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ABSTRACT: Introduction
Psychosocial and rehabilitation interventions are increasingly used to attenuate disability and improve health-related quality of life (HRQL) in chronic diseases, but are typically not available for patients with rare diseases. Conducting rigorous, adequately powered trials of these interventions for patients with rare diseases is difficult. The Scleroderma Patient-centered Intervention Network (SPIN) is an international collaboration of patient organisations, clinicians and researchers. The aim of SPIN is to develop a research infrastructure to test accessible, low-cost self-guided online interventions to reduce disability and improve HRQL for people living with the rare disease systemic sclerosis (SSc or scleroderma). Once tested, effective interventions will be made accessible through patient organisations partnering with SPIN.Methods and analysis
SPIN will employ the cohort multiple randomised controlled trial (cmRCT) design, in which patients consent to participate in a cohort for ongoing data collection. The aim is to recruit 1500-2000 patients from centres across the world within a period of 5 years (2013-2018). Eligible participants are persons ?18 years of age with a diagnosis of SSc. In addition to baseline medical data, participants will complete patient-reported outcome measures every 3 months. Upon enrolment in the cohort, patients will consent to be contacted in the future to participate in intervention research and to allow their data to be used for comparison purposes for interventions tested with other cohort participants. Once interventions are developed, patients from the cohort will be randomly selected and offered interventions as part of pragmatic RCTs. Outcomes from patients offered interventions will be compared with outcomes from trial-eligible patients who are not offered the interventions.Ethics and dissemination
The use of the cmRCT design, the development of self-guided online interventions and partnerships with patient organisations will allow SPIN to develop, rigourously test and effectively disseminate psychosocial and rehabilitation interventions for people with SSc.
SUBMITTER: Kwakkenbos L
PROVIDER: S-EPMC3740254 | biostudies-literature | 2013 Aug
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature
Kwakkenbos Linda L Jewett Lisa R LR Baron Murray M Bartlett Susan J SJ Furst Dan D Gottesman Karen K Khanna Dinesh D Malcarne Vanessa L VL Mayes Maureen D MD Mouthon Luc L Poiraudeau Serge S Sauve Maureen M Nielson Warren R WR Poole Janet L JL Assassi Shervin S Boutron Isabelle I Ells Carolyn C van den Ende Cornelia Hm CH Hudson Marie M Impens Ann A Körner Annett A Leite Catarina C Costa Maia Angela A Mendelson Cindy C Pope Janet J Steele Russell J RJ Suarez-Almazor Maria E ME Ahmed Sara S Coronado-Montoya Stephanie S Delisle Vanessa C VC Gholizadeh Shadi S Jang Yeona Y Levis Brooke B Milette Katherine K Mills Sarah D SD Razykov Ilya I Fox Rina S RS Thombs Brett D BD
BMJ open 20130807 8
<h4>Introduction</h4>Psychosocial and rehabilitation interventions are increasingly used to attenuate disability and improve health-related quality of life (HRQL) in chronic diseases, but are typically not available for patients with rare diseases. Conducting rigorous, adequately powered trials of these interventions for patients with rare diseases is difficult. The Scleroderma Patient-centered Intervention Network (SPIN) is an international collaboration of patient organisations, clinicians and ...[more]