9 results on '"Bullok, Kristin"'
Search Results
2. Patient Preferences in Rare Diseases: A Qualitative Study in Neuromuscular Disorders to Inform a Quantitative Preference Study
- Author
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Jimenez-Moreno, A. Cecilia, van Overbeeke, Eline, Pinto, Cathy Anne, Smith, Ian, Sharpe, Jenny, Ormrod, James, de Bekker-Grob, Esther W., Bullok, Kristin, Levitan, Bennet, Huys, Isabelle, de Wit, G. Ardine, Gorman, Grainne, Jimenez-Moreno, A. Cecilia, van Overbeeke, Eline, Pinto, Cathy Anne, Smith, Ian, Sharpe, Jenny, Ormrod, James, de Bekker-Grob, Esther W., Bullok, Kristin, Levitan, Bennet, Huys, Isabelle, de Wit, G. Ardine, and Gorman, Grainne
- Abstract
IntroductionIt has become increasingly important to include patient preference information in decision-making processes for drug development. As neuromuscular disorders represent multisystem, debilitating, and progressive rare diseases with few treatment options, this study aimed to explore unmet health care needs and patient treatment preferences for two neuromuscular disorders, myotonic dystrophy type 1 (DM1) and mitochondrial myopathies (MM) to inform early stages of drug development. MethodsFifteen semi-structured interviews and five focus group discussions (FGDs) were held with DM1 and MM adult patients and caregivers. Topics discussed included (1) reasons for study participation; (2) disease signs/symptoms and their impact on daily lives; (3) top desired benefits; and (4) acceptability of risks and tolerance levels for a hypothetical new treatment. Data were analyzed following a thematic ‘code’ approach. ResultsA total of 52 participants representing a wide range of disease severities participated. ‘Muscle strength’ and ‘energy and endurance’ were the disease-related unmet needs most often mentioned. Additionally, improved ‘balance’, ‘cognition’ and ‘gut function’ were the top desired treatment benefits, while ‘damage to the liver, kidneys or eyes’ was the most concerning risk. Factors influencing their tolerance to risks related to previously having experienced the risk and differentiation between permanent and temporary risks. A few differences were elicited between patients and caregivers. ConclusionsThis qualitative study provided an open forum to elicit treatment-desired benefits and acceptable risks to be established by patients themselves. These findings can inform decisions for developing new treatments and the design of clinical trials for DM1 and MM., IMI-PREFER
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Patient Preferences in Rare Diseases:A Qualitative Study in Neuromuscular Disorders to Inform a Quantitative Preference Study
- Author
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Jimenez-Moreno, A. Cecilia, van Overbeeke, Eline, Pinto, Cathy Anne, Smith, Ian, Sharpe, Jenny, Ormrod, James, Whichello, Chiara, de Bekker-Grob, Esther W., Bullok, Kristin, Levitan, Bennett, Huys, Isabelle, de Wit, G. Ardine, Gorman, Grainne, Jimenez-Moreno, A. Cecilia, van Overbeeke, Eline, Pinto, Cathy Anne, Smith, Ian, Sharpe, Jenny, Ormrod, James, Whichello, Chiara, de Bekker-Grob, Esther W., Bullok, Kristin, Levitan, Bennett, Huys, Isabelle, de Wit, G. Ardine, and Gorman, Grainne
- Abstract
Introduction: It has become increasingly important to include patient preference information in decision-making processes for drug development. As neuromuscular disorders represent multisystem, debilitating, and progressive rare diseases with few treatment options, this study aimed to explore unmet health care needs and patient treatment preferences for two neuromuscular disorders, myotonic dystrophy type 1 (DM1) and mitochondrial myopathies (MM) to inform early stages of drug development. Methods: Fifteen semi-structured interviews and five focus group discussions (FGDs) were held with DM1 and MM adult patients and caregivers. Topics discussed included (1) reasons for study participation; (2) disease signs/symptoms and their impact on daily lives; (3) top desired benefits; and (4) acceptability of risks and tolerance levels for a hypothetical new treatment. Data were analyzed following a thematic ‘code’ approach. Results: A total of 52 participants representing a wide range of disease severities participated. ‘Muscle strength’ and ‘energy and endurance’ were the disease-related unmet needs most often mentioned. Additionally, improved ‘balance’, ‘cognition’ and ‘gut function’ were the top desired treatment benefits, while ‘damage to the liver, kidneys or eyes’ was the most concerning risk. Factors influencing their tolerance to risks related to previously having experienced the risk and differentiation between permanent and temporary risks. A few differences were elicited between patients and caregivers. Conclusions: This qualitative study provided an open forum to elicit treatment-desired benefits and acceptable risks to be established by patients themselves. These findings can inform decisions for developing new treatments and the design of clinical trials for DM1 and MM.
