Identifying research priorities in cardiac surgery: a report from the James Lind Alliance Priority Setting Partnership in adult heart surgery

Author:

Lai Florence YORCID,Abbasciano Riccardo G,Tabberer Bethany,Kumar Tracy,Murphy Gavin J

Abstract

ObjectiveTo identify research priorities that address the needs of people affected by cardiac surgery and those who support and care for them.DesignJames Lind Alliance (JLA) process—two surveys and a consensus workshop guided by an independent JLA adviser.SettingThe UK with international participation.ParticipantsThree stakeholder groups—heart surgery patients, carers and healthcare professionals involved in care delivery.MethodsThe initial survey was set to collect potential research questions in cardiac surgery as identified by stakeholders. Submitted questions were summarised into indicative questions. The existing evidence was searched to verify that these indicative questions had not been answered. In the second survey, stakeholders then voted for their top 10 from the list of unanswered questions. The top voted questions were taken forward for final ranking in a workshop.ResultsIn the initial survey, 629 respondents (28% patients/carers, 62% healthcare professionals) submitted 1082 potential questions. Of these, 797 in-scope questions were summarised into 49 indicative questions and of which 45 had not been answered by existing research. In the second survey, 492 respondents (43% patients/carers, 49% healthcare professionals) cast their votes with the top 12 from each of the three stakeholder groups totalling 21 questions advancing to the final priority setting workshop. The workshop attended by 25 delegates (10 patients/carers and 15 healthcare professionals) agreed on the top 10 research questions including long-term outcomes (quality of life), and aspects from preoperative personalised care (prehabilitation, frailty, comorbidities), intraoperative management (minimally invasive techniques), to prevention and management of postoperative complications (organ injury, atrial fibrillation, infection).ConclusionsThis Priority Setting Partnership (PSP) identified the priorities and unmet needs of patients and clinicians in cardiac surgery. The next step is to disseminate and implement the PSP results to ensure that these priorities shape future research and improve clinical services.

Funder

Heart Research UK

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

General Medicine

Reference13 articles.

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2. Trends in the epidemiology of cardiovascular disease in the UK

3. A checklist for health research priority setting: nine common themes of good practice;Viergever;Health Res Policy Syst,2010

4. Cowan K , Oliver S . The James Lind alliance Guidebook. version 5, 2013. http://www.jlaguidebook.org/pdfguidebook/guidebook.pdf

5. JLA . JLA Guidebook. Available: https://www.jla.nihr.ac.uk/jla-guidebook/

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