22 results on '"StEP-COMPAC group"'
Search Results
2. Systematic review and consensus definitions for the Standardised Endpoints in Perioperative Medicine (StEP) initiative : infection and sepsis
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the StEP-COMPAC Group
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sepsis ,core outcome measures ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,standardised endpoints ,perioperative medicine ,anaesthesia ,postoperative outcome ,surgical site infection ,infection - Abstract
Background: Perioperative infection and sepsis are of fundamental concern to perioperative clinicians. However, standardised endpoints are either poorly defined or not routinely implemented. The Standardised Endpoints in Perioperative Medicine (StEP) initiative was established to derive a set of standardised endpoints for use in perioperative clinical trials. Methods: We undertook a systematic review to identify measures of infection and sepsis used in the perioperative literature. A multi-round Delphi consensus process that included more than 60 clinician researchers was then used to refine a recommended list of outcome measures. Results: A literature search yielded 1857 titles of which 255 met inclusion criteria for endpoint extraction. A long list of endpoints, with definitions and timescales, was generated and those potentially relevant to infection and sepsis circulated to the theme subgroup and then the wider StEP-COMPAC working group, undergoing a three-stage Delphi process. The response rates for Delphi rounds 1, 3, and 3 were 89% (n=8), 67% (n=62), and 80% (n=8), respectively. A set of 13 endpoints including fever, surgical site, and organ-specific infections as defined by the US Centres for Disease Control and Sepsis-3 are proposed for future use. Conclusions: We defined a consensus list of standardised endpoints related to infection and sepsis for perioperative trials using an established and rigorous approach. Each endpoint was evaluated with respect to validity, reliability, feasibility, and patient centredness. One or more of these should be considered for inclusion in future perioperative clinical trials assessing infection, sepsis, or both, thereby permitting synthesis and comparison of future results.
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- 2019
3. Systematic review and consensus definitions for the Standardised Endpoints in Perioperative Medicine (StEP) initiative: infection and sepsis
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Barnes, Jonathan, Hunter, Jennifer, Harris, Steve, Shankar-Hari, Manu, Diouf, Elisabeth, Jammer, Ib, Kalkman, Cor, Klein, Andrew A., Corcoran, Tomas, Dieleman, Stefan, Grocott, Michael P. W., Mythen, Michael G., StEP-COMPAC group, Botti, Mari, Barnes, Jonathan, Hunter, Jennifer, Harris, Steve, Shankar-Hari, Manu, Diouf, Elisabeth, Jammer, Ib, Kalkman, Cor, Klein, Andrew A., Corcoran, Tomas, Dieleman, Stefan, Grocott, Michael P. W., Mythen, Michael G., StEP-COMPAC group, and Botti, Mari
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- 2019
4. Systematic review and consensus definitions for the Standardised Endpoints in Perioperative Medicine (StEP) initiative: infection and sepsis
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IC Centrum, UMC Utrecht, Medische staf Anesthesiologie, Brain, Circulatory Health, Medische Staf Intensive Care, Management Vitale Functies, The StEP-COMPAC Group, IC Centrum, UMC Utrecht, Medische staf Anesthesiologie, Brain, Circulatory Health, Medische Staf Intensive Care, Management Vitale Functies, and The StEP-COMPAC Group
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- 2019
5. Systematic review and consensus definitions for standardised endpoints in perioperative medicine : postoperative cancer outcomes
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Buggy, D. J., Freeman, J., Johnson, M. Z., Leslie, K., Riedel, B., Sessler, D. I., Kurz, A., Gottumukkala, V., Short, T., Pace, N., Myles, P. M., Gan, T. J., Peyton, P., Tramèr, M., Cyna, A., De Oliveira, G. S., Wu, C., Jensen, M., Kehlet, H., Botti, M., Boney, O., Haller, G., Grocott, M., Cook, T., Fleisher, L., Neuman, M., Story, D., Gruen, R., Bampoe, S., Evered, Lis, Scott, D., Silbert, B., van Dijk, D., Kalkman, C., Chan, M., Grocott, H., Eckenhoff, R., Rasmussen, L., Eriksson, L., Beattie, S., Wijeysundera, D., Landoni, G., Biccard, B., Howell, S., Nagele, P., Richards, T., Lamy, A., Lalu, M., Dieleman, S., van Klei, W., and The StEP-COMPAC Group
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Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,clinical trials, endpoints ,cancer, surgery ,cancer, recurrence ,surgery, postoperative outcomes - Abstract
Background: The Standardising Endpoints for Perioperative Medicine group was established to derive an appropriate set of endpoints for use in clinical trials related to anaesthesia and perioperative medicine. Anaesthetic or analgesic technique during cancer surgery with curative intent may influence the risk of recurrence or metastasis. However, given the current equipoise in the existing literature, prospective, randomised, controlled trials are necessary to test this hypothesis. As such, a cancer subgroup was formed to derive endpoints related to research in onco-anaesthesia based on a current evidence base, international consensus and expert guidance. Methods: We undertook a systematic review to identify measures of oncological outcome used in the oncological, surgical, and wider literature. A multiround Delphi consensus process that included up to 89 clinician–researchers was then used to refine a recommended list of endpoints. Results: We identified 90 studies in a literature search, which were the basis for a preliminary list of nine outcome measures and their definitions. A further two were added during the Delphi process. Response rates for Delphi rounds one, two, and three were 88% (n=9), 82% (n=73), and 100% (n=10), respectively. A final list of 10 defined endpoints was refined and developed, of which six secured approval by ≥70% of the group: cancer health related quality of life, days alive and out of hospital at 90 days, time to tumour progression, disease-free survival, cancer-specific survival, and overall survival (and 5-yr overall survival). Conclusion: Standardised endpoints in clinical outcomes studies will support benchmarking and pooling (meta-analysis) of trials. It is therefore recommended that one or more of these consensus-derived endpoints should be considered for inclusion in clinical trials evaluating a causal effect of anaesthesia–analgesia technique on oncological outcomes.