- Published
- 2021
4. Patient Preferences in Rare Diseases: A Qualitative Study in Neuromuscular Disorders to Inform a Quantitative Preference Study
- Author
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HEE Team 1, Circulatory Health, JC onderzoeksprogramma Methodologie, Jimenez-Moreno, A. Cecilia, van Overbeeke, Eline, Pinto, Cathy Anne, Smith, Ian, Sharpe, Jenny, Ormrod, James, Whichello, Chiara, de Bekker-Grob, Esther W., Bullok, Kristin, Levitan, Bennett, Huys, Isabelle, de Wit, G. Ardine, Gorman, Grainne, HEE Team 1, Circulatory Health, JC onderzoeksprogramma Methodologie, Jimenez-Moreno, A. Cecilia, van Overbeeke, Eline, Pinto, Cathy Anne, Smith, Ian, Sharpe, Jenny, Ormrod, James, Whichello, Chiara, de Bekker-Grob, Esther W., Bullok, Kristin, Levitan, Bennett, Huys, Isabelle, de Wit, G. Ardine, and Gorman, Grainne
- Published
- 2021
5. A study protocol for quantifying patient preferences in neuromuscular disorders: a case study of the IMI PREFER Project [version 1; peer review: 1 approved]
- Author
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Jimenez-Moreno, Aura Cecilia, Pinto, Cathy Anne, Levitan, Bennett, Whichello, Chiara, Dyer, Christine, van Overbeeke, Eline, de Bekker-Grob, Esther, Smith, Ian, Huys, Isabelle, Viberg, Jennifer, Adcock, Kate, Bullok, Kristin, Soekhai, Vikas, Yuan, Zhong, Lochmuller, Hans, de Wit, Ardine, Gorman, Gráinne S., Jimenez-Moreno, Aura Cecilia, Pinto, Cathy Anne, Levitan, Bennett, Whichello, Chiara, Dyer, Christine, van Overbeeke, Eline, de Bekker-Grob, Esther, Smith, Ian, Huys, Isabelle, Viberg, Jennifer, Adcock, Kate, Bullok, Kristin, Soekhai, Vikas, Yuan, Zhong, Lochmuller, Hans, de Wit, Ardine, and Gorman, Gráinne S.
- Abstract
Objectives: Patient preference studies are increasingly used to inform decision-making during the medical product lifecycle but are rarely used to inform early stages of drug development. The primary aim of this study is to quantify treatment preferences of patients with neuromuscular disorders, which represent serious and debilitating conditions with limited or no treatment options available. Methods: This quantitative patient preferences study was designed as an online survey, with a cross-over design. This study will target two different diseases from the neuromuscular disorders disease group, myotonic dystrophy type 1 (DM1) and mitochondrial myopathies (MM). Despite having different physio-pathological pathways both DM1 and MM manifest in a clinically similar manner and may benefit from similar treatment options. The sample will be stratified into three subgroups: two patient groups differentiated by age of symptom onset and one caregivers group. Each subgroup will be randomly assigned to complete two of three different preference elicitation methods at two different time points: Q-methodology survey, discrete choice experiment, and best-worst scaling type 2, allowing cross-comparisons of the results across each study time within participants and within elicitation methods. Additional variables such as sociodemographic, clinical and health literacy will be collected to enable analysis of potential heterogeneity. Ethics and Dissemination: This study protocol has undergone ethical review and approval by the Newcastle University R&D Ethics Committee (Ref: 15169/2018). All participants will be invited to give electronic informed consent to take part in the study prior accessing the online survey. All electronic data will be anonymised prior analysis. This study is part of the Patient Preferences in Benefit-Risk Assessments during the Drug Life Cycle (IMI-PREFER) project, a public-private collaborative research project aiming to develop expert and evidence-b, IMI-PREFER
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. A study protocol for quantifying patient preferences in neuromuscular disorders: a case study of the IMI PREFER Project [version 1; peer review: 1 approved]
- Author
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Jimenez-Moreno, Aura Cecilia, Pinto, Cathy Anne, Levitan, Bennett, Whichello, Chiara, Dyer, Christine, van Overbeeke, Eline, de Bekker-Grob, Esther, Smith, Ian, Huys, Isabelle, Viberg, Jennifer, Adcock, Kate, Bullok, Kristin, Soekhai, Vikas, Yuan, Zhong, Lochmuller, Hans, de Wit, Ardine, Gorman, Gráinne S., Jimenez-Moreno, Aura Cecilia, Pinto, Cathy Anne, Levitan, Bennett, Whichello, Chiara, Dyer, Christine, van Overbeeke, Eline, de Bekker-Grob, Esther, Smith, Ian, Huys, Isabelle, Viberg, Jennifer, Adcock, Kate, Bullok, Kristin, Soekhai, Vikas, Yuan, Zhong, Lochmuller, Hans, de Wit, Ardine, and Gorman, Gráinne S.
