Metadata
Title
Use of Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System Pediatric Measures as Clinical Trial Endpoints: Experience from a Multicenter Pragmatic Trial in Children with Crohn’s Disease
Authors
Miller Talya L; Schuchard J; Carle AC; Forrest Christopher B; Kappelman MD; Adler J; Ammoury RF; Bass D; Bass J; Benkov K; Bousvaros A; Boyle B; Cabrera José M; Colletti R; Dorsey JM; Ebach DR; Firestine AM; Gulati A; Hoffenberg EJ; Jester TW; Kaplan JL; Kugathasan S; Kusek ME; Leibowitz Ian; Linville TM; Margolis P; Minar P; Rios Zarela M; Moses J; Palomo PJ; Pappa H; Pashankar DS; Saeed SA; Samson CM; Sandberg KC; Steiner Steven J; Strople J; Sullivan JS; Tung J; Wali P
Year
2021
Publication
Journal of Pediatrics
Abstract
Objectives To evaluate whether Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) pediatric patient-reported outcome (PRO) measures can serve as valid endpoints in a clinical trial of a chronic pediatric illness. Study design We evaluated the responsiveness of PROMIS pediatric measures collected through the Clinical Outcomes of Methotrexate Binary Therapy in Practice (COMBINE) trial, a multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, pragmatic clinical trial in pediatric patients with Crohn’s disease (CD). We examined the relationships between changes in PROMIS pediatric measures and changes in disease activity by evaluating PRO score changes among patients who did and patients who did not experience improvement in disease activity. Results Participants included 266 children and adolescents with CD from a total of 35 institutions. Over the course of follow-up, participants showed improvement in most PRO domains, with the largest effect sizes observed for the clinically improved group. Patients who maintained steroid-free remission showed significantly lower PRO scores for the Pain Interference, Fatigue, and inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) Symptoms domains and higher scores for the Positive Affect domain. Conclusions This study demonstrates the responsiveness of the PROMIS pediatric measures of Fatigue and Pain Interference as study endpoints in a large, multicenter pragmatic trial in pediatric CD, extending a growing body of research supporting the use of PROMIS pediatric measures as reliable PRO endpoints for clinical trials.
Authors
Adler J | Ammoury RF | Bass D | Bass J | Benkov K | Bousvaros A | Boyle B | Cabrera José M | Carle AC | Colletti R | Dorsey JM | Ebach DR | Firestine AM | Forrest Christopher B | Gulati A | Hoffenberg EJ | Jester TW | Kaplan JL | Kappelman MD | Kugathasan S | Kusek ME | Leibowitz Ian | Linville TM | Margolis P | Miller Talya L | Minar P | Moses J | Palomo PJ | Pappa H | Pashankar DS | Rios Zarela M | Saeed SA | Samson CM | Sandberg KC | Schuchard J | Steiner Steven J | Strople J | Sullivan JS | Tung J | Wali P
MeSH
Adolescent | Child | Crohn Disease | Crohn Disease/dt [Drug Therapy] | Fatigue | Humans | Information Systems | Pain | Patient Reported Outcome Measures | Quality of Life