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- 2018
6. A systematic review and consensus definitions for standardised end-points in perioperative medicine : pulmonary complications
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Abbott, T. E.F., Fowler, A. J., Pelosi, P., Gama de Abreu, M., Møller, A. M., Canet, J., Creagh-Brown, B., Mythen, M., Gin, T., Lalu, M. M., Futier, E., Grocott, M. P., Schultz, M. J., Pearse, R. M., Myles, P., Gan, T. J., Kurz, A., Peyton, P., Sessler, D., Tramèr, M., Cyna, A., De Oliveira, G. S., Wu, C., Jensen, M., Kehlet, H., Botti, M., Boney, O., Haller, G., Grocott, M., Cook, T., Fleisher, L., Neuman, M., Story, D., Gruen, R., Bampoe, S., Evered, Lis, Scott, D., Silbert, B., van Dijk, D., Kalkman, C., Chan, M., Grocott, H., Eckenhoff, R., Rasmussen, L., Eriksson, L., Beattie, S., Wijeysundera, D., Landoni, G., Dieleman, S., van Klei, W., and the StEP-COMPAC Group
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Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,perioperative care/methods ,outcome assessment (healthcare)/standards - Abstract
Background: There is a need for robust, clearly defined, patient-relevant outcome measures for use in randomised trials in perioperative medicine. Our objective was to establish standard outcome measures for postoperative pulmonary complications research. Methods: A systematic literature search was conducted using MEDLINE, Web of Science, SciELO, and the Korean Journal Database. Definitions were extracted from included manuscripts. We then conducted a three-stage Delphi consensus process to select the optimal outcome measures in terms of methodological quality and overall suitability for perioperative trials. Results: From 2358 records, the full texts of 81 manuscripts were retrieved, of which 45 met the inclusion criteria. We identified three main categories of outcome measure specific to perioperative pulmonary outcomes: (i) composite outcome measures of multiple pulmonary outcomes (27 definitions); (ii) pneumonia (12 definitions); and (iii) respiratory failure (six definitions). These were rated by the group according to suitability for routine use. The majority of definitions were given a low score, and many were imprecise, difficult to apply consistently, or both, in large patient populations. A small number of highly rated definitions were identified as appropriate for widespread use. The group then recommended four outcome measures for future use, including one new definition. Conclusions: A large number of postoperative pulmonary outcome measures have been used, but most are poorly defined. Our four recommended outcome measures include a new definition of postoperative pulmonary complications, incorporating an assessment of severity. These definitions will meet the needs of most clinical effectiveness trials of treatments to improve postoperative pulmonary outcomes.
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- 2018
7. Systematic review and consensus definitions for the Standardised Endpoints in Perioperative Medicine (StEP) initiative : patient comfort
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Myles, P S, Boney, O, Botti, M, Cyna, A M, Gan, T J, Jensen, M P, Kehlet, H, Kurz, Andrea, De Oliveira, G S, Peyton, P, Sessler, D I, Tramèr, M R, Wu, C L, StEP–COMPAC Group, Myles, Paul, Grocott, Michael, Biccard, Bruce, Blazeby, Jane, Boney, Oliver, Chan, Matthew, Diouf, Elisabeth, Fleisher, Lee, Kalkman, Cor, Moonesinghe, Ramani, and Wijeysundera, Duminda
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surgery ,clinical trials ,patient-reported outcomes ,Journal Article ,anaesthesia ,Review - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Maximising patient comfort during and after surgery is a primary concern of anaesthetists and other perioperative clinicians, but objective measures of what constitutes patient comfort in the perioperative period remain poorly defined. The Standardised Endpoints in Perioperative Medicine initiative was established to derive a set of standardised endpoints for use in perioperative clinical trials. METHODS: We undertook a systematic review to identify measures of patient comfort used in the anaesthetic, surgical, and other perioperative literature. A multi-round Delphi consensus process that included up to 89 clinician researchers was then used to refine a recommended list of outcome measures. RESULTS: We identified 122 studies in a literature search, which were the basis for a preliminary list of 24 outcome measures and their definitions. The response rates for Delphi Rounds 1, 2, and 3 were 100% (n=22), 90% (n=79), and 100% (n=13), respectively. A final list of six defined endpoints was identified: pain intensity (at rest and during movement) at 24 h postoperatively, nausea and vomiting (0-6 h, 6-24 h, and overall), one of two quality-of-recovery (QoR) scales (QoR score or QoR-15), time to gastrointestinal recovery, time to mobilisation, and sleep quality. CONCLUSIONS: As standardised outcomes will support benchmarking and pooling (meta-analysis) of trials, one or more of these recommended endpoints should be considered for inclusion in clinical trials assessing patient comfort and pain after surgery.
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- 2018
8. Systematic review and consensus definitions for the Standardised Endpoints in Perioperative Medicine (StEP) initiative: patient comfort
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Myles, Paul S, Boney, Oliver, Botti, Mari, Cyna, Allan M, Gan, Tongjoo J, Jensen, Mark P, Kehlet, H, Kurz, A, De Oliveira, G S (Jr), Peyton, P, Sessler, D I, Tramer, Martin, Wu, C L, and StEP–COMPAC Group
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Perioperative Care/methods ,Consensus ,ddc:617 ,Delphi Technique ,Research Design ,education ,Practice Guidelines as Topic ,Humans ,Patient Comfort/methods - Abstract
Maximising patient comfort during and after surgery is a primary concern of anaesthetists and other perioperative clinicians, but objective measures of what constitutes patient comfort in the perioperative period remain poorly defined. The Standardised Endpoints in Perioperative Medicine initiative was established to derive a set of standardised endpoints for use in perioperative clinical trials.
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- 2018
9. Systematic review and consensus definitions for the Standardised Endpoints in Perioperative Medicine (StEP) initiative: patient comfort
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Myles, P. S., Boney, O., Botti, M., Cyna, A. M., Gan, T. J., Jensen, M. P., Kehlet, H., Kurz, A., De Oliveira, G. S., Peyton, P., Sessler, D. I., Tramèr, M. R., Wu, C. L., StEP–COMPAC Group, Myles, P., Grocott, M., Biccard, B., Blazeby, J., Chan, M., Diouf, E., Fleisher, L., Kalkman, C., Moonesinghe, R., Wijeysundera, D., Myles, P. S., Boney, O., Botti, M., Cyna, A. M., Gan, T. J., Jensen, M. P., Kehlet, H., Kurz, A., De Oliveira, G. S., Peyton, P., Sessler, D. I., Tramèr, M. R., Wu, C. L., StEP–COMPAC Group, Myles, P., Grocott, M., Biccard, B., Blazeby, J., Chan, M., Diouf, E., Fleisher, L., Kalkman, C., Moonesinghe, R., and Wijeysundera, D.
