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Development of an International Standard Set of Value-Based Outcome Measures for Patients With Chronic Kidney Disease: A Report of the International Consortium for Health Outcomes Measurement (ICHOM) CKD Working Group

Authors :
Charlotte Roberts
Hans A.J. Bart
Wouter R. Verberne
Wim Van Biesen
Markus Ketteler
Katherine R. Tuttle
Kitty J Jager
Willem Jan W Bos
Marc H Hemmelder
Eduardo Parra
Matthew J. Salt
Guillermo Garcia-Garcia
Andrew S. Allegretti
David C. Wheeler
Chih-Wei Yang
Elizabeth Gibbons
Zofia Das-Gupta
Muhamed Al Rohani
Andrea Stopper
Türkan Terkivatan
Surgery
Medical Informatics
APH - Quality of Care
ACS - Pulmonary hypertension & thrombosis
APH - Aging & Later Life
APH - Global Health
Source :
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF KIDNEY DISEASES, American Journal of Kidney Diseases, 73(3), 372-384. W.B. Saunders, American Journal of Kidney Diseases, 73(3), 372-384, American journal of kidney diseases, 73(3), 372-384. W.B. Saunders Ltd
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
W.B. Saunders, 2019.

Abstract

Value-based health care is increasingly promoted as a strategy for improving care quality by benchmarking outcomes that matter to patients relative to the cost of obtaining those outcomes. To support the shift toward value-based health care in chronic kidney disease (CKD), the International Consortium for Health Outcomes Measurement (ICHOM) assembled an international working group of health professionals and patient representatives to develop a standardized minimum set of patient-centered outcomes targeted for clinical use. The considered outcomes and patient- reported outcome measures were generated from systematic literature reviews. Feedback was sought from patients and health professionals. Patients with very high-risk CKD (stages G3a/A3 and G3b/A2- G5, including dialysis, kidney transplantation, and conservative care) were selected as the target population. Using an online modified Delphi process, outcomes important to all patients were selected, such as survival and hospitalization, and to treatment-specific subgroups, such as vascular access survival and kidney allograft survival. Patient-reported outcome measures were included to capture domains of health-related quality of life, which were rated as the most important outcomes by patients. Demographic and clinical variables were identified to be used as case-mix adjusters. Use of these consensus recommendations could enable institutions to monitor, compare, and improve the quality of their CKD care.

Details

ISSN :
15236838 and 02726386
Volume :
73
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American Journal of Kidney Diseases
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9853ff0d4444d94fe00e8b2cb8a5233d