TY - JOUR
T1 - Development of a Minimum Dataset for the Monitoring of Recombinant Human Growth Hormone Therapy in Children with Growth Hormone Deficiency
T2 - A GloBE-Reg Initiative
AU - Chen, Suet Ching
AU - Bryce, Jillian
AU - Chen, Minglu
AU - Charmandari, Evangelia
AU - Choi, Jin Ho
AU - Dou, Xinyu
AU - Gong, Chunxiu
AU - Hamza, Rasha
AU - Harvey, Jamie
AU - Hoffman, Andrew R.
AU - Horikawa, Reiko
AU - Johannson, Gudmundur
AU - Jorge, Alexander Augusto De Lima
AU - Miller, Bradley S.
AU - Roehrich, Sebastian
AU - Sävendahl, Lars
AU - Tseretopoulou, Xanthippi
AU - Vitali, Diana
AU - Wajnrajch, Michael
AU - Ahmed, S. Faisal
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 The Author(s). Published by S. Karger AG, Basel.
PY - 2024/8/1
Y1 - 2024/8/1
N2 - Introduction: Although there are some recommendations in the literature on the assessments that should be performed in children on recombinant human growth hormone (rhGH) therapy, the level of consensus on these measurements is not clear. The objective of the current study was to identify the minimum dataset (MDS) that could be measured in a routine clinical setting across the world, aiming to minimise burden on clinicians and improve quality of data collection. Methods: This study was undertaken by the growth hormone (GH) scientific study group in GloBE-Reg, a new project that has developed a common registry platform that can support long-term safety and effectiveness studies of drugs. Twelve clinical experts from 7 international endocrine organisations identified by the GloBE-Reg Steering Committee, 2 patient representatives, and representatives from 2 pharmaceutical companies with previous GH registry expertise collaborated to develop this recommendation. A comprehensive list of data fields routinely collected by each of the clinical and industry experts for children with growth hormone deficiency (GHD) was compiled. Each member was asked to determine the: (1) importance of the data field and (2) ease of data collection. Data fields that achieved 70% consensus in terms of importance qualified for the MDS, provided <50% deemed the item difficult to collect. Results: A total of 246 items were compiled and 27 were removed due to redundancies, with 219 items subjected to the grading system. Of the 219 items, 111 achieved at least 70% consensus as important data to collect when monitoring children with GHD on rhGH treatment. Sixty-nine of the 219 items were deemed easy to collect. Combining the criteria of importance and ease of data collection, 63 met the criteria for the MDS. Several anomalies to the MDS rule were identified and highlighted for discussion, including whether the patients were involved in current or previous clinical trials, need for HbA1c monitoring, other past medical history, and adherence, enabling formulation of the final MDS recommendation of 43 items; 20 to be completed once, 14 every 6 months, and 9 every 12 months. Conclusion: In summary, this exercise performed through the GloBE-Reg initiative provides a recommendation of the MDS requirement, collected through real-world data, for the monitoring of safety and effectiveness of rhGH in children with GHD, both for the current daily preparations and the newer longacting GH.
AB - Introduction: Although there are some recommendations in the literature on the assessments that should be performed in children on recombinant human growth hormone (rhGH) therapy, the level of consensus on these measurements is not clear. The objective of the current study was to identify the minimum dataset (MDS) that could be measured in a routine clinical setting across the world, aiming to minimise burden on clinicians and improve quality of data collection. Methods: This study was undertaken by the growth hormone (GH) scientific study group in GloBE-Reg, a new project that has developed a common registry platform that can support long-term safety and effectiveness studies of drugs. Twelve clinical experts from 7 international endocrine organisations identified by the GloBE-Reg Steering Committee, 2 patient representatives, and representatives from 2 pharmaceutical companies with previous GH registry expertise collaborated to develop this recommendation. A comprehensive list of data fields routinely collected by each of the clinical and industry experts for children with growth hormone deficiency (GHD) was compiled. Each member was asked to determine the: (1) importance of the data field and (2) ease of data collection. Data fields that achieved 70% consensus in terms of importance qualified for the MDS, provided <50% deemed the item difficult to collect. Results: A total of 246 items were compiled and 27 were removed due to redundancies, with 219 items subjected to the grading system. Of the 219 items, 111 achieved at least 70% consensus as important data to collect when monitoring children with GHD on rhGH treatment. Sixty-nine of the 219 items were deemed easy to collect. Combining the criteria of importance and ease of data collection, 63 met the criteria for the MDS. Several anomalies to the MDS rule were identified and highlighted for discussion, including whether the patients were involved in current or previous clinical trials, need for HbA1c monitoring, other past medical history, and adherence, enabling formulation of the final MDS recommendation of 43 items; 20 to be completed once, 14 every 6 months, and 9 every 12 months. Conclusion: In summary, this exercise performed through the GloBE-Reg initiative provides a recommendation of the MDS requirement, collected through real-world data, for the monitoring of safety and effectiveness of rhGH in children with GHD, both for the current daily preparations and the newer longacting GH.
KW - Children
KW - Efficacy
KW - Growth hormonetherapy
KW - Registry
KW - Safety
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85194495591&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85194495591&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1159/000533763
DO - 10.1159/000533763
M3 - Article
C2 - 37703843
AN - SCOPUS:85194495591
SN - 1663-2818
VL - 97
SP - 365
EP - 373
JO - Hormone Research in Paediatrics
JF - Hormone Research in Paediatrics
IS - 4
ER -