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- 2018
10. Systematic review and consensus definitions for the Standardised Endpoints in Perioperative Medicine (StEP) initiative: patient comfort.
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Myles, PS, Peyton, PJ, Cyna, AM, Boney, O, Botti, M, Gan, TJ, Jensen, MP, Kehlet, H, Kurz, A, De Oliveira, GS Jr, Peyton, P, Sessler, DI, Tramèr, MR, Wu, CL, StEP–COMPAC Group, Myles, P, Grocott, M, Biccard, B, Blazeby, J, Chan, M, Diouf, E, Fleisher, L, Kalkman, C, Moonesinghe, R, Wijeysundera, D, Myles, PS, Peyton, PJ, Cyna, AM, Boney, O, Botti, M, Gan, TJ, Jensen, MP, Kehlet, H, Kurz, A, De Oliveira, GS Jr, Peyton, P, Sessler, DI, Tramèr, MR, Wu, CL, StEP–COMPAC Group, Myles, P, Grocott, M, Biccard, B, Blazeby, J, Chan, M, Diouf, E, Fleisher, L, Kalkman, C, Moonesinghe, R, and Wijeysundera, D
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: Maximising patient comfort during and after surgery is a primary concern of anaesthetists and other perioperative clinicians, but objective measures of what constitutes patient comfort in the perioperative period remain poorly defined. The Standardised Endpoints in Perioperative Medicine initiative was established to derive a set of standardised endpoints for use in perioperative clinical trials. METHODS: We undertook a systematic review to identify measures of patient comfort used in the anaesthetic, surgical, and other perioperative literature. A multi-round Delphi consensus process that included up to 89 clinician researchers was then used to refine a recommended list of outcome measures. RESULTS: We identified 122 studies in a literature search, which were the basis for a preliminary list of 24 outcome measures and their definitions. The response rates for Delphi Rounds 1, 2, and 3 were 100% (n=22), 90% (n=79), and 100% (n=13), respectively. A final list of six defined endpoints was identified: pain intensity (at rest and during movement) at 24 h postoperatively, nausea and vomiting (0-6 h, 6-24 h, and overall), one of two quality-of-recovery (QoR) scales (QoR score or QoR-15), time to gastrointestinal recovery, time to mobilisation, and sleep quality. CONCLUSIONS: As standardised outcomes will support benchmarking and pooling (meta-analysis) of trials, one or more of these recommended endpoints should be considered for inclusion in clinical trials assessing patient comfort and pain after surgery
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- 2018
11. Systematic review and consensus definitions for standardised endpoints in perioperative medicine: postoperative cancer outcomes
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Medische Staf Intensive Care, Brain, Circulatory Health, Epi Methoden Team 1, Medische staf Anesthesiologie, Management Vitale Functies, Buggy, D. J., Freeman, J., Johnson, M. Z., Leslie, K., Riedel, B., Sessler, D. I., Kurz, A., Gottumukkala, V., Short, T., Pace, N., Myles, P. M., Gan, T. J., Peyton, P., Tramèr, M., Cyna, A., De Oliveira, G. S., Wu, C., Jensen, M., Kehlet, H., Botti, M., Boney, O., Haller, G., Grocott, M., Cook, T., Fleisher, L., Neuman, M., Story, D., Gruen, R., Bampoe, S., Evered, Lis, Scott, D., Silbert, B., van Dijk, D., Kalkman, C., Chan, M., Grocott, H., Eckenhoff, R., Rasmussen, L., Eriksson, L., Beattie, S., Wijeysundera, D., Landoni, G., Biccard, B., Howell, S., Nagele, P., Richards, T., Lamy, A., Lalu, M., Dieleman, S., van Klei, W., The StEP-COMPAC Group, Medische Staf Intensive Care, Brain, Circulatory Health, Epi Methoden Team 1, Medische staf Anesthesiologie, Management Vitale Functies, Buggy, D. J., Freeman, J., Johnson, M. Z., Leslie, K., Riedel, B., Sessler, D. I., Kurz, A., Gottumukkala, V., Short, T., Pace, N., Myles, P. M., Gan, T. J., Peyton, P., Tramèr, M., Cyna, A., De Oliveira, G. S., Wu, C., Jensen, M., Kehlet, H., Botti, M., Boney, O., Haller, G., Grocott, M., Cook, T., Fleisher, L., Neuman, M., Story, D., Gruen, R., Bampoe, S., Evered, Lis, Scott, D., Silbert, B., van Dijk, D., Kalkman, C., Chan, M., Grocott, H., Eckenhoff, R., Rasmussen, L., Eriksson, L., Beattie, S., Wijeysundera, D., Landoni, G., Biccard, B., Howell, S., Nagele, P., Richards, T., Lamy, A., Lalu, M., Dieleman, S., van Klei, W., and The StEP-COMPAC Group
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- 2018
12. Systematic review and consensus definitions for the Standardised Endpoints in Perioperative Medicine (StEP) initiative: patient comfort
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Epi Methoden Team 1, Medische staf Anesthesiologie, Brain, Circulatory Health, Myles, P S, Boney, O, Botti, M, Cyna, A M, Gan, T J, Jensen, M P, Kehlet, H, Kurz, Andrea, De Oliveira, G S, Peyton, P, Sessler, D I, Tramèr, M R, Wu, C L, StEP–COMPAC Group, Myles, Paul, Grocott, Michael, Biccard, Bruce, Blazeby, Jane, Boney, Oliver, Chan, Matthew, Diouf, Elisabeth, Fleisher, Lee, Kalkman, Cor, Moonesinghe, Ramani, Wijeysundera, Duminda, Epi Methoden Team 1, Medische staf Anesthesiologie, Brain, Circulatory Health, Myles, P S, Boney, O, Botti, M, Cyna, A M, Gan, T J, Jensen, M P, Kehlet, H, Kurz, Andrea, De Oliveira, G S, Peyton, P, Sessler, D I, Tramèr, M R, Wu, C L, StEP–COMPAC Group, Myles, Paul, Grocott, Michael, Biccard, Bruce, Blazeby, Jane, Boney, Oliver, Chan, Matthew, Diouf, Elisabeth, Fleisher, Lee, Kalkman, Cor, Moonesinghe, Ramani, and Wijeysundera, Duminda
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- 2018
13. A systematic review and consensus definitions for standardised end-points in perioperative medicine: pulmonary complications
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Medische Staf Intensive Care, Brain, Circulatory Health, Epi Methoden Team 1, Medische staf Anesthesiologie, Management Vitale Functies, Abbott, T. E.F., Fowler, A. J., Pelosi, P., Gama de Abreu, M., Møller, A. M., Canet, J., Creagh-Brown, B., Mythen, M., Gin, T., Lalu, M. M., Futier, E., Grocott, M. P., Schultz, M. J., Pearse, R. M., Myles, P., Gan, T. J., Kurz, A., Peyton, P., Sessler, D., Tramèr, M., Cyna, A., De Oliveira, G. S., Wu, C., Jensen, M., Kehlet, H., Botti, M., Boney, O., Haller, G., Grocott, M., Cook, T., Fleisher, L., Neuman, M., Story, D., Gruen, R., Bampoe, S., Evered, Lis, Scott, D., Silbert, B., van Dijk, D., Kalkman, C., Chan, M., Grocott, H., Eckenhoff, R., Rasmussen, L., Eriksson, L., Beattie, S., Wijeysundera, D., Landoni, G., Dieleman, S., van Klei, W., The StEP-COMPAC Group, Medische Staf Intensive Care, Brain, Circulatory Health, Epi Methoden Team 1, Medische staf Anesthesiologie, Management Vitale Functies, Abbott, T. E.F., Fowler, A. J., Pelosi, P., Gama de Abreu, M., Møller, A. M., Canet, J., Creagh-Brown, B., Mythen, M., Gin, T., Lalu, M. M., Futier, E., Grocott, M. P., Schultz, M. J., Pearse, R. M., Myles, P., Gan, T. J., Kurz, A., Peyton, P., Sessler, D., Tramèr, M., Cyna, A., De Oliveira, G. S., Wu, C., Jensen, M., Kehlet, H., Botti, M., Boney, O., Haller, G., Grocott, M., Cook, T., Fleisher, L., Neuman, M., Story, D., Gruen, R., Bampoe, S., Evered, Lis, Scott, D., Silbert, B., van Dijk, D., Kalkman, C., Chan, M., Grocott, H., Eckenhoff, R., Rasmussen, L., Eriksson, L., Beattie, S., Wijeysundera, D., Landoni, G., Dieleman, S., van Klei, W., and The StEP-COMPAC Group
