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A Quality Assessment of the ARM-Net Registry Design and Data Collection

Authors :
Isabel C. Hageman
Hendrik J.J. van der Steeg
Ekkehart Jenetzky
Misel Trajanovska
Sebastian K. King
Ivo de Blaauw
Iris A.L.M. van Rooij
Dalia Aminoff
Eva Amerstorfer
Holger Till
Piero Bagolan
Barbara Iacobelli
Hakan Çavuşoğlu
Onur Ozen
Stefan Deluggi
Johanna Ludwiczek
Emre Divarci
María Fanjul
Francesco Fascetti-Leon
Araceli García Vázquez
Carlos Giné
Ramon Gorter
Justin de Jong
Jan Goseman
Martin Lacher
Caterina Grano
Sabine Grasshoff-Derr
Michel Haanen
Ernesto Leva
Anna Morandi
Gabriele Lisi
Igor Makedonsky
Carlo Marcelis
Paola Midrio
Marc Miserez
Mazeena Mohideen
Alessio PiniPrato
Carlos Reck-Burneo
Heiko Reutter
Stephan Rohleder
Inbal Samuk
Eberhard Schmiedeke
Nicole Schwarzer
Pim Sloots
Pernilla Stenström
Chris Verhaak
Alejandra Vilanova-Sánchez
Patrick Volk
Marieke Witvliet
Paediatric Surgery
AGEM - Amsterdam Gastroenterology Endocrinology Metabolism
ARD - Amsterdam Reproduction and Development
Source :
Journal of pediatric surgery. W.B. Saunders Ltd
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Background: Registries are important in rare disease research. The Anorectal Malformation Network (ARM-Net) registry is a well-established European patient registry collecting demographic, clinical, and functional outcome data. We assessed the quality of this registry through review of the structure, data elements, collected data, and user experience. Material and methods: Design and data elements were assessed for completeness, consistency, usefulness, accuracy, validity, and comparability. An intra- and inter-user variability study was conducted through monitoring and re-registration of patients. User experience was assessed via a questionnaire on registration, design of registry, and satisfaction. Results: We evaluated 119 data elements, of which 107 were utilized and comprised 42 string and 65 numeric elements. A minority (37.0%) of the 2278 included records had complete data, though this improved to 83.5% when follow-up elements were excluded. Intra-observer variability demonstrated 11.7% incongruence, while inter-observer variability was 14.7%. Users were predominantly pediatric surgeons and typically registered patients within 11–30 min. Users did not experience any significant difficulties with data entry and were generally satisfied with the registry, but preferred more longitudinal data and patient-reported outcomes. Conclusions: The ARM-Net registry presents one of the largest ARM cohorts. Although its collected data are valuable, they are susceptible to error and user variability. Continuous evaluations are required to maintain relevant and high-quality data and to achieve long-term sustainability. With the recommendations resulting from this study, we call for rare disease patient registries to take example and aim to continuously improve their data quality to enhance the small, but impactful, field of rare disease research. Level of Evidence: V.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00223468
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of pediatric surgery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0268d59bc5995a8ad39f1e71184707bb