- Abstract
Objectives: Patient preference studies are increasingly used to inform decision-making during the medical product lifecycle but are rarely used to inform early stages of drug development. The primary aim of this study is to quantify treatment preferences of patients with neuromuscular disorders, which represent serious and debilitating conditions with limited or no treatment options available. Methods: This quantitative patient preferences study was designed as an online survey, with a cross-over design. This study will target two different diseases from the neuromuscular disorders disease group, myotonic dystrophy type 1 (DM1) and mitochondrial myopathies (MM). Despite having different physio-pathological pathways both DM1 and MM manifest in a clinically similar manner and may benefit from similar treatment options. The sample will be stratified into three subgroups: two patient groups differentiated by age of symptom onset and one caregivers group. Each subgroup will be randomly assigned to complete two of three different preference elicitation methods at two different time points: Q-methodology survey, discrete choice experiment, and best-worst scaling type 2, allowing cross-comparisons of the results across each study time within participants and within elicitation methods. Additional variables such as sociodemographic, clinical and health literacy will be collected to enable analysis of potential heterogeneity. Ethics and Dissemination: This study protocol has undergone ethical review and approval by the Newcastle University R&D Ethics Committee (Ref: 15169/2018). All participants will be invited to give electronic informed consent to take part in the study prior accessing the online survey. All electronic data will be anonymised prior analysis. This study is part of the Patient Preferences in Benefit-Risk Assessments during the Drug Life Cycle (IMI-PREFER) project, a public-private collaborative research project aiming to develop expert and evidence-b, IMI-PREFER
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. A study protocol for quantifying patient preferences in neuromuscular disorders: a case study of the IMI PREFER Project [version 1; peer review: 1 approved]
- Author
-
Jimenez-Moreno, Aura Cecilia, Pinto, Cathy Anne, Levitan, Bennett, Whichello, Chiara, Dyer, Christine, van Overbeeke, Eline, de Bekker-Grob, Esther, Smith, Ian, Huys, Isabelle, Viberg, Jennifer, Adcock, Kate, Bullok, Kristin, Soekhai, Vikas, Yuan, Zhong, Lochmuller, Hans, de Wit, Ardine, Gorman, Gráinne S., Jimenez-Moreno, Aura Cecilia, Pinto, Cathy Anne, Levitan, Bennett, Whichello, Chiara, Dyer, Christine, van Overbeeke, Eline, de Bekker-Grob, Esther, Smith, Ian, Huys, Isabelle, Viberg, Jennifer, Adcock, Kate, Bullok, Kristin, Soekhai, Vikas, Yuan, Zhong, Lochmuller, Hans, de Wit, Ardine, and Gorman, Gráinne S.
- Abstract
Objectives: Patient preference studies are increasingly used to inform decision-making during the medical product lifecycle but are rarely used to inform early stages of drug development. The primary aim of this study is to quantify treatment preferences of patients with neuromuscular disorders, which represent serious and debilitating conditions with limited or no treatment options available. Methods: This quantitative patient preferences study was designed as an online survey, with a cross-over design. This study will target two different diseases from the neuromuscular disorders disease group, myotonic dystrophy type 1 (DM1) and mitochondrial myopathies (MM). Despite having different physio-pathological pathways both DM1 and MM manifest in a clinically similar manner and may benefit from similar treatment options. The sample will be stratified into three subgroups: two patient groups differentiated by age of symptom onset and one caregivers group. Each subgroup will be randomly assigned to complete two of three different preference elicitation methods at two different time points: Q-methodology survey, discrete choice experiment, and best-worst scaling type 2, allowing cross-comparisons of the results across each study time within participants and within elicitation methods. Additional variables such as sociodemographic, clinical and health literacy will be collected to enable analysis of potential heterogeneity. Ethics and Dissemination: This study protocol has undergone ethical review and approval by the Newcastle University R&D Ethics Committee (Ref: 15169/2018). All participants will be invited to give electronic informed consent to take part in the study prior accessing the online survey. All electronic data will be anonymised prior analysis. This study is part of the Patient Preferences in Benefit-Risk Assessments during the Drug Life Cycle (IMI-PREFER) project, a public-private collaborative research project aiming to develop expert and evidence-b, IMI-PREFER
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. A study protocol for quantifying patient preferences in neuromuscular disorders: a case study of the IMI PREFER Project [version 1; peer review: 1 approved]
- Author
-
Jimenez-Moreno, Aura Cecilia, Pinto, Cathy Anne, Levitan, Bennett, Whichello, Chiara, Dyer, Christine, van Overbeeke, Eline, de Bekker-Grob, Esther, Smith, Ian, Huys, Isabelle, Viberg, Jennifer, Adcock, Kate, Bullok, Kristin, Soekhai, Vikas, Yuan, Zhong, Lochmuller, Hans, de Wit, Ardine, Gorman, Gráinne S., Jimenez-Moreno, Aura Cecilia, Pinto, Cathy Anne, Levitan, Bennett, Whichello, Chiara, Dyer, Christine, van Overbeeke, Eline, de Bekker-Grob, Esther, Smith, Ian, Huys, Isabelle, Viberg, Jennifer, Adcock, Kate, Bullok, Kristin, Soekhai, Vikas, Yuan, Zhong, Lochmuller, Hans, de Wit, Ardine, and Gorman, Gráinne S.