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- 2018
14. Core Outcome Measures for Perioperative and Anaesthetic Care (COMPAC): a modified Delphi process to develop a core outcome set for trials in perioperative care and anaesthesia.
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Boney, Oliver, Moonesinghe, S. Ramani, Myles, Paul S., Grocott, Michael P.W., and StEP-COMPAC group
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PERIOPERATIVE care , *ANESTHESIA , *SURGICAL complications , *LENGTH of stay in hospitals , *QUALITY of life , *CONSENSUS (Social sciences) , *ANESTHETICS , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *DELPHI method - Abstract
Background: Outcome selection underpins clinical trial interpretation. Inconsistency in outcome selection and reporting hinders comparison of different trials' results, reducing the utility of research findings.Methods: We conducted an iterative consensus process to develop a set of Core Outcome Measures for Perioperative and Anaesthetic Care (COMPAC), following the established Core Outcome Measures for Effectiveness Trials (COMET) methodology. First, we undertook a systematic review of RCTs in high-impact journals to describe current outcome reporting trends. We then surveyed patients, carers, researchers, and perioperative clinicians about important outcomes after surgery. Finally, a purposive stakeholder sample participated in a modified Delphi process to develop a core outcome set for perioperative and anaesthesia trials.Results: Our systematic review revealed widespread inconsistency in outcome reporting, with variable or absent definitions, levels of detail, and temporal criteria. In the survey, almost all patients, carers, and clinicians rated clinical outcome measures critically important, but clinicians rated patient-centred outcomes less highly than patients and carers. The final core outcome set was: (i) mortality/survival (postoperative mortality, long-term survival); (ii) perioperative complications (major postoperative complications/adverse events; complications/adverse events causing permanent harm); (iii) resource use (length of hospital stay, unplanned readmission within 30 days); (iv) short-term recovery (discharge destination, level of dependence, or both); and (v) longer-term recovery (overall health-related quality of life).Conclusions: This core set, incorporating important outcomes for both clinicians and patients, should guide outcome selection in future perioperative medicine or anaesthesia trials. Mapping these alongside standardised endpoint definitions will yield a comprehensive perioperative outcome framework. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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15. Systematic review and consensus definitions for the Standardized Endpoints in Perioperative Medicine (StEP) initiative: cardiovascular outcomes.
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Beattie, W. Scott, Lalu, Manoj, Bocock, Matthew, Feng, Simon, Wijeysundera, Duminda N., Nagele, Peter, Fleisher, Lee A., Kurz, Andrea, Biccard, Bruce, Leslie, Kate, Howell, Simon, Landoni, Giovani, Grocott, Hilary, Lamy, Andre, Richards, Toby, Myles, Paul, StEP COMPAC Group, Patient Comfort, Clinical Indicators, and Delirium Postoperative Cognitive Dysfunction Stroke
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VENOUS thrombosis , *EXPERIMENTAL design , *CARDIOVASCULAR diseases , *PULMONARY embolism , *CARDIOVASCULAR disease diagnosis , *PERIOPERATIVE care , *CLINICAL trials , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *SURGICAL complications , *RESEARCH funding , *BIOLOGICAL assay , *DELPHI method ,CARDIOVASCULAR disease related mortality - Abstract
Background: Adverse cardiovascular events are a leading cause of perioperative morbidity and mortality. The definitions of perioperative cardiovascular adverse events are heterogeneous. As part of the international Standardized Endpoints in Perioperative Medicine initiative, this study aimed to find consensus amongst clinical trialists on a set of standardised and valid cardiovascular outcomes for use in future perioperative clinical trials.Methods: We identified currently used perioperative cardiovascular outcomes by a systematic review of the anaesthesia and perioperative medicine literature (PubMed/Ovid, Embase, and Cochrane Library). We performed a three-stage Delphi consensus-gaining process that involved 55 clinician researchers worldwide. Cardiovascular outcomes were first shortlisted and the most suitable definitions determined. These cardiovascular outcomes were then assessed for validity, reliability, feasibility, and clarity.Results: We identified 18 cardiovascular outcomes. Participation in the three Delphi rounds was 100% (n=19), 71% (n=55), and 89% (n=17), respectively. A final list of nine cardiovascular outcomes was elicited from the consensus: myocardial infarction, myocardial injury, cardiovascular death, non-fatal cardiac arrest, coronary revascularisation, major adverse cardiac events, pulmonary embolism, deep vein thrombosis, and atrial fibrillation. These nine cardiovascular outcomes were rated by the majority of experts as valid, reliable, feasible, and clearly defined.Conclusions: These nine consensus cardiovascular outcomes can be confidently used as endpoints in clinical trials designed to evaluate perioperative interventions with the goal of improving perioperative outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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16. Systematic review and consensus definitions for the Standardised Endpoints in Perioperative Medicine initiative: patient-centred outcomes.
