A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal
Consensus outcomes between health professionals and parents for oral corticosteroids in treating preschool wheeze: a multi-national survey and nominal group technique study
Authors: Lee, Bohee; Turner, Stephen W.; Hine, Jasmine; Mcmurray, Ann; Roland, Damian; Borland, Meredith Louise; Csonka, Peter; Grigg, Jonathan; Guilbert, Theresa W.; Jartti, Tuomas; Oommen, Abraham; Lewis, Steff; Cunningham, Steve
Publisher: BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
Publishing place: LONDON
Publication year: 2025
Journal: Archives of Disease in Childhood
Journal name in source: ARCHIVES OF DISEASE IN CHILDHOOD
Journal acronym: ARCH DIS CHILD
Number of pages: 7
ISSN: 0003-9888
eISSN: 1468-2044
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1136/archdischild-2024-327696
Web address : https://doi.org/10.1136/archdischild-2024-327696
Objective: To obtain priority consensus for outcome measures of oral corticosteroid treatment of preschool wheeze that represent stakeholder groups.
Design: (1) A systematic review to identify a set of outcome measures; (2) an international survey for healthcare professionals (HCPs) and a nominal group meeting with parents; (3) a final consensus nominal group meeting with key HCPs (trial investigators and paediatric emergency medicine clinicians) and the same parent group.
Main outcome measures: Consensus priority of treatment outcome measures, outcome minimal clinically important differences (MCIDs) and level of concerns about adverse effects.
Results: Through an iterative process engaging HCPs and parents, the final consensus on a primary outcome was Wheezing Severity Score (WSS). Secondary outcomes prioritised as a revisit to general practice/emergency department, rehospitalisation, length of hospital stay (LOS), time back to normal, doses of short-acting beta-agonists and additional steroid course. Compared with placebo, clinicians considered the median MCID change in WSS at 4 and 12 hours as 40% (IQR 29-51%) and 50% (37-63%) and 5 hours (4-6 hours) for LOS, and 2 days (2-3 days) for a time back to normal. Parents identified MCIDs which were frequently longer than physiologically observed impacts in trials. Concerns about multiple steroid doses were most prevalent.
Conclusions: Stakeholders prioritised change in WSS as the most favourable outcome measure. Our study demonstrated the potential of parent/patient engagement in co-creating patient research outcomes. Incorporating this result in the design of future clinical research will provide a more holistic assessment of the impact of treatment while ensuring relevant primary research outcomes.
Funding information in the publication:
BL has received a PhD studentship from AUKCAR programme (AUK-AC-2018-01) funded by Asthma + Lung UK.