A Core Outcome Set for Seamless, Standardized Evaluation of Innovative Surgical Procedures and Devices (COHESIVE)

Autor: Nicholas Wilson, Christin Hoffmann, Shelley Potter, Sarah Squire, Patient representative, Uk, Jane M Blazeby, Alan Thomas, Patient representative, Uk, Angus G K McNair, Kerry N L Avery, Rhiannon C Macefield, Pete Wheatstone, Patient representative, Uk, UK Neurosurgery
Rok vydání: 2023
Předmět:
Zdroj: Avery, K N L, Wilson, N M, Macefield, R C, Mcnair, A G K, Hoffmann, C, Blazeby, J M & Potter, S 2023, ' A Core Outcome Set for Seamless, Standardized Evaluation of Innovative Surgical Procedures and Devices (COHESIVE) : A Patient and Professional Stakeholder Consensus Study ', Annals of Surgery, vol. 277, no. 2, pp. 238-245 . https://doi.org/10.1097/SLA.0000000000004975, https://doi.org/10.1097/SLA.0000000000004975
ISSN: 0003-4932
DOI: 10.1097/sla.0000000000004975
Popis: Objective: To develop a core outcome set (COS), an agreed minimum set of outcomes to measure and report in all studies evaluating the introduction and evaluation of novel surgical techniques.Summary Background Data: Agreement on the key outcomes to measure and report for safe and efficient surgical innovation is lacking, hindering transparency and risking patient harm.Methods: (I) Generation of a list of outcome domains from published innovation-specific literature, policy/regulatory body documents, and surgeon interviews; (II) Prioritization of identified outcome domains using an international, multi-stakeholder Delphi survey; (III) Consensus meeting to agree the final COS. Participants were international stakeholders, including patients/public, surgeons, device manufacturers, regulators, trialists, methodologists and journal editors.Results: 7,972 verbatim outcomes were identified, categorized into 32 domains, and formatted into survey items/questions. 410 international participants (220 professionals, 190 patients/public) completed at least one round 1 survey item, of which 153 (69.5%) professionals and 116 (61.1%) patients completed at least one round 2 item. 12 outcomes were scored ‘consensus in’ (‘very important’ by ≥70% of patients and professionals) and 20 ‘no consensus’. A consensus meeting, involving 19 professionals and 10 patient/public representatives, led to agreement on a final 8-domain COS. Six domains are specific to a surgical innovation context: modifications, unexpected disadvantages, device problems, technical procedure success, whether the overall desired effect was achieved, surgeons’/operators’ experience. Two domains relate to intended benefits and expected disadvantages.Conclusions: The COS is recommended for use in all studies prior to definitive RCT evaluation to promote safe, transparent, and efficient surgical innovation.
Databáze: OpenAIRE