Patient‐Reported Outcome Measures in Routine Clinical Practice: Practical Guidance for Institutional Review Boards

Author:

Bachmann Justin M.1,Shiflet Molly A.2,Palacios Julia R.3,Turer Robert W.4,Wallace Grace H.5,Rosenbloom S. Trent6,Rice Todd W.7

Affiliation:

1. Assistant professor of medicine and biomedical informatics and medical director for patient‐reported outcomes measurement at Vanderbilt University Medical Center. He is also a staff physician and research scientist at the Veterans Affairs Tennessee Valley Healthcare System

2. Operations manager for the human research protections program at Vanderbilt University Medical Center

3. Medical student at Saint Louis University School of Medicine

4. Assistant professor of emergency medicine at University of Texas‐Southwestern Medical Center

5. Clinical/translational research coordinator at Vanderbilt University Medical Center

6. Professor of biomedical informatics, medicine, pediatrics, and nursing, and is a vice chair of faculty affairs in the Department of Biomedical Informatics at Vanderbilt University Medical Center. He also directs My Health at Vanderbilt, Vanderbilt's patient portal

7. Professor of medicine and vice president for clinical trial innovation and operations as well as medical director of the human research protections program at Vanderbilt University Medical Center

Abstract

ABSTRACTThe use of patient‐reported outcome measures (PROMs) is increasingly common in routine clinical practice. As tools to quantify symptoms and health status, PROMs play an important role in focusing health care on outcomes that matter to patients. The uses of PROM data are myriad, ranging from clinical care to survey‐based research and quality improvement. Discerning the boundaries between these use cases can be challenging for institutional review boards (IRBs). In this article, we provide a framework for classifying the three primary PROM use cases (clinical care, human subjects research, and quality improvement) and discuss the level of IRB oversight (if any) necessary for each. One of the most important considerations for IRB staff is whether PROMs are being used primarily for clinical care and thus do not constitute human subjects research. We discuss characteristics of PROMs implemented primarily for clinical care, focusing on: data platform; survey location; questionnaire length; patient interface; and clinician interface. We also discuss IRB oversight of projects involving the secondary use of PROM data that were collected during the course of clinical care, which span human subjects research and quality improvement. This framework provides practical guidance for IRB staff as well as clinicians who use PROMs as communication aids in routine clinical practice.

Funder

Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute

U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs

Office of Research and Development

Publisher

Wiley

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