TY - JOUR AU - Kerr P. AU - Hawley C. AU - Tong A. AU - McDonald S. AU - Polkinghorne K. AU - Hemmelgarn B. AU - Wheeler D. AU - Tugwell P. AU - Pollock C. AU - Johnson D. AU - Howard K. AU - Craig J. AU - Gallagher M. AU - Van Biesen W. AU - Winkelmayer W. AU - Crowe S. AU - Manns B. AU - Urquhart-Secord R. AB -

BACKGROUND: Chronic kidney disease is a significant contributor to mortality and morbidity worldwide, and the number of people who require dialysis or transplantation continues to increase. People on dialysis are 15 times more likely to die than the general population. Dialysis is also costly, intrusive, and time-consuming and imposes an enormous burden on patients and their families. This escalating problem has spurred a proliferation of trials in dialysis, yet health and quality of life remain poor. The reasons for this are complex and varied but are attributable in part to problems in the design and reporting of studies, particularly outcome selection. Problems related to outcomes include use of unvalidated surrogates, outcomes of little or no relevance to patients, highly variable outcome selection limiting comparability across studies, and bias in reporting outcomes. The aim of the Standardised Outcomes in Nephrology-Haemodialysis (SONG-HD) study is to establish a core outcome set for haemodialysis trials, to improve the quality of reporting, and the relevance of trials conducted in people on haemodialysis. METHODS/DESIGN: SONG-HD is a five-phase project that includes the following: a systematic review to identify outcomes that have been reported in haemodialysis systematic reviews and trials; nominal group technique with patients and caregivers to identify, rank, and describe reasons for their choices; qualitative stakeholder interviews with patients, caregivers, clinicians, researchers, and policy makers to elicit individual values and perspectives on outcomes for haemodialysis trials; a three-round Delphi survey with stakeholder groups to distil and generate a prioritised list of core outcomes; and a consensus workshop to establish a core outcome set for haemodialysis trials. DISCUSSION: Establishing a core outcome set to be consistently measured and reported in haemodialysis trials will improve the integrity, transparency, usability, and contribution of research relevant to patients requiring haemodialysis; ensure that outcomes of relevance to all stakeholders are consistently reported across trials; and mitigate against outcome reporting bias. Ultimately, patients will be more protected from potential harm, patients and clinicians will be better able to make informed decisions about treatment, and researchers and policy makers will be more able to maximise the value of research to the public.

