Core Patient-Reported Outcomes for Trials in Nephrology

The outcomes reported in trials across all stages of chronic kidney disease (CKD) are highly variable and often do not include outcomes that are directly relevant to patients and caregivers. Frequently, the outcomes reported in trials are often unvalidated surrogate biochemical end points. The omission of outcomes that are meaningful and important to patients can diminish the value of trials in supporting treatment decisions. In response, there have been increasing efforts across many health and medical disciplines to develop core outcome sets, defined as the minimum set of outcomes to be reported in all trials in a specific health area to improve the relevance and consistency of reporting trial outcomes. The international Standardized Outcomes in Nephrology (SONG) initiative was established in 2014 and has since developed seven core outcome sets for different diagnosis and treatment stages of CKD. The core outcomes were based on consensus among patients, caregivers, and health professionals. Each core outcome set includes at least one patient-reported outcome, including fatigue (hemodialysis), life participation (kidney transplantation, peritoneal dialysis, early CKD not yet requiring kidney replacement therapy, children and adolescents, and glomerular disease), and pain (polycystic kidney disease). This article outlines how patient-reported outcomes are currently reported in trials, discusses core patient-reported outcomes that have been established for trials in kidney disease, and outlines strategies for implementing core patient-reported outcomes in trials.

Contributors

Anastasia Hughes, Nicole Scholes-Robertson, Angela Ju, Allison Jauré

Publication

Journal: Seminars In Nephrology
Volume: 44
Issue: 3
Pages: -
Year: 2024
DOI: 10.1016/j.semnephrol.2024.151549

Further Study Information

Current Stage: Completed
Date:
Funding source(s): Allison Jaure is a recipient of the National Health and Medical Research Council Postgraduate Career Development Fellowship (APP1106716). The funding organization had no role in the design, conduct, review, or approval of the article.


Health Area

Disease Category: Kidney disease

Disease Name: Autosomal Dominant Polycystic Kidney Disease, Chronic kidney disease , Glomerular disease, Polycystic kidney disease

Target Population

Age Range: Unknown

Sex:

Nature of Intervention: Hemodialysis, Surgery

Stakeholders Involved

Study Type

- Commentary

Method(s)

- Literature review

Linked Studies

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