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Moonesinghe, S.R., Jackson, A.I.R., Boney, O., Stevenson, N., Chan, M.T.V., Cook, T.M., Lane-Fall, M., Kalkman, C., Neuman, M.D., Nilsson, U., Shulman, M., Myles, P.S., and Standardised Endpoints in Perioperative Medicine-Core Outcome Measures in Perioperative and Anaesthetic Care (StEP-COMPAC) Group
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META-analysis , *QUALITY of life , *PATIENT satisfaction , *BIOLOGICAL assay , *COMPARATIVE studies , *DELPHI method , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *HEALTH outcome assessment , *PSYCHOMETRICS , *RESEARCH , *OPERATIVE surgery , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *ACTIVITIES of daily living , *EVALUATION research , *PERIOPERATIVE care , *REHABILITATION - Abstract
Background: Patient-centred outcomes are increasingly used in perioperative clinical trials. The Standardised Endpoints in Perioperative Medicine (StEP) initiative aims to define which measures should be used in future research to facilitate comparison between studies and to enable robust evidence synthesis.Methods: A systematic review was conducted to create a longlist of patient satisfaction, health-related quality of life, functional status, patient well-being, and life-impact measures for consideration. A three-stage Delphi consensus process involving 89 international experts was then conducted in order to refine this list into a set of recommendations.Results: The literature review yielded six patient-satisfaction measures, seven generic health-related quality-of-life measures, eight patient well-being measures, five functional-status measures, and five life-impact measures for consideration. The Delphi response rates were 92%, 87%, and 100% for Rounds 1, 2, and 3, respectively. Three additional measures were added during the Delphi process as a result of contributions from the StEP group members. Firm recommendations have been made about one health-related quality-of-life measure (EuroQol 5 Dimension, five-level version with visual analogue scale), one functional-status measure (WHO Disability Assessment Schedule version 2.0, 12-question version), and one life-impact measure (days alive and out of hospital at 30 days after surgery). Recommendations with caveats have been made about the Bauer patient-satisfaction measure and two life-impact measures (days alive and out of hospital at 1 yr after surgery, and discharge destination).Conclusions: Several patient-centred outcome measures have been recommended for use in future perioperative studies. We suggest that every clinical study should consider using at least one patient-centred outcome within a suite of endpoints. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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17. Systematic review and consensus definitions for the Standardised Endpoints in Perioperative Medicine initiative: clinical indicators.
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Haller, Guy, Bampoe, Sohail, Cook, Tim, Fleisher, Lee A., Grocott, Michael P.W., Neuman, Mark, Story, David, Myles, Paul S., and StEP-COMPAC Group
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CLINICAL medicine , *DEFINITIONS , *META-analysis , *INTENSIVE care units , *HOSPITAL admission & discharge , *CORONARY artery bypass - Abstract
Background: Clinical indicators are powerful tools to quantify the safety and quality of patient care. Their validity is often unclear and definitions extremely heterogeneous. As part of the International Standardised Endpoints in Perioperative Medicine (StEP) initiative, this study aimed to derive a set of standardised and valid clinical outcome indicators for use in perioperative clinical trials.Methods: We identified clinical indicators via a systematic review of the anaesthesia and perioperative medicine literature (PubMed/OVID, EMBASE, and Cochrane Library). We performed a three-stage Delphi consensus-gaining process that involved 54 clinician-researchers worldwide. Indicators were first shortlisted and the most suitable definitions for evaluation of quality and safety interventions determined. Indicators were then assessed for validity, reliability, feasibility, and clarity.Results: We identified 167 clinical outcome indicators. Participation in the three Delphi rounds was 100% (n=13), 68% (n=54), and 85% (n= 6), respectively. A final list of eight outcome indicators was generated: surgical site infection at 30 days, stroke within 30 days of surgery, death within 30 days of coronary artery bypass grafting, death within 30 days of surgery, admission to the intensive care unit within 14 days of surgery, readmission to hospital within 30 days of surgery, and length of hospital stay (with or without in-hospital mortality). They were rated by the majority of experts as valid, reliable, easy to use, and clearly defined.Conclusions: These clinical indicators can be confidently used as endpoints in clinical trials measuring quality, safety, and improvement in perioperative care.Registration: PROSPERO 2016 CRD42016042102 (http://www.crd.york.ac.uk/PROSPERO/display_record.php? ID=CRD42016042102). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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- View/download PDF
18. Systematic review and consensus definitions for standardised endpoints in perioperative medicine: postoperative cancer outcomes.
