Abstract

BackgroundAs the development of core outcome sets (COS) increases, guidance for developing and reporting high-quality COS continues to evolve; however, a number of methodological uncertainties still remain. The objectives of this study were: (1) to explore the impact of including patient interviews in developing a COS, (2) to examine the impact of using a 5-point versus a 9-point rating scale during Delphi consensus methods on outcome selection and (3) to inform and contribute to COS development methodology by advancing the evidence base on COS development techniques.MethodsSemi-structured patient interviews and a nested randomised controlled parallel group trial as part of the Pelvic Girdle Pain Core Outcome Set project (PGP-COS). Patient interviews, as an adjunct to a systematic review of outcomes reported in previous studies, were undertaken to identify preliminary outcomes for including in a Delphi consensus survey. In the Delphi survey, participants were randomised (1:1) to a 5-point or 9-point rating scale for rating the importance of the list of preliminary outcomes.ResultsFour of the eight patient interview derived outcomes were included in the preliminary COS, however, none of these outcomes were included in the final PGP-COS. The 5-point rating scale resulted in twice as many outcomes reaching consensus after the 3-round Delphi survey compared to the 9-point scale. Consensus on all five outcomes included in the final PGP-COS was achieved by participants allocated the 5-point rating scale, whereas consensus on four of these was achieved by those using the 9-point scale.ConclusionsUsing patient interviews to identify preliminary outcomes as an adjunct to conducting a systematic review of outcomes measured in the literature did not appear to influence outcome selection in developing the COS in this study. The use of different rating scales in a Delphi survey, however, did appear to impact on outcome selection. The 5-point scale demonstrated greater congruency than the 9-point scale with the outcomes included in the final PGP-COS. Future research to substantiate our findings and to explore the impact of other rating scales on outcome selection during COS development, however, is warranted.

Highlights

  • As the development of core outcome sets (COS) increases, guidance for developing and reporting high-quality COS continues to evolve; a number of methodological uncertainties still remain

  • Using patient interviews to identify preliminary outcomes as an adjunct to conducting a systematic review of outcomes measured in the literature did not appear to influence outcome selection in developing the COS in this study

  • In depth methodological details about the design and analysis of the Pelvic Girdle Pain Core Outcome Set (PGP-COS) project, including the systematic review, semi-structured interviews, the Delphi survey and the consensus meeting are available in the study protocol [10], the published systematic review [16] and in the PGP-COS main report (Remus et al: A Core outcome set for research and clinical practice in women with pelvic girdle pain: PGPCOS, Under review)

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Summary

Introduction

As the development of core outcome sets (COS) increases, guidance for developing and reporting high-quality COS continues to evolve; a number of methodological uncertainties still remain. There has been an increase in the development of core outcome sets (COS) to overcome the heterogeneity in outcome selection across clinical trials for a broad spectrum of health conditions [1]. The development of a COS is a stepwise process that involves working with relevant stakeholders of a particular health condition/ area to prioritise the core set from a larger list of outcomes which have been identified through earlier work [2]. Guidance for developing and reporting high-quality COS is evolving, a number of methodological uncertainties still remain [2,3,4,5,6]

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