Background:Current treatments for systemic sclerosis-associated interstitial lung disease (SSc-ILD) are characterised by different attributes such as mode of administration, adverse events (AE) and efficacy. Physicians and patients often have different perspectives on treatments, thus shared decision-making between patients and physicians is essential. An understanding of patients’ decision processes when weighing treatment attributes and the trade-offs they are willing to make is important for shared decision-making.Objectives:The study aimed to 1) identify relevant treatment attributes, 2) elicit patient preferences for these attributes and 3) quantify preference as relative attribute importance (RAI; a higher RAI indicates that more of the variability in patients’ responses may be explained by changes in the attribute); and maximum acceptable risk (MAR) of diarrhoea, nausea and/or vomiting (MAR is a trade-off measure that evaluates attributes in risk-equivalences as a unit of measurement).Methods:A discrete choice experiment (DCE) was created, based on a literature review, a patient advisory board, qualitative patient interviews, and a workshop involving SSc-ILD expert physicians. Seven SSc-ILD treatment attributes were identified: 1) mode of administration; 2) shortness of breath; 3) skin tightness; 4) cough; 5) tiredness; 6) risk of gastrointestinal tract (GIT) AEs; and 7) risk of serious and non-serious infections. The levels of AE risk were informed by frequencies observed in clinical trials and patient input during the interviews. The DCE was integrated into an online survey, which asked patients to make repeated choices between two alternatives described by varying levels of included attributes. Patients with SSc-ILD were recruited by physician referral from Switzerland, Norway, France, Germany and the USA. DCE data were analysed using a logit model, and RAI and MAR measures were calculated.Results:A total of 231 patients with physician-confirmed SSc-ILD (mean age 52.6±13.2 years; 54% diagnosed for >5 years) completed the survey. Patients with SSc-ILD mostly preferred twice-daily oral treatments (pPatients accepted an additional 21% risk (95% CI 13–29%) of GIT AEs if they could reduce the frequency of infusions from monthly to 6–12 monthly, or accepted an extra 15% (95% CI 7–23%) increase in risk if changing to an oral treatment twice daily. Among symptoms, an additional 28% (95% CI 20–36%) risk of GIT AEs was considered acceptable if the severity of patients’ persistent cough was reduced to a level that was easier to tolerate, even if it remained persistent. Similarly, a 37% (95% CI 28–46%) increase in the risk of GIT AEs was acceptable if it resulted in breathlessness during routine activities rather than breathlessness at rest. Finally, patients were willing to accept an additional 36% risk (95% CI 27–45%) of GIT AEs if it reduced their risk of non-serious infections from 30% to 15% and of serious infections from 10% to 5%.Conclusion:This is the first study to quantitatively elicit patients’ preferences for attributes of SSc-ILD treatments. Preferences were driven by safety, efficacy and technical considerations. Patients showed willingness to make trade-offs, providing a firm basis for shared decision-making in routine clinical practice.Disclosure of Interests:Cosimo Bruni Speakers bureau: Actelion, Consultant of: Eli Lilly, Grant/research support from: Gruppo Italiano Lotta alla Scleroderma (GILS), Fondazione Italiana per la Ricerca sull’Artrite (FIRA), New Horizon Fellowship, European Scleroderma Trial and Research (EUSTAR), Foundation for Research in Rheumatology (FOREUM)., Sebastian Heidenreich Consultant of: Sebastian Heidenreich, PhD is employed by Evidera Inc, a business unit of PPD. Evidera is a CRO that offers paid research services to pharmaceutical companies., Ashley Duenas Consultant of: Yes. I am an employee of Evidera which received funding from Boehringer