- Author
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Buggy, D.J., Freeman, J., Johnson, M.Z., Leslie, K., Riedel, B., Sessler, D.I., Kurz, A., Gottumukkala, V., Short, T., Pace, N., Myles, P.S., and StEP-COMPAC Group
- Subjects
- *
PERIOPERATIVE care , *ANESTHESIA , *ANESTHETICS , *ANALGESICS , *ONCOLOGIC surgery , *CANCER invasiveness , *PROGRESSION-free survival , *BIOLOGICAL assay , *POSTOPERATIVE care , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *STANDARDS ,TUMOR surgery - Abstract
Background: The Standardising Endpoints for Perioperative Medicine group was established to derive an appropriate set of endpoints for use in clinical trials related to anaesthesia and perioperative medicine. Anaesthetic or analgesic technique during cancer surgery with curative intent may influence the risk of recurrence or metastasis. However, given the current equipoise in the existing literature, prospective, randomised, controlled trials are necessary to test this hypothesis. As such, a cancer subgroup was formed to derive endpoints related to research in onco-anaesthesia based on a current evidence base, international consensus and expert guidance.Methods: We undertook a systematic review to identify measures of oncological outcome used in the oncological, surgical, and wider literature. A multiround Delphi consensus process that included up to 89 clinician-researchers was then used to refine a recommended list of endpoints.Results: We identified 90 studies in a literature search, which were the basis for a preliminary list of nine outcome measures and their definitions. A further two were added during the Delphi process. Response rates for Delphi rounds one, two, and three were 88% (n=9), 82% (n=73), and 100% (n=10), respectively. A final list of 10 defined endpoints was refined and developed, of which six secured approval by ≥70% of the group: cancer health related quality of life, days alive and out of hospital at 90 days, time to tumour progression, disease-free survival, cancer-specific survival, and overall survival (and 5-yr overall survival).Conclusion: Standardised endpoints in clinical outcomes studies will support benchmarking and pooling (meta-analysis) of trials. It is therefore recommended that one or more of these consensus-derived endpoints should be considered for inclusion in clinical trials evaluating a causal effect of anaesthesia-analgesia technique on oncological outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. A systematic review and consensus definitions for standardised end-points in perioperative medicine: pulmonary complications.
- Author
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Abbott, T. E. F., Fowler, A. J., Pelosi, P., de Abreu, M. Gama, Møller, A. M., Canet, J., Creagh-Brown, B., Mythen, M., Gin, T., Lalu, M. M., Futier, E., Grocott, M. P., Schultz, M. J., Pearse, R. M., Gama de Abreu, M, and StEP-COMPAC Group
- Subjects
- *
PERIOPERATIVE care , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *LUNG disease diagnosis , *SURGICAL complications , *CONSENSUS (Social sciences) , *MEDLINE , *HEALTH outcome assessment , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
Background: There is a need for robust, clearly defined, patient-relevant outcome measures for use in randomised trials in perioperative medicine. Our objective was to establish standard outcome measures for postoperative pulmonary complications research.Methods: A systematic literature search was conducted using MEDLINE, Web of Science, SciELO, and the Korean Journal Database. Definitions were extracted from included manuscripts. We then conducted a three-stage Delphi consensus process to select the optimal outcome measures in terms of methodological quality and overall suitability for perioperative trials.Results: From 2358 records, the full texts of 81 manuscripts were retrieved, of which 45 met the inclusion criteria. We identified three main categories of outcome measure specific to perioperative pulmonary outcomes: (i) composite outcome measures of multiple pulmonary outcomes (27 definitions); (ii) pneumonia (12 definitions); and (iii) respiratory failure (six definitions). These were rated by the group according to suitability for routine use. The majority of definitions were given a low score, and many were imprecise, difficult to apply consistently, or both, in large patient populations. A small number of highly rated definitions were identified as appropriate for widespread use. The group then recommended four outcome measures for future use, including one new definition.Conclusions: A large number of postoperative pulmonary outcome measures have been used, but most are poorly defined. Our four recommended outcome measures include a new definition of postoperative pulmonary complications, incorporating an assessment of severity. These definitions will meet the needs of most clinical effectiveness trials of treatments to improve postoperative pulmonary outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Systematic review and consensus definitions for the Standardised Endpoints in Perioperative Medicine initiative: clinical indicators
- Author
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Guy Haller, Sohail Bampoe, Tim Cook, Lee A. Fleisher, Michael P.W. Grocott, Mark Neuman, David Story, Paul S. Myles, P. Myles, M. Grocott, B. Biccard, J. Blazeby, O. Boney, M. Chan, E. Diouf, L. Fleisher, C. Kalkman, A. Kurz, R. Moonesinghe, D. Wijeysundera, T.J. Gan, P. Peyton, D. Sessler, M. Tramèr, A. Cyna, G.S. De Oliveira, C. Wu, M. Jensen, H. Kehlet, M. Botti, G. Haller, T. Cook, M. Neuman, D. Story, R. Gruen, S. Bampoe, L. Evered, D. Scott, B. Silbert, D. van Dijk, H. Grocott, R. Eckenhoff, L. Rasmussen, L. Eriksson, S. Beattie, G. Landoni, K. Leslie, S. Howell, P. Nagele, T. Richards, A. Lamy, M. Lalu, R. Pearse, M. Mythen, J. Canet, A. Moller, T. Gin, M. Schultz, P. Pelosi, M. Gabreu, E. Futier, B. Creagh-Brown, T. Abbott, A. Klein, T. Corcoran, D. Jamie Cooper, S. Dieleman, D. McIlroy, R. Bellomo, A. Shaw, J. Prowle, K. Karkouti, J. Billings, D. Mazer, M. Jayarajah, M. Murphy, J. Bartoszko, R. Sneyd, S. Morris, R. George, M. Shulman, M. Lane-Fall, U. Nilsson, N. Stevenson, J.D.J. Cooper, W. van Klei, L. Cabrini, T. Miller, N. Pace, S. Jackson, D. Buggy, T. Short, B. Riedel, V. Gottumukkala, B. Alkhaffaf, M. Johnson, Intensive Care Medicine, ACS - Diabetes & metabolism, ACS - Pulmonary hypertension & thrombosis, ACS - Microcirculation, Haller, G, Bampoe, S, Cook, T, Fleisher, La, Grocott, Mpw, Neuman, M, Story, D, Myles, P, on behalf of the StEP-COMPAC, Group, Landoni, G, and Tramer, Martin
- Subjects
Outcome Assessment ,Cochrane Library ,law.invention ,quality improvement ,0302 clinical medicine ,030202 anesthesiology ,law ,Outcome Assessment, Health Care ,Health care ,patient safety ,clinical indicators ,clinical trials ,outcome measures ,perioperative medicine ,standardised endpoint ,Clinical Trials as Topic ,Humans ,Patient Safety ,Perioperative Care ,Quality of Health Care ,Reference Standards ,Reproducibility of Results ,Consensus ,Perioperative medicine ,ddc:617 ,Manchester Cancer Research Centre ,Patient Safety/standards ,Outcome Assessment, Health Care/standards ,clinical trial ,Intensive care unit ,Quality of Health Care / standards ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Health Care/standards ,Perioperative Care/standards ,Quality of Health Care/standards ,03 medical and health sciences ,Patient safety ,Anesthesiology ,medicine ,Journal Article ,clinical indicator ,outcome measure ,business.industry ,ResearchInstitutes_Networks_Beacons/mcrc ,Perioperative Care / standards ,Perioperative ,Patient Safety / standards ,Clinical trial ,Health Care ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Emergency medicine ,Quality and Patient Safety ,Outcome Assessment, Health Care / standards ,Systematic Review ,business - Abstract
