Consensus outcomes between health professionals and parents for oral corticosteroids in treating preschool wheeze: A multi-national survey and nominal group technique study

Bohee Lee, Stephen W. Turner, Jasmine Hine, Ann McMurray, Damian Roland, Meredith Louise Borland, Peter Csonka, Jonathan Grigg, Theresa W. Guilbert, Tuomas Jartti, Abraham Oommen, Steff Lewis, Steve Cunningham

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

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.

Original languageEnglish
JournalArchives of Disease in Childhood
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 15 Jan 2025

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