Abstract

ObjectivesThere has been limited success in achieving integration of patient-reported outcomes (PROs) in clinical trials. We describe how stakeholders envision a solution to this challenge.MethodsStakeholders from academia, industry, non-profits, insurers, clinicians, and the Food and Drug Administration convened at a Think Tank meeting funded by the Duke Clinical Research Institute to discuss the challenges of incorporating PROs into clinical trials and how to address those challenges. Using examples from cardiovascular trials, this article describes a potential path forward with a focus on applications in the United States.ResultsThink Tank members identified one key challenge: a common understanding of the level of evidence that is necessary to support patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) in trials. Think Tank participants discussed the possibility of creating general evidentiary standards depending upon contextual factors, but such guidelines could not be feasibly developed because many contextual factors are at play. The attendees posited that a more informative approach to PROM evidentiary standards would be to develop validity arguments akin to courtroom briefs, which would emphasize a compelling rationale (interpretation/use argument) to support a PROM within a specific context. Participants envisioned a future in which validity arguments would be publicly available via a repository, which would be indexed by contextual factors, clinical populations, and types of claims.ConclusionsA publicly available repository would help stakeholders better understand what a community believes constitutes compelling support for a specific PROM in a trial. Our proposed strategy is expected to facilitate the incorporation of PROMs into cardiovascular clinical trials and trials in general.

Highlights

  • During a Think Tank meeting funded by the Duke Clinical Research Institute (Durham, NC) and held in July of 2018 in Washington, DC, stakeholders from academia

  • This paper summarizes the discussion and conclusions from the Think Tank meeting

  • With promotion and application of modern validity theory, clinical trials could move toward adopting context-specific validity arguments for patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs)

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Summary

Introduction

During a Think Tank meeting funded by the Duke Clinical Research Institute (Durham, NC) and held in July of 2018 in Washington, DC, stakeholders from academia, Coles et al Health Qual Life Outcomes (2021) 19:164 of the authors from the multi-stakeholder scientific meeting as well as the authors’ reflections on those discussions. The meeting format consisted of alternating sessions of brief presentations describing attendees’ positions and perspectives and a discussion moderated by a senior health outcomes researcher and a clinician. The meeting included a session in which participants responded to and discussed specific case examples. Detailed notes were recorded during the meeting describing the presentations and discussion. Presenters shared their slide sets for reference during the manuscript development. This paper summarizes the discussion and conclusions from the Think Tank meeting

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