A core outcome set for clinical studies of adhesive small bowel obstruction

Bibliographic Details
Title: A core outcome set for clinical studies of adhesive small bowel obstruction
Authors: Lee, Matthew J., Chapman, Stephen J., Blackwell, Sue, Arnott, Robert, ten Broek, Richard P. G., Delaney, Conor P., Dudi‐Venkata, Nagendra N., Fish, Rebecca, Hind, Daniel, Jayne, David G., Mellor, Katie, Mishra, Anurag, O’Grady, Greg, Sammour, Tarik, Thorpe, Gabrielle, Wells, Cameron I., Wolthuis, Albert M., Fearnhead, Nicola S., Adegbola, Samuel, Ananth, Sachin, Bagaglini, Giulia, Beamish, Andrew, Bibby, Neil, Blencowe, Natalie S., Brown, Leo R., Bulte, Joris P., Carver, Julie, Challand, Christopher P., Chan, Shirley, Chisholm, Lindsey, Clerc, Daniel, Coe, Peter O., Cox, Daniel, Culkin, Alison, Daniels, Sarah, Dawidziuk, Aleksander, Dawson, Amanda, Drake, Thomas M., Drayton, Daniel J., Duff, Sarah, Espin‐Basany, Eloy, Evans, Martin D., Fakhrul‐Aldeen, Mohammed, Fisher, Nigel, Fleetwood‐Beresford, Sahara, Forshaw, Suzannah, Gani, Jon, Haddon, Sandra, Han, Jennie, Helliwell, Jack, Herrod, Philip, Hollyman, Marianne, Hopkins, James, Juloski, Jovan, Keane, Celia, Lam, Yick Ho, Love, Lisa, Lynch, Aoife, Major, Giles, Maw, Andrew, McDermott, Frank, McVeigh, Jamie, Mehraj, Asif, Millan, Monica, Mohan, Helen, Moug, Susan, Naylor, Maureen, Parnell, Richard, Pata, Francesco, Peckham‐Cooper, Adam, Pellino, Gianluca, Pockney, Peter, Proctor, Victoria K., Rajagopalan, Arjun, Robinson, Jonathan, Rutegård, Martin, Saha, Arin, Sahnan, Kapil, Sayers, Adele E., Siragusa, Leandro, Smart, Neil J., Swain, David, Thompson, Julie, Tutty, Linda, Vaughan‐Shaw, Peter G., Vinci, Danilo, Vissapragada, Ravi, Wheelband, Katharine R., Williams, Annabelle, Younis, Mohammed U.
Contributors: Group, Tripartite Gastrointestinal Recovery SBO
Source: Colorectal Dis
Tripartite Gastrointestinal Recovery SBO Group 2022, 'A core outcome set for clinical studies of adhesive small bowel obstruction', Colorectal Disease, vol. 24, no. 10, pp. 1204-1210. https://doi.org/10.1111/codi.16158
Publisher Information: Wiley, 2022.
Publication Year: 2022
Subject Terms: Consensus, perioperative care, Delphi Technique, Kirurgi, Original Articles, adhesions, core outcome set, 16. Peace & justice, gastrointestinal recovery, small bowel obstruction, Humans, Surveys and Questionnaires, Research Design, Treatment Outcome, Adhesives, Patient Reported Outcome Measures, 3. Good health, 03 medical and health sciences, 0302 clinical medicine, Surgery
Description: AimAdhesive small bowel obstruction (ASBO) is a common surgical emergency condition. Research in the field is plentiful; however, inconsistency in outcome reporting makes comparisons challenging. The aim of this study was to define a core outcome set (COS) for studies of ASBO.MethodsThe long list of outcomes was identified through systematic review, and focus groups across different geographical regions. A modified Delphi consensus exercise of three rounds was undertaken with stakeholder groups (patients and clinicians). Items were rated on a 9‐point Likert scale. Items exceeding 70% rating at 7–9 were passed to the consensus meeting. New item proposals were invited in round 1. Individualised feedback on prior voting compared to other participants was provided. An international consensus meeting was convened to ratify the final COS.ResultsIn round 1, 56 items were rated by 118 respondents. A total of 18 items reached consensus, and respondents proposed an additional 10 items. Round 2 was completed by 90 respondents, and nine items achieved consensus. In round 3, 80 surveys were completed; one item achieved consensus, and five borderline items were identified. The final COS included 26 outcomes, mapped to the following domains: Interventions, need for stoma, septic complications, return of gut function, patient reported outcomes, and recurrence of obstruction, as well as mortality, failure to rescue, and time to resolution.ConclusionThis COS should be used in future studies in the treatment of adhesive SBO. Further studies to define a core measurement set are needed to identify the optimum tools to measure each outcome.
Document Type: Article
Other literature type
File Description: application/pdf
Language: English
ISSN: 1463-1318
1462-8910
DOI: 10.1111/codi.16158
Access URL: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35445534
http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:umu:diva-237490
Rights: CC BY
Accession Number: edsair.doi.dedup.....7f86165d9a7b4948287c8acb1847e8fc
Database: OpenAIRE
Description
ISSN:14631318
14628910
DOI:10.1111/codi.16158