PLoS ONE (Jan 2023)

Which clinical research questions are the most important? Development and preliminary validation of the Australia & New Zealand Musculoskeletal (ANZMUSC) Clinical Trials Network Research Question Importance Tool (ANZMUSC-RQIT).

  • William J Taylor,
  • Robin Willink,
  • Denise A O'Connor,
  • Vinay Patel,
  • Allison Bourne,
  • Ian A Harris,
  • Samuel L Whittle,
  • Bethan Richards,
  • Ornella Clavisi,
  • Sally Green,
  • Rana S Hinman,
  • Chris G Maher,
  • Ainslie Cahill,
  • Annie McPherson,
  • Charlotte Hewson,
  • Suzie E May,
  • Bruce Walker,
  • Philip C Robinson,
  • Davina Ghersi,
  • Jane Fitzpatrick,
  • Tania Winzenberg,
  • Kieran Fallon,
  • Paul Glasziou,
  • Laurent Billot,
  • Rachelle Buchbinder

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0281308
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 3
p. e0281308

Abstract

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Background and aimsHigh quality clinical research that addresses important questions requires significant resources. In resource-constrained environments, projects will therefore need to be prioritized. The Australia and New Zealand Musculoskeletal (ANZMUSC) Clinical Trials Network aimed to develop a stakeholder-based, transparent, easily implementable tool that provides a score for the 'importance' of a research question which could be used to rank research projects in order of importance.MethodsUsing a mixed-methods, multi-stage approach that included a Delphi survey, consensus workshop, inter-rater reliability testing, validity testing and calibration using a discrete-choice methodology, the Research Question Importance Tool (ANZMUSC-RQIT) was developed. The tool incorporated broad stakeholder opinion, including consumers, at each stage and is designed for scoring by committee consensus.ResultsThe ANZMUSC-RQIT tool consists of 5 dimensions (compared to 6 dimensions for an earlier version of RQIT): (1) extent of stakeholder consensus, (2) social burden of health condition, (3) patient burden of health condition, (4) anticipated effectiveness of proposed intervention, and (5) extent to which health equity is addressed by the research. Each dimension is assessed by defining ordered levels of a relevant attribute and by assigning a score to each level. The scores for the dimensions are then summed to obtain an overall ANZMUSC-RQIT score, which represents the importance of the research question. The result is a score on an interval scale with an arbitrary unit, ranging from 0 (minimal importance) to 1000. The ANZMUSC-RQIT dimensions can be reliably ordered by committee consensus (ICC 0.73-0.93) and the overall score is positively associated with citation count (standardised regression coefficient 0.33, pConclusionWe propose that the ANZMUSC-RQIT is a useful tool for prioritising the importance of a research question.