Ingelheim for work related to this study., Anna-Maria Hoffmann-Vold Speakers bureau: Boehringer Ingelheim, Actelion, Roche, Merck Sharp & Dohme, Lilly, Consultant of: Actelion, Boehringer Ingelheim, Roche, Bayer, Merck Sharp & Dohme, ARXX, Lilly and Medscape, Grant/research support from: Boehringer Ingelheim, Armando Gabrielli Grant/research support from: Pfizer Bhering, Yannick Allanore Consultant of: Honorarium received from Boehringer, Medsenic,Sanofi, Menarini, Grant/research support from: Grants received from Alpine, Ose Immunogenetics, Emmanuel Chatelus: None declared, Jörg H.W. Distler Shareholder of: JHWD is stock owner of 4D Science, Consultant of: JHWD has consultancy relationships with Actelion, Active Biotech, Anamar, ARXX, Bayer Pharma, Boehringer Ingelheim, Celgene, Galapagos, GSK, Inventiva, JB Therapeutics, Medac, Pfizer, RuiYi and UCB, Grant/research support from: JHWD has received research funding from Anamar, Active Biotech, Array Biopharma, ARXX, aTyr, BMS, Bayer Pharma, Boehringer Ingelheim, Celgene, Galapagos, GSK, Inventiva, Novartis, Sanofi-Aventis, RedX, UCB, Eric Hachulla: None declared, Vivian Hsu Speakers bureau: I am a speaker for Boehringer Ingelheim Pharmaceuticals, Consultant of: with Boehringer Ingelheim Pharmaceuticals, Grant/research support from: Principal Investigator for several clinical trials, currently with Genentech, Corbus Pharmaceutical, and EICOS, Nicolas Hunzelmann Speakers bureau: Boehringer, Roche, Sanofi, Dinesh Khanna Shareholder of: Eicos Sciences, Inc (less than 5%), Consultant of: Paid Consultant for: Acceleron, Actelion, Abbvie, Amgen, Bayer, Boehringer Ingelheim, CSL Behring, Corbus, Gilead, Galapagos, Genentech/Roche, GSK, Horizon, Merck, Mitsubishi Tanabe Pharma, Sanofi-Aventis, and United Therapeutics, Grant/research support from: Research Grant support from: Immune Tolerance Network, Bayer, BMS, Horizon, Pfizer, Employee of: Leadership/Equity position – Chief Medical Officer, CiviBioPharma/Eicos Sciences, Inc – recieves a stipend for role as Chief Medical Officer, which would technically qualify as emplyoment., Marie-Elise Truchetet Speakers bureau: Abbvie, Lilly, Sobi, Boehringer, Paid instructor for: Lilly, Consultant of: UCB, Sobi, Abbvie, Grant/research support from: UCB, Gilead, Ulrich Walker Shareholder of: Bayer, NASDAQ, MSCI-World ETF’s, Speakers bureau: All companies producing pharmaceuticals used in AIDS, Paid instructor for: Roche, Abbvie, Novartis, Consultant of: All companies producing pharmaceuticals used in AIDS, Grant/research support from: Gilead, Abbvie, (in the last two years). Other companies in previous years., Margarida Alves Employee of: Boehringer Ingelheim, Nils Schoof Employee of: Employee of Boehringer Ingelheim International GmbH, Lesley Ann Saketkoo Speakers bureau: Boehringer Ingelheim, Actelion, Janssen, Mallinckrodt, United Therapeutics, Consultant of: Actelion, Boehringer Ingelheim, Bayer, Bristol Meyer Squibb, Corbus, EICOS, Janssen, Horizon, United Therapeutics, Inc, Grant/research support from: Mallinckrodt, United Therapeutics, Oliver Distler Speakers bureau: Boehringer Ingelheim, Medscape, IQone, Roche, Consultant of: OD has/had consultancy relationship and/or has received research funding in the area of potential treatments for systemic sclerosis and its complications from (last three years):Abbvie, Acceleron Pharma, Amgen, AnaMar, Arxx Therapeutics, Baecon Discovery, Blade Therapeutics, Bayer, Boehringer Ingelheim, ChemomAb, Corbus Pharmaceuticals, CSL Behring, Galapagos NV, Glenmark Pharmaceuticals, GSK, Horizon (Curzion) Pharmaceuticals, Inventiva, iQvia, Italfarmaco, iQone, Kymera Therapeutics, Lilly, Medac, Medscape, Mitsubishi Tanabe Pharma, MSD, Novartis, Pfizer, Roche, Sanofi, Serodapharm, Topadur, Target Bioscience and UCB. Patent issued “mir-29 for the treatment of systemic sclerosis” (US8247389, EP2331143)., Grant/research support from: Kymera Therapeutics, Mitsubishi Tanabe