Prioritization of Outcomes in Efficacy and Effectiveness of Alcohol Brief Intervention Trials: International Multi-Stakeholder e-Delphi Consensus Study to Inform a Core Outcome Set

Gillian W Shorter, Nick Heather, Jeremy W Bray, Anne H Berman, Emma L Giles, Amy J O'Donnell, Carolina Barbosa, Mike Clarke, Aisha Holloway, Dorothy Newbury-Birch

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

24 Citations (Scopus)
140 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Outcomes used in alcohol brief intervention trials vary considerably. Achieving consensus about key outcomes can enhance evidence synthesis and improve healthcare guidelines. This international, e-Delphi study sought to prioritize outcomes for alcohol brief intervention trials as part of a larger program of work develop an alcohol brief intervention core outcome set.

METHOD: In total, 150 registrants from 19 countries, representing researchers, policymakers, and patients, participated in a two-round e-Delphi study. In Round 1, participants (n = 137) rated 86 outcomes, derived from a review of the literature and a patient and public involvement panel, by importance. In Round 2, participants (n = 114) received feedback on importance ratings for each outcome, and a reminder of their personal rating, before rating the outcomes for importance a second time. Seven additional outcomes suggested in Round 1 were added to the Round 2 questionnaire. We defined consensus a priori as 70% agreement across all stakeholder groups.

RESULTS: Seven consumption outcomes met inclusion criteria: typical frequency, typical quantity, frequency of heavy drinking, alcohol-related problems, weekly drinks, at-risk drinking, and combined consumption measures. Others meeting the threshold were alcohol-related injury, quality of life, readiness to change, and intervention fidelity.

CONCLUSIONS: This is the first international e-Delphi study to identify and prioritize outcomes for use in alcohol brief intervention trials. The use and reporting of outcomes in future alcohol brief intervention trials should improve evidence synthesis in systematic reviews and meta-analyses. Further work is required to refine these outcomes into a core outcome set that includes guidance for measurement of outcomes.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)299-309
Number of pages11
JournalJournal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs
Volume80
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 30 Jun 2019

Keywords

  • alcohol brief interventions
  • core outcome sets
  • comet initiative
  • minimum data standard
  • hazardous drinking
  • harmful drinking
  • alcohol drinking
  • alcohols

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