TY - JOUR
T1 - Prioritization of outcome measures in regional anesthesia research
AU - El-Boghdadly, Kariem
AU - Narouze, Samer
AU - Ayad, Amany Ezzat
AU - Memtsoudis, Stavros G.
AU - Schreiber, Kristin L.
AU - Myles, Paul S.
AU - Radcliffe, Gillian
AU - Rivett, Kate
AU - Princova, Zuzana
AU - Adhikary, Sanjib
AU - Albrecht, Eric
AU - Bowness, James
AU - Candido, Kenneth
AU - Coppens, Steve
AU - Gupta, Rajnish K.
AU - Hanna, Marie
AU - Johnson, Rebecca L.
AU - Kandil, Enas
AU - Kohan, Lynn
AU - Kopp, Sandra
AU - Lobo, Clara
AU - Moka, Eleni
AU - Muse, Iyabo O.
AU - Nsiri, Afak
AU - Pasternak, Jeffrey J.
AU - Pino, Carlos
AU - Singh, Vinita
AU - Theron, Andre
AU - Tolba, Reda
AU - Van de Putte, Peter B.C.
AU - Wolmarans, Morné
AU - Elkassabany, Nabil M.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© American Society of Regional Anesthesia & Pain Medicine 2025. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ Group.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Background Outcome selection in regional anesthesia and acute pain research is inconsistent, often lacking patient-centered priorities and validated instruments. We aimed to prioritize key outcomes and propose suitable measurement tools to improve the quality, consistency, and relevance of regional anesthesia research. Methods We conducted a multiround Delphi process, including two electronic voting rounds, a multiday in-person meeting, and a patient panel. Experts and patients evaluated existing and proposed outcomes for importance, validity, and relevance. Outcomes reaching ≥70% agreement were prioritized, and appropriate measurement instruments were identified. Results Thirty-two experts and three patients participated. Across three Delphi rounds, 10 outcomes were prioritized for future regional anesthesia research: seven efficacy outcomes (pain scores; opioid consumption; Brief Pain Inventory; functional outcomes; cognitive function; length of stay; block duration); two multidimensional outcomes (quality of recovery and development of a regional anesthesia-specific quality-of-recovery instrument); one safety outcome (chronic postsurgical pain). Patients prioritized cognitive recovery, function, chronic pain, and pain scores. Conclusions This consensus-based, patient-centered framework defines the core priorities for future regional anesthesia and acute pain research. Future work should focus on developing and validating a regional anesthesia-specific quality-of-recovery instrument, refining multidimensional measures such as functional recovery, cognitive outcomes, and the Brief Pain Inventory, and standardizing the reporting of chronic pain and opioid-related outcomes. Adoption of these priorities will enhance methodological consistency, comparability, and patient relevance in future clinical trials.
AB - Background Outcome selection in regional anesthesia and acute pain research is inconsistent, often lacking patient-centered priorities and validated instruments. We aimed to prioritize key outcomes and propose suitable measurement tools to improve the quality, consistency, and relevance of regional anesthesia research. Methods We conducted a multiround Delphi process, including two electronic voting rounds, a multiday in-person meeting, and a patient panel. Experts and patients evaluated existing and proposed outcomes for importance, validity, and relevance. Outcomes reaching ≥70% agreement were prioritized, and appropriate measurement instruments were identified. Results Thirty-two experts and three patients participated. Across three Delphi rounds, 10 outcomes were prioritized for future regional anesthesia research: seven efficacy outcomes (pain scores; opioid consumption; Brief Pain Inventory; functional outcomes; cognitive function; length of stay; block duration); two multidimensional outcomes (quality of recovery and development of a regional anesthesia-specific quality-of-recovery instrument); one safety outcome (chronic postsurgical pain). Patients prioritized cognitive recovery, function, chronic pain, and pain scores. Conclusions This consensus-based, patient-centered framework defines the core priorities for future regional anesthesia and acute pain research. Future work should focus on developing and validating a regional anesthesia-specific quality-of-recovery instrument, refining multidimensional measures such as functional recovery, cognitive outcomes, and the Brief Pain Inventory, and standardizing the reporting of chronic pain and opioid-related outcomes. Adoption of these priorities will enhance methodological consistency, comparability, and patient relevance in future clinical trials.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105023999806
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105023999806#tab=citedBy
U2 - 10.1136/rapm-2025-107087
DO - 10.1136/rapm-2025-107087
M3 - Article
C2 - 41151978
AN - SCOPUS:105023999806
SN - 1098-7339
JO - Regional Anesthesia and Pain Medicine
JF - Regional Anesthesia and Pain Medicine
M1 - rapm-2025-107087
ER -