Background Cognition is a research priority for people living with CKD, but identification of critical research questions is lacking. This study aimed to determine which cognition-related research questions are most important to CKD stakeholders. Methods A modified Delphi technique with three survey rounds was used. The study sample included three panels (People with lived CKD experience, Researchers, and Clinicians) recruited through international patient and kidney research networks, kidney societies, and snowball sampling with email invitations. Survey rounds were distributed electronically through Research Electronic Data Capture. In round 1 (October 2021–May 2022), respondents contributed three important research questions regarding cognition in CKD (free text). After deduplication and qualitative synthesis, respondents ranked the importance of these questions on a nine-point Likert scale in round 2 (February–April 2023). Questions with mean and median ratings of .7 by at least two respondent panels or rated critically important by the lived experience panel were reranked in round 3 (August–September 2023) and assessed for consensus to identify the final list of priority research questions. Results Respondents (n5152) identified 125 and 44 discrete questions after rounds 1 and 2, respectively. The final shortlist included 27 questions in eight categories. The most critical research question identified was “What factors prevent cognitive impairment in people receiving dialysis?” Overall, respondents prioritized questions focusing on prevention and treatment of cognitive impairment. Scores between the panels were significantly different for 16 questions. Those with lived CKD experience prioritized quality of life, researchers emphasized developing interventions to mitigate cognitive impairment, and clinicians prioritized the effect of CKD treatment on cognitive impairment. Conclusions Through an established consensus methodology involving key stakeholder groups, we identified 27 critical research questions about cognition in CKD. These questions should guide future study design and outcome selection.
Identifying Research Priorities for Cognition in CKD A Delphi Study
Manfredini F.;
2025
Abstract
Background Cognition is a research priority for people living with CKD, but identification of critical research questions is lacking. This study aimed to determine which cognition-related research questions are most important to CKD stakeholders. Methods A modified Delphi technique with three survey rounds was used. The study sample included three panels (People with lived CKD experience, Researchers, and Clinicians) recruited through international patient and kidney research networks, kidney societies, and snowball sampling with email invitations. Survey rounds were distributed electronically through Research Electronic Data Capture. In round 1 (October 2021–May 2022), respondents contributed three important research questions regarding cognition in CKD (free text). After deduplication and qualitative synthesis, respondents ranked the importance of these questions on a nine-point Likert scale in round 2 (February–April 2023). Questions with mean and median ratings of .7 by at least two respondent panels or rated critically important by the lived experience panel were reranked in round 3 (August–September 2023) and assessed for consensus to identify the final list of priority research questions. Results Respondents (n5152) identified 125 and 44 discrete questions after rounds 1 and 2, respectively. The final shortlist included 27 questions in eight categories. The most critical research question identified was “What factors prevent cognitive impairment in people receiving dialysis?” Overall, respondents prioritized questions focusing on prevention and treatment of cognitive impairment. Scores between the panels were significantly different for 16 questions. Those with lived CKD experience prioritized quality of life, researchers emphasized developing interventions to mitigate cognitive impairment, and clinicians prioritized the effect of CKD treatment on cognitive impairment. Conclusions Through an established consensus methodology involving key stakeholder groups, we identified 27 critical research questions about cognition in CKD. These questions should guide future study design and outcome selection.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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