

Subject

Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

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4. Costs associated with office visits for diarrhea in infants and toddlers;Avendaño;Pediatr Infect Dis J,1993

5. Hospitalizations and deaths from diarrhea and rotavirus among children <5 years of age in the United States, 1993–2003;Fischer;J Infect Dis,2007

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