Background Clinical indicators are powerful tools to quantify the safety and quality of patient care. Their validity is often unclear and definitions extremely heterogeneous. As part of the International Standardised Endpoints in Perioperative Medicine (StEP) initiative, this study aimed to derive a set of standardised and valid clinical outcome indicators for use in perioperative clinical trials. Methods We identified clinical indicators via a systematic review of the anaesthesia and perioperative medicine literature (PubMed/OVID, EMBASE, and Cochrane Library). We performed a three-stage Delphi consensus-gaining process that involved 54 clinician–researchers worldwide. Indicators were first shortlisted and the most suitable definitions for evaluation of quality and safety interventions determined. Indicators were then assessed for validity, reliability, feasibility, and clarity. Results We identified 167 clinical outcome indicators. Participation in the three Delphi rounds was 100% (n=13), 68% (n=54), and 85% (n= 6), respectively. A final list of eight outcome indicators was generated: surgical site infection at 30 days, stroke within 30 days of surgery, death within 30 days of coronary artery bypass grafting, death within 30 days of surgery, admission to the intensive care unit within 14 days of surgery, readmission to hospital within 30 days of surgery, and length of hospital stay (with or without in-hospital mortality). They were rated by the majority of experts as valid, reliable, easy to use, and clearly defined. Conclusions These clinical indicators can be confidently used as endpoints in clinical trials measuring quality, safety, and improvement in perioperative care. Registration PROSPERO 2016 CRD42016042102 (http://www.crd.york.ac.uk/PROSPERO/display_record.php? ID=CRD42016042102).
- Published
- 2019
21. Systematic review and consensus definitions for standardised endpoints in perioperative medicine : postoperative cancer outcomes
- Author
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Monty G. Mythen, Ronald B. George, Hilary P. Grocott, Christopher L. Wu, Andy Klein, Keyvan Karkouti, M. Gabreu, Justyna Bartoszko, Tony Gin, David Mazer, Bilal Alkhaffaf, A. Kurz, Oliver Boney, Cornelis J. Kalkman, David R. McIlroy, P. Peyton, S. Dieleman, N. Stevenson, Mark D. Neuman, Stephen Morris, Rupert M Pearse, Ramani Moonesinghe, Matthew T. V. Chan, Lisbeth Evered, Donal J. Buggy, Guy Haller, R. Eckenhoff, MJ Schultz, Timothy G. Short, E. Diouf, Lars S. Rasmussen, D. Jamie Cooper, Tom E.F. Abbott, Emmanuel Futier, Nathan L. Pace, Andre Lamy, Scott Beattie, D. I. Sessler, Lars Eriksson, P. Myles, Jaume Canet, Paolo Pelosi, M. Jayarajah, David Scott, A. Cyna, Simon J. Howell, S. Jackson, Mark Johnson, Bruce M Biccard, Ben Creagh-Brown, Ann Merete Møller, Rinaldo Bellomo, Ulrica Nilsson, Toby Richards, Bernhard Riedel, Peter Nagele, W. A. van Klei, Timothy E. Miller, Mark A Shulman, Kate Leslie, G. S. De Oliveira, Mari Botti, Tim Cook, J. Billings, Tong J. Gan, Tomas Corcoran, Brendan S. Silbert, Michael P.W. Grocott, Duminda N. Wijeysundera, David A Story, Sohail Bampoe, Meghan B. Lane-Fall, M.-B. Jensen, R. Sneyd, Manoj M. Lalu, Russell L. Gruen, James Freeman, John R. Prowle, D. van Dijk, Martin R. Tramèr, Luca Cabrini, Michael P. Murphy, Giovanni Landoni, Henrik Kehlet, Lee A. Fleisher, Andrew D. Shaw, Vijaya Gottumukkala, Buggy, Dj, Freeman, J, Johnson, Mz, Leslie, K, Riedel, B, Sessler, Di, Kurz, A, Gottumukkala, V, Short, T, Pace, N, Myles, P, StEP-COMPAC, Group, Landoni, G, Intensive Care Medicine, ACS - Diabetes & metabolism, ACS - Pulmonary hypertension & thrombosis, ACS - Microcirculation, Haller, Guy Serge Antoine, and Tramer, Martin
- Subjects
postoperative outcomes ,Delphi method ,surgery ,0302 clinical medicine ,Neoplasms / surgery ,030202 anesthesiology ,Neoplasms ,cancer, recurrence ,cancer, surgery ,clinical trials, endpoints ,surgery, postoperative outcomes ,Consensus ,Disease-Free Survival ,Endpoint Determination ,Humans ,Perioperative Care ,Postoperative Care ,Survival Analysis ,Treatment Outcome ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Medicine ,Postoperative Care / standards ,Perioperative medicine ,Manchester Cancer Research Centre ,ddc:617 ,surgery, postoperative outcome ,Neoplasms/surgery ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,clinical trials, endpoint ,Endpoint Determination / standards ,medicine.medical_specialty ,recurrence ,endpoints ,Perioperative Care/standards ,03 medical and health sciences ,Anesthesiology ,Endpoint Determination/standards ,cancer ,Intensive care medicine ,Survival analysis ,clinical trials ,Clinical trials, endpoints ,business.industry ,ResearchInstitutes_Networks_Beacons/mcrc ,Surgery, postoperative outcomes ,Cancer ,Perioperative Care / standards ,medicine.disease ,Clinical trial ,Clinical research ,Systematic Review ,Postoperative Care/standards ,business ,Cancer surgery - Abstract
Background: The Standardising Endpoints for Perioperative Medicine group was established to derive an appropriate set of endpoints for use in clinical trials related to anaesthesia and perioperative medicine. Anaesthetic or analgesic technique during cancer surgery with curative intent may influence the risk of recurrence or metastasis. However, given the current equipoise in the existing literature, prospective, randomised, controlled trials are necessary to test this hypothesis. As such, a cancer subgroup was formed to derive endpoints related to research in onco-anaesthesia based on a current evidence base, international consensus and expert guidance.Methods: We undertook a systematic review to identify measures of oncological outcome used in the oncological, surgical, and wider literature. A multiround Delphi consensus process that included up to 89 clinician–researchers was then used to refine a recommended list of endpoints.Results: We identified 90 studies in a literature search, which were the basis for a preliminary list of nine outcome measures and their definitions. A further two were added during the Delphi process. Response rates for Delphi rounds one, two, and three were 88% (n=9), 82% (n=73), and 100% (n=10), respectively. A final list of 10 defined endpoints was refined and developed, of which six secured approval by ≥70% of the group: cancer health related quality of life, days alive and out of hospital at 90 days, time to tumour progression, disease-free survival, cancer-specific survival, and overall survival (and 5-yr overall survival).Conclusion: Standardised endpoints in clinical outcomes studies will support benchmarking and pooling (meta-analysis) of trials. It is therefore recommended that one or more of these consensus-derived endpoints should be considered for inclusion in clinical trials evaluating a causal effect of anaesthesia–analgesia technique on oncological outcomes.
