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MM: Delphi Survey Project: Towards a Core Outcome Set for Multiple Myeloma

Delphi, HARMONY, MM, Myeloma

The MM Delphi Survey is closed. Patients, clinicians, drug developers and regulators have participated. 


Make use of our explanatory documentation, developed for patients and their carers:


Challenge

At present, several clinical trials examine appropriate therapy protocols as well as new innovative compounds with the aim to improve the treatment of Multiple Myeloma (MM). However, these trials measure different outcomes, thus questioning their comparability. In addition, the majority of clinical trials do not assess long-term side effects and their influence on the patients’ quality of life. A core outcome set (COS) may assist researchers in selecting outcomes for future trials, thereby promoting harmonization of MM studies and improving clinical management of the disease.


Aim


Approach


Impact


Project Summary

MM is the second most common hematologic malignancy in Europe and the incidence of MM is expected to rise as a result of population ageing. In the past ten years, several novel MM drugs have appeared, which have significantly improved the survival of MM patients. Despite these advances, the vast majority of patients eventually relapse, and the disease remains largely incurable. To improve the treatment of MM, several novel compounds are currently being tested in clinical trials. Unfortunately, these trials are insufficiently comparable because they measure different outcomes. In addition, the majority of trials do not assess long-term side effects and their influence on patients’ quality of life. Defining a core outcome set may offer a solution to these problems.

A COS is a minimum set of outcomes to be collected in future clinical trials which, ideally, have been agreed upon by all stakeholders. The COS is intended as an international standard to evaluate MM treatments in clinical trials and other research settings (e.g., registry and observational studies). Using a COS will improve the comparability of clinical trials, enhance the consistency of reporting, and reduce selective reporting bias. The COS can also be incorporated into clinical guidelines and be used to improve patient management. This project aims to identify a COS for MM that will be accepted by all of HARMONY’s stakeholder groups.

The researchers will use the Delphi method to develop the COS. First, a preliminary list of about 60 outcomes was created, which is based on literature research and expert interviews. Next, a panel of stakeholders will be asked to rate the importance of each outcome on the basis of their personal experiences. Three iterative rounds are planned, using an online survey tool (COMET). After each round, the participants will receive an anonymized summary of the survey results per stakeholder group. This will allow them to revise their answers in the next round. It is expected that the group will converge towards a consensus COS after a number of iterations. The process will be stopped after pre-defined consensus criteria have been achieved. The final version of the COS will be aligned in a meeting with all participants.

Panel participants will be recruited from HARMONY Partners, including clinicians, patients, representatives from the pharmaceutical industry, and health authorities. The aim is to recruit equal participant numbers for all stakeholder groups wherever possible. This project is part of a series of Delphi studies for the seven hematological malignancies that are being studied by the HARMONY Alliance. In the future, a COS applicable to all seven hematological malignancies will be defined.


Download the Delphi MM Study Protocol document to inspect the full outcome list in Annex 1 >


Project Leadership


Project Partnership


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