Browsing by Author "Inbar-Feigenberg, Michal"
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Item Open Access Assessing the quality and value of metabolic chart data for capturing core outcomes for pediatric medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (MCAD) deficiency(2024-01-13) Iverson, Ryan; Taljaard, Monica; Geraghty, Michael T.; Pugliese, Michael; Tingley, Kylie; Coyle, Doug; Kronick, Jonathan B.; Wilson, Kumanan; Austin, Valerie; Brunel-Guitton, Catherine; Buhas, Daniela; Butcher, Nancy J.; Chan, Alicia K. J.; Dyack, Sarah; Goobie, Sharan; Greenberg, Cheryl R.; Jain-Ghai, Shailly; Inbar-Feigenberg, Michal; Karp, Natalya; Kozenko, Mariya; Langley, Erica; Lines, Matthew; Little, Julian; MacKenzie, Jennifer; Maranda, Bruno; Mercimek-Andrews, Saadet; Mhanni, Aizeddin; Mitchell, John J.; Nagy, Laura; Offringa, Martin; Pender, Amy; Potter, Murray; Prasad, Chitra; Ratko, Suzanne; Salvarinova, Ramona; Schulze, Andreas; Siriwardena, Komudi; Sondheimer, Neal; Sparkes, Rebecca; Stockler-Ipsiroglu, Sylvia; Tapscott, Kendra; Trakadis, Yannis; Turner, Lesley; Van Karnebeek, Clara; Vandersteen, Anthony; Walia, Jagdeep S.; Wilson, Brenda J.; Yu, Andrea C.; Potter, Beth K.; Chakraborty, PraneshAbstract Background Generating rigorous evidence to inform care for rare diseases requires reliable, sustainable, and longitudinal measurement of priority outcomes. Having developed a core outcome set for pediatric medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (MCAD) deficiency, we aimed to assess the feasibility of prospective measurement of these core outcomes during routine metabolic clinic visits. Methods We used existing cohort data abstracted from charts of 124 children diagnosed with MCAD deficiency who participated in a Canadian study which collected data from birth to a maximum of 11 years of age to investigate the frequency of clinic visits and quality of metabolic chart data for selected outcomes. We recorded all opportunities to collect outcomes from the medical chart as a function of visit rate to the metabolic clinic, by treatment centre and by child age. We applied a data quality framework to evaluate data based on completeness, conformance, and plausibility for four core MCAD outcomes: emergency department use, fasting time, metabolic decompensation, and death. Results The frequency of metabolic clinic visits decreased with increasing age, from a rate of 2.8 visits per child per year (95% confidence interval, 2.3–3.3) among infants 2 to 6 months, to 1.0 visit per child per year (95% confidence interval, 0.9–1.2) among those ≥ 5 years of age. Rates of emergency department visits followed anticipated trends by child age. Supplemental findings suggested that some emergency visits occur outside of the metabolic care treatment centre but are not captured. Recommended fasting times were updated relatively infrequently in patients’ metabolic charts. Episodes of metabolic decompensation were identifiable but required an operational definition based on acute manifestations most commonly recorded in the metabolic chart. Deaths occurred rarely in these patients and quality of mortality data was not evaluated. Conclusions Opportunities to record core outcomes at the metabolic clinic occur at least annually for children with MCAD deficiency. Methods to comprehensively capture emergency care received at outside institutions are needed. To reduce substantial heterogeneous recording of core outcome across treatment centres, improved documentation standards are required for recording of recommended fasting times and a consensus definition for metabolic decompensations needs to be developed and implemented.Item Open Access Correction to: Establishing a core outcome set for mucopolysaccharidoses (MPS) in children: study protocol for a rapid literature review, candidate outcomes survey, and Delphi surveys(2021-12-09) Howie, Alison H.; Tingley, Kylie; Inbar-Feigenberg, Michal; Mitchell, John J.; Butcher, Nancy J.; Offringa, Martin; Smith, Maureen; Angel, Kim; Gentle, Jenifer; Wyatt, Alexandra; Campeau, Philippe M.; Chan, Alicia; Chakraborty, Pranesh; El Turk, Farah; Mamak, Eva; Mhanni, Aizeddin; Skidmore, Becky; Sparkes, Rebecca; Stockler, Sylvia; Potter, Beth K.Item Open Access Establishing a core outcome set for mucopolysaccharidoses (MPS) in children: study protocol for a rapid literature review, candidate outcomes survey, and Delphi surveys(2021-11-17) Howie, Alison H.; Tingley, Kylie; Inbar-Feigenberg, Michal; Mitchell, John J.; Butcher, Nancy J.; Offringa, Martin; Smith, Maureen; Angel, Kim; Gentle, Jenifer; Wyatt, Alexandra; Campeau, Philippe M.; Chan, Alicia; Chakraborty, Pranesh; El Turk, Farah; Mamak, Eva; Mhanni, Aizeddin; Skidmore, Becky; Sparkes, Rebecca; Stockler, Sylvia; Potter, Beth K.Abstract Background Mucopolysaccharidoses (MPS) are a group of inherited metabolic diseases characterized by chronic, progressive multi-system manifestations with varying degrees of severity. Disease-modifying therapies exist to treat some types of MPS; however, they are not curative, underscoring the need to identify and evaluate co-interventions that optimize functioning, participation in preferred activities, and quality of life. A Canadian pediatric MPS registry is under development and may serve as a platform to launch randomized controlled trials to evaluate such interventions. To promote the standardized collection of patient/family-reported and clinical outcomes considered