Core outcome set
A core outcome set is a standardized set of domains and instruments that define the minimum outcomes to be measured and reported in all clinical trials related to a specific clinical area. It is developed through a rigorous consensus process involving diverse collaborators, including patient research partners, healthcare professionals, and researchers. The process has two key phases:
1. Identifying what to measure, which results in a core domain set.
2. Determining how to measure these domains through the selection of validated instruments.
By providing a common framework for measuring and reporting outcomes, a COS ensures consistency and comparability across studies, leading to more reliable and meaningful data in research on a particular health condition.
Terminology
The term core domain is a key aspect of health or well-being that is considered essential to define, measure and report in all clinical trials and other research studies related to a specific health condition or disease. These are considered the ‘What’ to measure in core outcome sets. The term core domain should not be confused with the term domain, which refers to any clinical endpoint that can be measured in research, regardless of importance.Similarly, core domains are distinct from core instruments. While core domains provide guidance on what to measure in clinical studies, core instruments provide guidance on how to measure those selected outcomes.
Scope
Core outcome sets are commonly used by clinical investigators who conduct clinical trials for the treatment of a health condition. The patient population associated with a particular core outcome set may vary, as some apply to all patients with that health condition and others apply to a small subset of that population. Core outcome sets are typically used in research, but they may also be used for patient management during routine clinical care.The need to develop core outcome sets was initially identified by methodologists and aggregators of systematic reviews, like Cochrane, who observed that meta-analyses of trials of similar conditions were frequently impeded by the lack of similarity among the outcomes and outcome measures they employed.
Methodology
In general, the process for developing a core outcome set requires rigorous methodology in which domains are first generated from all possible sources and then subsequently prioritized during a consensus process.A long list of domains is first developed by means of systematic reviews, literature reviews, and reviews of patient resources. Additional domains are identified by interviewing those with further personal, professional or scientific knowledge of the health condition, such as patients, representatives of patient support groups, physicians and other clinicians, industry scientists, and healthcare regulators.
After a list of potential domains is identified, an international group of experts and patients then select the domains most important to them by a consensus process, commonly the Delphi technique or nominal group technique.
For each of the selected core domains, instruments are identified and then selected through an instrument selection process.
The selected list of core domains and instruments is then published and disseminated for use by clinical trialists. Uptake of the core outcome set, or its active use by trialists, is encouraged.