JMIR Pediatrics and Parenting (Sep 2024)

Use of Web-Based Surveys to Collect Long-Term Pediatric Outcomes in Patients With Twin-Twin Transfusion Syndrome Treated With Fetoscopic Laser Photocoagulation: Observational Study

  • Eric Bergh,
  • Kimberly Rennie,
  • Jimmy Espinoza,
  • Anthony Johnson,
  • Ramesha Papanna

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2196/60039
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7
pp. e60039 – e60039

Abstract

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Abstract BackgroundIn the United States, patients with monochorionic diamniotic twins who undergo in utero fetoscopic laser photocoagulation (FLP) for twin-twin transfusion syndrome (TTTS) may travel great distances for care. After delivery, many parents cannot return to study sites for formal pediatric evaluation due to geographic location and cost. ObjectiveThe aim of this study was to collect long-term pediatric outcomes in patients who underwent FLP for TTTS. MethodsWe assessed the feasibility of using a web-based survey designed in REDCap (Research Electronic Data Capture; Vanderbilt University) to collect parent-reported outcomes in children treated for TTTS at a single center during 2011‐2019. Patients with ≥1 neonatal survivor were invited via email to complete 5 possible questionnaires: the child status questionnaire (CSQ); fetal center questionnaire (FCQ); ResultsA total of 389 patients in 26 different states and 2 international locations had an email address on file and received an invitation in 2019 to complete the survey (median pediatric age 48.9, IQR 1.0‐93.6 months). Among surveyed mothers in 2019, the overall response rate was 37.3% (145/389), and the questionnaire completion rate was 98% (145/148), 87.8% (130/148), 71.1% (81/100), 86.4% (19/22), and 74.3% (110/148) for the CSQ, FCQ, ASQ ConclusionsThis is the first study to use both REDCap and computer automation to aid in the dissemination, collection, and reporting of surveys to collect long-term pediatric outcomes in the field of fetal medicine.