- Published
- 2018
22. A systematic review and consensus definitions for standardised end-points in perioperative medicine : pulmonary complications
- Author
-
Bilal Alkhaffaf, Christopher L. Wu, M. Gabreu, Alexander J. Fowler, Tony Gin, S. Dieleman, P. Peyton, D. Jamie Cooper, Tong J. Gan, Tomas Corcoran, Simon K. Jackson, Oliver Boney, D. van Dijk, Nathan L. Pace, G. S. De Oliveira, Martin R. Tramèr, Luca Cabrini, Michael P. Murphy, Timothy G. Short, Giovanni Landoni, Ronald B. George, Henrik Kehlet, David Mazer, Ulrica Nilsson, Cornelis J. Kalkman, Rupert M Pearse, R. Eckenhoff, Andrea Kurz, Monty G. Mythen, N. Stevenson, David R. McIlroy, Lis Evered, M.-B. Jensen, Manoj M. Lalu, Russell L. Gruen, R. Sneyd, Stephen Morris, Meghan B. Lane-Fall, Ramani Moonesinghe, D. I. Sessler, Guy Haller, Michael P.W. Grocott, Paul S. Myles, Mark D. Johnson, Ben Creagh-Brown, E. Diouf, Marcus J. Schultz, Ann Merete Møller, Lars Eriksson, Tom E.F. Abbott, Peter Nagele, Andrew A. Klein, Paolo Pelosi, A. Cyna, Lee A. Fleisher, Mark A Shulman, David A Story, Andrew D. Shaw, Sohail Bampoe, W. A. van Klei, Timothy E. Miller, Justyna Bartoszko, M. Gama de Abreu, Scott Beattie, Vijaya Gottumukkala, Brendan S. Silbert, Toby Richards, Michael P. W. Grocott, Bernhard Riedel, Mari Botti, Tim Cook, J. Billings, Lars S. Rasmussen, Andre Lamy, Keyvan Karkouti, Mark D. Neuman, John R. Prowle, Jaume Canet, Matthew T. V. Chan, David Scott, Bruce M Biccard, Donal J. Buggy, Emmanuel Futier, Simon J. Howell, Duminda N. Wijeysundera, Kate Leslie, Hilary P. Grocott, M. Jayarajah, Rinaldo Bellomo, Abbott, Tef, Fowler, Aj, Pelosi, P, Gama de Abreu, M, Møller, Am, Canet, J, Creagh-Brown, B, Mythen, M, Gin, T, Lalu, Mm, Futier, E, Grocott, Mp, Schultz, Mj, Pearse, Rm, and the StEP-COMPAC, Group, Landoni, Giovanni, and Haller, Guy Serge Antoine
- Subjects
Lung Diseases ,Research design ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Consensus ,MEDLINE ,outcome assessment (healthcare)/standard ,Perioperative Care ,law.invention ,Outcome Assessment (Health Care) ,03 medical and health sciences ,Postoperative Complications ,0302 clinical medicine ,Randomized controlled trial ,perioperative care/method ,030202 anesthesiology ,law ,Anesthesiology ,Outcome Assessment, Health Care ,Positive airway pressure ,Health care ,medicine ,outcome assessment (healthcare)/standards ,perioperative care/methods ,Humans ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,Reference Standards ,Research Design ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Intensive care medicine ,Perioperative medicine ,ddc:617 ,Manchester Cancer Research Centre ,business.industry ,ResearchInstitutes_Networks_Beacons/mcrc ,Perioperative ,business - Abstract
Background: There is a need for robust, clearly defined, patient-relevant outcome measures for use in randomised trials in perioperative medicine. Our objective was to establish standard outcome measures for postoperative pulmonary complications research.Methods: A systematic literature search was conducted using MEDLINE, Web of Science, SciELO, and the Korean Journal Database. Definitions were extracted from included manuscripts. We then conducted a three-stage Delphi consensus process to select the optimal outcome measures in terms of methodological quality and overall suitability for perioperative trials.Results: From 2358 records, the full texts of 81 manuscripts were retrieved, of which 45 met the inclusion criteria. We identified three main categories of outcome measure specific to perioperative pulmonary outcomes: (i) composite outcome measures of multiple pulmonary outcomes (27 definitions); (ii) pneumonia (12 definitions); and (iii) respiratory failure (six definitions). These were rated by the group according to suitability for routine use. The majority of definitions were given a low score, and many were imprecise, difficult to apply consistently, or both, in large patient populations. A small number of highly rated definitions were identified as appropriate for widespread use. The group then recommended four outcome measures for future use, including one new definition.Conclusions: A large number of postoperative pulmonary outcome measures have been used, but most are poorly defined. Our four recommended outcome measures include a new definition of postoperative pulmonary complications, incorporating an assessment of severity. These definitions will meet the needs of most clinical effectiveness trials of treatments to improve postoperative pulmonary outcomes.
- Published
- 2018
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