학술논문

Development of the HIV360 international core set of outcome measures for adults living with HIV: A consensus process
Document Type
article
Source
HIV Medicine. 23(6)
Subject
Health Services and Systems
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Clinical Sciences
Health Sciences
Health Services
Clinical Research
Behavioral and Social Science
HIV/AIDS
8.1 Organisation and delivery of services
Health and social care services research
Good Health and Well Being
Adult
Consensus
HIV Infections
Health Personnel
Humans
Outcome Assessment
Health Care
Patient Reported Outcome Measures
Treatment Outcome
AIDS
HIV
outcomes
patient-centred care
value-based healthcare
Virology
Clinical sciences
Epidemiology
Language
Abstract
ObjectivesHIV outcomes centre primarily around clinical markers with limited focus on patient-reported outcomes. With a global trend towards capturing the outcomes that matter most to patients, there is agreement that standardizing the definition of value in HIV care is key to their incorporation. This study aims to address the lack of routine, standardized data in HIV care.MethodsAn international working group (WG) of 37 experts and patients, and a steering group (SG) of 18 experts were convened from 14 countries. The project team (PT) identified outcomes by conducting a literature review, screening 1979 articles and reviewing the full texts of 547 of these articles. Semi-structured interviews and advisory groups were performed with the WG, SG and people living with HIV to add to the list of potentially relevant outcomes. The WG voted via a modified Delphi process - informed by six Zoom calls - to establish a core set of outcomes for use in clinical practice.ResultsFrom 156 identified outcomes, consensus was reached to include three patient-reported outcomes, four clinician-reported measures and one administratively reported outcome; standardized measures were included. The WG also reached agreement to measure 22 risk-adjustment variables. This outcome set can be applied to any person living with HIV aged > 18 years.ConclusionsAdoption of the HIV360 outcome set will enable healthcare providers to record, compare and integrate standardized metrics across treatment sites to drive quality improvement in HIV care.