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Ayer — Octubre 2nd 2025Tus fuentes RSS

Australian research priorities for inherited retinal diseases: a James Lind Alliance priority setting partnership

Por: Robertson · E. G. · Hetherington · K. · Prain · M. · Ma · A. · Ayton · L. N. · Jamieson · R. V. · Shepard · E. · Boyd · L. · Hall · J. · Boyd · R. · Karandrews · S. · Feller · H. · Simunovic · M. P. · Grigg · J. R. · Yamamoto · K. · Wakefield · C. E. · Gonzalez-Cordero · A.
Objectives

Inherited retinal diseases (IRDs) are a broad range of diseases associated with abnormalities/degeneration of retinal cells. We aimed to identify the top 10 Australian research priorities for IRDs to ultimately facilitate more meaningful and potentially cost-effective research.

Design

We conducted a James Lind Alliance priority setting partnership that involved two Australian-wide surveys and online workshops.

Setting

Australia-wide.

Participants

Individuals aged 16 years or older were eligible to participate if they had an IRD, were caregivers of an individual with an IRD or were health professionals providing care to this community.

Outcome measure

In Survey 1, we gathered participants’ unanswered questions about IRDs. We grouped these into summary questions and undertook a literature review to verify if they were truly unanswered (ie, evidence uncertainties). In Survey 2, participants voted for the uncertainties that they considered a priority. Top-ranked uncertainties progressed for discussion and final prioritisation in two workshops.

Results

In Survey 1, we collected 223 questions from 69 participants. We grouped these into 42 summary questions and confirmed 41 as evidence uncertainties. In Survey 2, 151 participants voted, with the 16 uncertainties progressing to final prioritisation. The top 10 priorities, set by the 24 workshop participants, represented (1) treatment/cure; (2) symptoms and disease progression; (3) psychosocial well-being and (4) health service delivery. The #1 priority was for treatment to prevent, slow down or stop vision loss, followed by the #2 priority to address the psychological impact of having an IRD.

Conclusion

The top 10 research priorities highlight the need for IRD research that takes a whole-person, systems approach. Collaborations to progress priorities will accelerate the translation of research into real-world benefits.

AnteayerTus fuentes RSS

Rationale and design of 'discontinuing statins in multimorbid older adults without cardiovascular disease (STREAM): study protocol of a randomised non-inferiority clinical trial

Por: Aebi · P. S. · Adam · L. · Haller · M. · Bardoczi · J. B. · Gencer · B. · Bonnet · F. · Beer · J.-H. · Carballo · S. · Christ-Crain · M. · Feller · M. · Gabutti · L. · Haynes · A. G. · Moutzouri · E. · Chocano-Bedoya · P. O. · Bassetti · S. · Escher · R. · Egger · M. · Poortvliet · R. K.
Introduction

Statins are among the most widely used drugs. While they are effective for primary and secondary prevention of cardiovascular (CV) disease in middle-aged subjects, their benefits for prevention in older adults (aged ≥70 years) without CV disease are uncertain, particularly for those with multimorbidity. Statin side effects and drug interactions are common in older patients and may negatively impact quality of life. To date, the only randomised controlled trial (RCT) investigating statin discontinuation in older adults has demonstrated no difference in survival but did note a small improvement in quality of life for those who discontinued statins. However, this trial exclusively enrolled patients with a life expectancy

Methods and analysis

This study is a multicentre, randomised, non-inferiority trial conducted in both inpatient and outpatient settings in Switzerland, France and the Netherlands, targeting patients using statins for primary prevention. 1800 participants are randomly assigned 1:1 to either discontinue (intervention arm) or continue (control arm) statin therapy. The primary objective is to compare the primary composite endpoint of major CV events (non-fatal myocardial infarction or non-fatal ischaemic stroke) and all-cause death between the control and intervention groups over a follow-up duration of up to 48 months. We hypothesise that discontinuing statins does not result in shorter event-free survival, with a non-inferiority margin set at 5.2 weeks over a 2-year observation period. Secondary objectives are to compare patient-centred outcomes (health-related quality of life, muscle pain symptoms, falls and sarcopenia) and all-cause death, non-CV death, major CV events and coronary and peripheral artery revascularisation. The study is open-labelled, with blinded outcome adjudication of the primary endpoints.

Ethics and dissemination

The trial protocol has received approval from the local ethics committees in Switzerland, France and the Netherlands. Results will be published in a peer-reviewed journal.

Trial registration number

Clinicaltrials.gov: NCT05178420; BASEC (Swiss Ethics Commission): 2021-01513; FOPH (Swiss national portal): SNCTP000005172; Netherlands Trial Register: NL83907.058.23; France Trial Register: 22.04747.000158– IDRCB 2022-A02481-42.

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