‘Am I doing this right?’ Physician perceptions of the global assessment in clinical trials of systemic sclerosis
Hana Sabanovic, John D Pauling, Murray Baron, Laurence Clemens, Francesco del Galdo, Christopher P Denton, Oliver Distler, Tracy Frech, Anna Maria Hoffmann-Vold, Marie Hudson, Dinesh Khanna, Nancy Maltez, Thomas A Medsger, Peter A Merkel, Mandana Nikpour, Janet Pope, Virginia D Steen, Wendy Stevens, Elizabeth R Volkmann, Laura RossAbstract
Objectives
Physician global assessments (PhyGAs) are commonly performed in randomised controlled trials (RCTs) in systemic sclerosis (SSc). However, there is no single PhyGA applied across RCTs. We performed an exploratory qualitative study to explore perceptions of the PhyGA, its role in RCTs and how physicians perform their own assessment.
Methods
Participants with expertise in the clinical assessment and research of SSc were invited to participate. Participants were asked to define disease constructs of activity, damage, severity and overall health, how they perform a PhyGA and their perception of what a PhyGA should assess. Interview transcripts were analysed using deductive and inductive thematic analysis.
Results
Eighteen rheumatologists and one patient research partner were interviewed. Four major themes were identified: i) Physician uncertainty; ii) Variation in the conduct of a PhyGA; iii) Physician efforts to improve PhyGA consistency; iv) Utility of a PhyGA. Most participants felt a PhyGA should assess changeable aspects of SSc, commonly conceived of as disease activity. There was considerable uncertainty about the optimal method to identify disease activity. Participants were uncertain about their own methods of performing a PhyGA and variability in the application of the instrument was identified. Despite these limitations, physicians generally agreed the PhyGA is useful and can assess unquantifiable aspects of SSc.
Conclusion
We identified significant heterogeneity in the approach to PhyGAs in SSc. This variation was considered a limitation of the PhyGA. Overall, a PhyGA was viewed as a useful instrument that can aid the assessment of treatment response in RCTs.