- Abstract
Objectives: Patient preference studies are increasingly used to inform decision-making during the medical product lifecycle but are rarely used to inform early stages of drug development. The primary aim of this study is to quantify treatment preferences of patients with neuromuscular disorders, which represent serious and debilitating conditions with limited or no treatment options available. Methods: This quantitative patient preferences study was designed as an online survey, with a cross-over design. This study will target two different diseases from the neuromuscular disorders disease group, myotonic dystrophy type 1 (DM1) and mitochondrial myopathies (MM). Despite having different physio-pathological pathways both DM1 and MM manifest in a clinically similar manner and may benefit from similar treatment options. The sample will be stratified into three subgroups: two patient groups differentiated by age of symptom onset and one caregivers group. Each subgroup will be randomly assigned to complete two of three different preference elicitation methods at two different time points: Q-methodology survey, discrete choice experiment, and best-worst scaling type 2, allowing cross-comparisons of the results across each study time within participants and within elicitation methods. Additional variables such as sociodemographic, clinical and health literacy will be collected to enable analysis of potential heterogeneity. Ethics and Dissemination: This study protocol has undergone ethical review and approval by the Newcastle University R&D Ethics Committee (Ref: 15169/2018). All participants will be invited to give electronic informed consent to take part in the study prior accessing the online survey. All electronic data will be anonymised prior analysis. This study is part of the Patient Preferences in Benefit-Risk Assessments during the Drug Life Cycle (IMI-PREFER) project, a public-private collaborative research project aiming to develop expert and evidence-b, IMI-PREFER
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. A study protocol for quantifying patient preferences in neuromuscular disorders: a case study of the IMI PREFER Project [version 1; peer review: 1 approved]
- Author
-
Jimenez-Moreno, Aura Cecilia, Pinto, Cathy Anne, Levitan, Bennett, Whichello, Chiara, Dyer, Christine, van Overbeeke, Eline, de Bekker-Grob, Esther, Smith, Ian, Huys, Isabelle, Viberg, Jennifer, Adcock, Kate, Bullok, Kristin, Soekhai, Vikas, Yuan, Zhong, Lochmuller, Hans, de Wit, Ardine, Gorman, Gráinne S., Jimenez-Moreno, Aura Cecilia, Pinto, Cathy Anne, Levitan, Bennett, Whichello, Chiara, Dyer, Christine, van Overbeeke, Eline, de Bekker-Grob, Esther, Smith, Ian, Huys, Isabelle, Viberg, Jennifer, Adcock, Kate, Bullok, Kristin, Soekhai, Vikas, Yuan, Zhong, Lochmuller, Hans, de Wit, Ardine, and Gorman, Gráinne S.
- Abstract
Objectives: Patient preference studies are increasingly used to inform decision-making during the medical product lifecycle but are rarely used to inform early stages of drug development. The primary aim of this study is to quantify treatment preferences of patients with neuromuscular disorders, which represent serious and debilitating conditions with limited or no treatment options available. Methods: This quantitative patient preferences study was designed as an online survey, with a cross-over design. This study will target two different diseases from the neuromuscular disorders disease group, myotonic dystrophy type 1 (DM1) and mitochondrial myopathies (MM). Despite having different physio-pathological pathways both DM1 and MM manifest in a clinically similar manner and may benefit from similar treatment options. The sample will be stratified into three subgroups: two patient groups differentiated by age of symptom onset and one caregivers group. Each subgroup will be randomly assigned to complete two of three different preference elicitation methods at two different time points: Q-methodology survey, discrete choice experiment, and best-worst scaling type 2, allowing cross-comparisons of the results across each study time within participants and within elicitation methods. Additional variables such as sociodemographic, clinical and health literacy will be collected to enable analysis of potential heterogeneity. Ethics and Dissemination: This study protocol has undergone ethical review and approval by the Newcastle University R&D Ethics Committee (Ref: 15169/2018). All participants will be invited to give electronic informed consent to take part in the study prior accessing the online survey. All electronic data will be anonymised prior analysis. This study is part of the Patient Preferences in Benefit-Risk Assessments during the Drug Life Cycle (IMI-PREFER) project, a public-private collaborative research project aiming to develop expert and evidence-b, IMI-PREFER
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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