important to patients/families, health care providers (HCPs), and policymakers, the choice of outcomes to include in the registry will be informed by a core outcome set (COS). We aim to establish a patient-oriented COS for pediatric MPS using a multi-stakeholder approach. Methods In step 1 of the six-step process to develop the COS, we will identify relevant outcomes through a rapid literature review and candidate outcomes survey. A two-phase screening approach will be implemented to identify eligible publications, followed by extraction of outcomes and other pre-specified data elements. Simultaneously, we will conduct a candidate outcomes survey with children with MPS and their families to identify outcomes most important to them. In step 2, HCPs experienced in treating patients with MPS will be invited to review the list of outcomes generated in step 1 and identify additional clinically relevant outcomes. We will then ask patients/families, HCPs, and policymakers to rate the outcomes in a set of Delphi Surveys (step 3), and to participate in a subsequent consensus meeting to finalize the COS (step 4). Step 5 involves establishing a set of outcome measurement instruments for the COS. Finally, we will disseminate the COS to knowledge users (step 6). Discussion The proposed COS will inform the choice of outcomes to include in the MPS registry and, more broadly, promote the standardized collection of patient-oriented outcomes for pediatric MPS research. By involving patients/families from the earliest stage of the research, we will ensure that the COS will be relevant to those who will ultimately benefit from the research. Trial registration PROSPERO CRD42021267531 , COMETItem Open Access Evaluation of the quality of clinical data collection for a pan-Canadian cohort of children affected by inherited metabolic diseases: lessons learned from the Canadian Inherited Metabolic Diseases Research Network(2020-04-10) Tingley, Kylie; Lamoureux, Monica; Pugliese, Michael; Geraghty, Michael T; Kronick, Jonathan B; Potter, Beth K; Coyle, Doug; Wilson, Kumanan; Kowalski, Michael; Austin, Valerie; Brunel-Guitton, Catherine; Buhas, Daniela; Chan, Alicia K J; Dyack, Sarah; Feigenbaum, Annette; Giezen, Alette; Goobie, Sharan; Greenberg, Cheryl R; Ghai, Shailly J; Inbar-Feigenberg, Michal; Karp, Natalya; Kozenko, Mariya; Langley, Erica; Lines, Matthew; Little, Julian; MacKenzie, Jennifer; Maranda, Bruno; Mercimek-Andrews, Saadet; Mohan, Connie; Mhanni, Aizeddin; Mitchell, Grant; Mitchell, John J; Nagy, Laura; Napier, Melanie; Pender, Amy; Potter, Murray; Prasad, Chitra; Ratko, Suzanne; Salvarinova, Ramona; Schulze, Andreas; Siriwardena, Komudi; Sondheimer, Neal; Sparkes, Rebecca; Stockler-Ipsiroglu, Sylvia; Trakadis, Yannis; Turner, Lesley; Van Karnebeek, Clara; Vallance, Hilary; Vandersteen, Anthony; Walia, Jagdeep; Wilson, Ashley; Wilson, Brenda J; Yu, Andrea C; Yuskiv, Nataliya; Chakraborty, PraneshAbstract Background The Canadian Inherited Metabolic Diseases Research Network (CIMDRN) is a pan-Canadian practice-based research network of 14 Hereditary Metabolic Disease Treatment Centres and over 50 investigators. CIMDRN aims to develop evidence to improve health outcomes for children with inherited metabolic diseases (IMD). We describe the development of our clinical data collection platform, discuss our data quality management plan, and present the findings to date from our data quality assessment, highlighting key lessons that can serve as a resource for future clinical research initiatives relating to rare diseases. Methods At participating centres, children born from 2006 to 2015 who were diagnosed with one of 31 targeted IMD were eligible to participate in CIMDRN’s clinical research stream. For all participants, we collected a minimum data set that includes information about demographics and diagnosis. For children with five prioritized IMD, we collected longitudinal data including interventions, clinical outcomes, and indicators of disease management. The data quality management plan included: design of user-friendly and intuitive clinical data collection forms; validation measures at point of data entry, designed to minimize data entry errors; regular communications with each CIMDRN site; and routine review of aggregate data. Results As of June 2019, CIMDRN has enrolled 798 participants of whom 764 (96%) have complete minimum data set information. Results from our data quality assessment revealed that potential data quality issues were related to interpretation of definitions of some variables, participants who transferred care across institutions, and the organization of information within the patient charts (e.g., neuropsychological test results). Little information was missing regarding disease ascertainment and diagnosis (e.g., ascertainment method – 0% missing). Discussion Using several data quality management strategies, we have established a comprehensive clinical database that provides information about care and outcomes for Canadian children affected by IMD. We describe quality issues and lessons for consideration in future clinical research initiatives for rare diseases, including accurately accommodating different clinic workflows and balancing comprehensiveness of data collection with available resources. Integrating data collection within clinical care, leveraging electronic medical records, and implementing core outcome sets will be essential for achieving sustainability.