@article{21760, author = {Wong G. and Kerr P. and Hawley C. and Tong A. and McKenzie A. and Polkinghorne K. and Walker R. and Tugwell P. and Webster A. and Pollock C. and Strippoli G. and Parker D. and Johnson D. and Chapman J. and Howard K. and Chadban S. and Cass A. and Craig J. and Gallagher M. and Crowe S. and Chando S. and Hill S. and Perkovic Vlado}, title = {Research Priorities in CKD: Report of a National Workshop Conducted in Australia}, abstract = {

Research aims to improve health outcomes for patients. However, the setting of research priorities is usually performed by clinicians, academics, and funders, with little involvement of patients or caregivers and using processes that lack transparency. A national workshop was convened in Australia to generate and prioritize research questions in chronic kidney disease (CKD) among diverse stakeholder groups. Patients with CKD (n=23), nephrologists/surgeons (n=16), nurses (n=8), caregivers (n=7), and allied health professionals and researchers (n=4) generated and voted on intervention questions across 4 treatment categories: CKD stages 1 to 5 (non-dialysis dependent), peritoneal dialysis, hemodialysis, and kidney transplantation. The 5 highest ranking questions (in descending order) were as follows: How effective are lifestyle programs for preventing deteriorating kidney function in early CKD? What strategies will improve family consent for deceased donor kidney donation, taking different cultural groups into account? What interventions can improve long-term post-transplant outcomes? What are effective interventions for post hemodialysis fatigue? How can we improve and individualize drug therapy to control post-transplant side effects? Priority questions were focused on prevention, lifestyle, quality of life, and long-term impact. These prioritized research questions can inform funding agencies, patient/consumer organizations, policy makers, and researchers in developing a CKD research agenda that is relevant to key stakeholders.

}, year = {2015}, journal = {American Journal of Kidney Diseases}, volume = {66}, edition = {2015/05/07}, number = {2}, pages = {212-22}, isbn = {1523-6838 (Electronic)
0272-6386 (Linking)}, note = {Tong, Allison
Crowe, Sally
Chando, Shingisai
Cass, Alan
Chadban, Steve J
Chapman, Jeremy R
Gallagher, Martin
Hawley, Carmel M
Hill, Sophie
Howard, Kirsten
Johnson, David W
Kerr, Peter G
McKenzie, Anne
Parker, David
Perkovic, Vlado
Polkinghorne, Kevan R
Pollock, Carol
Strippoli, Giovanni F M
Tugwell, Peter
Walker, Rowan G
Webster, Angela C
Wong, Germaine
Craig, Jonathan C
Am J Kidney Dis. 2015 May 2. pii: S0272-6386(15)00593-4. doi: 10.1053/j.ajkd.2015.02.341.}, language = {Eng}, }