Establishing and prioritizing research questions for the treatment of alopecia areata: The Alopecia Areata Priority Setting Partnership
Author
Macbeth, A. E.Tomlinson, J.
Messenger, A. G.
Moore-Millar, K.
Michaelides, C.
Shipman, A. R.
Kassim, J. M.
Brockley, J. R.
Szczecinska, W.
Farrant, P.
Robinson, R.
Rodgers, J.
Chambers, J.
Upadhyaya, S.
Harries, M. J.
Affiliation
Norfolk and Norwich University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust; Alopecia; Shipley; University of Sheffield, Royal Hallamshire Hospital; University of Strathclyde, Glasgow; Philip Kingsley Trichological Clinic, London; South Warwickshire University NHS Foundation Trust; St Mary's Hospital, Portsmouth; Cannock Chase Hospital; Solihull Hospital; Brighton and Sussex University Hospitals NHS Trust; Harrogate and District NHS Foundation Trust; Birmingham; The James Lind Alliance, Oxford; University of Manchester, Salford Royal NHS Foundation TrustPublication date
2017-04-16Subject
Dermatology
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Background: Alopecia areata (AA) is a common hair loss disorder that results in patchy to complete hair loss. Many uncertainties exist around the most effective treatments for this condition. Objectives: To identify uncertainties in AA management and treatment that are important to both service users (people with hair loss, carers and relatives) and healthcare professionals. Methods: An AA priority setting partnership was established between patients, their carers and relatives, and healthcare professionals to identify the most important uncertainties in AA. The methodology of the James Lind Alliance was followed to ensure a balanced, inclusive and transparent process. Results: In total, 2747 treatment uncertainties were submitted by 912 participants, of which 1012 uncertainties relating to AA (and variants) were analysed. Questions were combined into 'indicative uncertainties' following a structured format. A series of ranking exercises further reduced this list to a top 25 that were taken to a final prioritization workshop where the top 10 priorities were agreed. Conclusions: We present the top 10 research priorities for AA to guide researchers and funding bodies to support studies important to both patients and clinicians.Citation
Macbeth, A. E., Tomlinson, J., Messenger, A. G., Moore-Millar, K., Michaelides, C., Shipman, A. R., Kassim, J. M., Brockley, J. R., Szczecinska, W., Farrant, P., Robinson, R., Rodgers, J., Chambers, J., Upadhyaya, S., & Harries, M. J. (2017). Establishing and prioritizing research questions for the treatment of alopecia areata: The Alopecia Areata Priority Setting Partnership. The British Journal of Dermatology, 176(5), 1316–1320. https://doi.org/10.1111/bjd.15099Type
ArticlePMID
27696375Journal
British Journal of DermatologyPublisher
Oxford University Pressae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1111/bjd.15099