TY - JOUR
T1 - Validation of the "United Registries for Clinical Assessment and Research" (UR-CARE), a European online registry for clinical care and research in Inflammatory Bowel Disease
AU - Burisch, Johan
AU - Gisbert, Javier P
AU - Siegmund, Britta
AU - Bettenworth, Dominik
AU - Bohn Thomsen, Sandra
AU - Cleynen, Isabelle
AU - Cremer, Anneline
AU - Ding, Nik John Sheng
AU - Furfaro, Federica
AU - Galanopoulos, Michail
AU - Grunert, Philip Christian
AU - Hanzel, Jurij
AU - Knezevic Ivanovski, Tamara
AU - Krustins, Eduards
AU - Noor, Nurulamin
AU - O'Morain, Neil
AU - Rodríguez-Lago, Iago
AU - Scharl, Michael
AU - Tua, Julia
AU - Uzzan, Mathieu
AU - Yassin, Nuha Ali
AU - Baert, Filip
AU - Langholz, Ebbe
PY - 2018/5/1
Y1 - 2018/5/1
N2 - Background: The "United Registries for Clinical Assessment and Research" (UR-CARE) database is an initiative of the European Crohn's and Colitis Organisation (ECCO) to facilitate daily patient care and research studies in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Herein, we sought to validate the database by using fictional case histories of patients with IBD that were to be entered by observers of varying experience in IBD.Methods: A total of 19 observers entered 5 patient case histories into the database. After six weeks, all observers entered the same case histories again. For each case history, 20 key variables were selected to calculate the accuracy for each observer. We assumed that the database was such that ≥ 90% of the entered data would be correct. Overall proportion of correctly entered data was calculated using a beta-binomial regression model to account for inter-observer variation and compared to the expected level of validity. Re-test reliability was assessed using McNemar's test.Results: For all case histories, the overall proportion of correctly entered items and their confidence intervals included the target of 90% [Case 1: 92% (88-94%); Case 2: 87% (83-91%); Case 3: 93% (90-95%); Case 4: 97% (94-99%); Case 5: 91% (87-93%)]. These numbers did not differ significantly from those found 6 weeks later (NcNemar's test p>0.05).Conclusion: The UR-CARE database appears to be feasible, valid and reliable as a tool and easy to use regardless of prior user experience and level of clinical IBD experience. UR-CARE has the potential to enhance future European collaborations regarding clinical research in IBD.
AB - Background: The "United Registries for Clinical Assessment and Research" (UR-CARE) database is an initiative of the European Crohn's and Colitis Organisation (ECCO) to facilitate daily patient care and research studies in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Herein, we sought to validate the database by using fictional case histories of patients with IBD that were to be entered by observers of varying experience in IBD.Methods: A total of 19 observers entered 5 patient case histories into the database. After six weeks, all observers entered the same case histories again. For each case history, 20 key variables were selected to calculate the accuracy for each observer. We assumed that the database was such that ≥ 90% of the entered data would be correct. Overall proportion of correctly entered data was calculated using a beta-binomial regression model to account for inter-observer variation and compared to the expected level of validity. Re-test reliability was assessed using McNemar's test.Results: For all case histories, the overall proportion of correctly entered items and their confidence intervals included the target of 90% [Case 1: 92% (88-94%); Case 2: 87% (83-91%); Case 3: 93% (90-95%); Case 4: 97% (94-99%); Case 5: 91% (87-93%)]. These numbers did not differ significantly from those found 6 weeks later (NcNemar's test p>0.05).Conclusion: The UR-CARE database appears to be feasible, valid and reliable as a tool and easy to use regardless of prior user experience and level of clinical IBD experience. UR-CARE has the potential to enhance future European collaborations regarding clinical research in IBD.
KW - Journal Article
U2 - 10.1093/ecco-jcc/jjy015
DO - 10.1093/ecco-jcc/jjy015
M3 - Journal article
C2 - 29415255
SN - 1873-9946
VL - 12
SP - 532
EP - 537
JO - Journal of Crohn's & colitis
JF - Journal of Crohn's & colitis
IS - 5
ER -