Research and Practice in Thrombosis and Haemostasis (May 2020)

Clinical outcomes in hemophilia: Towards development of a core set of standardized outcome measures for research

  • Saunya Dover,
  • Victor S. Blanchette,
  • Alok Srivastava,
  • Kathelijn Fischer,
  • Audrey Abad,
  • Brian M. Feldman

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/rth2.12331
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 4
pp. 652 – 658

Abstract

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Abstract Introduction A lack of uniformity in the choice of outcome measurement in hemophilia care and research has led to studies with incomparable results. We identified a need to define core outcome measures for use in research and clinical care of persons with hemophilia. Objective To move toward a core set of outcome measures for the assessment of persons with hemophilia in research and practice. Methods A modified nominal groups process was conducted with an international group of hemophilia experts, including persons with hemophilia as follows. Step 1: item generation for all potential outcome measures. Step 2: survey where respondents voted on the relative importance and usefulness of each item. Steps 3/4: 2‐day meeting where attendees voted for items they valued, followed by open discussion and a second round of voting. Step 5: survey where respondents selected their top five items from those with >50% agreement at the meeting. Results The highest ranked items for the pediatric core set (% agreement) are treatment satisfaction (92.7%), joint health (83.3%), a measure of access to treatment (82.5%), a measure of treatment adherence (72.5%), and generic performance based physical function (72.1%). The highest ranked items for the adult core set (% agreement) are total bleeding events (88.1%), EuroQol five dimensions (85.4%), treatment adherence (82.1%), joint health (79.1%), and number/location of bleeds per unit time (78.6%). Conclusion This process generated a list of preferred outcome measures to consider for assessment in persons with hemophilia. This information now requires refinement to define optimal core sets for use in different clinical/research contexts.

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