AD - Sydney School of Public Health, The University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia. allison.tong@sydney.edu.au.
Centre for Kidney Research, The Children's Hospital at Westmead, Westmead, Sydney, Australia. allison.tong@sydney.edu.au.
Departments of Medicine and Community Health Sciences, Libin Cardiovascular Institute and O'Brien Institute of Public Health, University of Calgary, Calgary, Canada. braden.manns@albertahealthservices.ca.
Departments of Medicine and Community Health Sciences, Libin Cardiovascular Institute and O'Brien Institute of Public Health, University of Calgary, Calgary, Canada. brenda.hemmelgarn@albertahealthservices.ca.
Centre for Nephrology, University College London, London, United Kingdom. d.wheeler@ucl.ac.uk.
Department of Medicine, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Canada. tugwell.bb@uottawa.ca.
Section of Nephrology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, United States. wolfgang.winkelmayer@bcm.edu.
Renal Division, Ghent University Hospital, Ghent, Belgium. wim.vanbiesen@ugent.be.
Crowe Associates, Ltd, Oxon, United Kingdom. sally@crowe-associates.co.uk.
Monash Medical Centre and Monash University, Clayton, Australia. peter.kerr@med.monash.edu.
Monash Medical Centre and Monash University, Clayton, Australia. kevan.polkinghorne@monash.edu.
Department of Epidemiology and Preventative Medicine, Monash University, Melbourne, VIC, Australia. kevan.polkinghorne@monash.edu.
The Institute for Choice, University of South Australia, Sydney, Australia. kirsten.howard@unisa.edu.au.
Renal Division, Kolling Institute, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. carol.pollock@sydney.edu.au.
Queesland School of Medicine, University of Queensland at Princess Alexandra Hospital, Brisbane, Australia. carmel.hawley@health.qld.gov.au.
Translational Research Institute, Brisbane, Australia. carmel.hawley@health.qld.gov.au.
Metro South and Ipswich Nephrology and Transplant Services (MINTS), Brisbane, Australia. carmel.hawley@health.qld.gov.au.
Queesland School of Medicine, University of Queensland at Princess Alexandra Hospital, Brisbane, Australia. david.johnson2@health.qld.gov.au.
Translational Research Institute, Brisbane, Australia. david.johnson2@health.qld.gov.au.
Metro South and Ipswich Nephrology and Transplant Services (MINTS), Brisbane, Australia. david.johnson2@health.qld.gov.au.
Central Northern Adelaide Renal and Transplantation Service, Royal Adelaide Hospital, Adelaide, Australia. stephen@anzdata.org.au.
Faculty of Health Science, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, Australia. stephen@anzdata.org.au.
Concord Clinical School, University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia. mgallagher@georgeinstitute.org.au.
Renal and Metabolic Division, The George Institute, Sydney, Australia. mgallagher@georgeinstitute.org.au.
Sydney School of Public Health, The University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia. rachel.urquhart-secord@sydney.edu.au.
Centre for Kidney Research, The Children's Hospital at Westmead, Westmead, Sydney, Australia. rachel.urquhart-secord@sydney.edu.au.
Sydney School of Public Health, The University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia. jonathan.craig@sydney.edu.au.
Centre for Kidney Research, The Children's Hospital at Westmead, Westmead, Sydney, Australia. jonathan.craig@sydney.edu.au. AN - 26285819 BT - Trials C2 - PMC4543451 DP - NLM ET - 2015/08/20 LA - eng LB - R&M
AUS M1 - 1 N1 - Tong, Allison
Manns, Braden
Hemmelgarn, Brenda
Wheeler, David C
Tugwell, Peter
Winkelmayer, Wolfgang C
van Biesen, Wim
Crowe, Sally
Kerr, Peter G
Polkinghorne, Kevan R
Howard, Kirsten
Pollock, Carol
Hawley, Carmel M
Johnson, David W
McDonald, Stephen P
Gallagher, Martin P
Urquhart-Secord, Rachel
Craig, Jonathan C
SONG-HD Collaboration
England
Trials. 2015 Aug 19;16(1):364. doi: 10.1186/s13063-015-0895-7. N2 -

BACKGROUND: Chronic kidney disease is a significant contributor to mortality and morbidity worldwide, and the number of people who require dialysis or transplantation continues to increase. People on dialysis are 15 times more likely to die than the general population. Dialysis is also costly, intrusive, and time-consuming and imposes an enormous burden on patients and their families. This escalating problem has spurred a proliferation of trials in dialysis, yet health and quality of life remain poor. The reasons for this are complex and varied but are attributable in part to problems in the design and reporting of studies, particularly outcome selection. Problems related to outcomes include use of unvalidated surrogates, outcomes of little or no relevance to patients, highly variable outcome selection limiting comparability across studies, and bias in reporting outcomes. The aim of the Standardised Outcomes in Nephrology-Haemodialysis (SONG-HD) study is to establish a core outcome set for haemodialysis trials, to improve the quality of reporting, and the relevance of trials conducted in people on haemodialysis. METHODS/DESIGN: SONG-HD is a five-phase project that includes the following: a systematic review to identify outcomes that have been reported in haemodialysis systematic reviews and trials; nominal group technique with patients and caregivers to identify, rank, and describe reasons for their choices; qualitative stakeholder interviews with patients, caregivers, clinicians, researchers, and policy makers to elicit individual values and perspectives on outcomes for haemodialysis trials; a three-round Delphi survey with stakeholder groups to distil and generate a prioritised list of core outcomes; and a consensus workshop to establish a core outcome set for haemodialysis trials. DISCUSSION: Establishing a core outcome set to be consistently measured and reported in haemodialysis trials will improve the integrity, transparency, usability, and contribution of research relevant to patients requiring haemodialysis; ensure that outcomes of relevance to all stakeholders are consistently reported across trials; and mitigate against outcome reporting bias. Ultimately, patients will be more protected from potential harm, patients and clinicians will be better able to make informed decisions about treatment, and researchers and policy makers will be more able to maximise the value of research to the public.

PY - 2015 SN - 1745-6215 (Electronic)
1745-6215 (Linking) EP - 364 T2 - Trials TI - Standardised outcomes in nephrology - Haemodialysis (SONG-HD): study protocol for establishing a core outcome set in haemodialysis VL - 16 Y2 - FY16 ER -