A common language for Gulf War Illness (GWI) research studies: GWI common data elements.

TitleA common language for Gulf War Illness (GWI) research studies: GWI common data elements.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2022
AuthorsCohen DE, Sullivan KA, McNeil RB, McNeil RB, Ashford W, Bested A, Bunker J, Cheema A, Cohen DE, Cook D, Cournoyer J, Craddock T, Golier J, Hardie A, Helmer D, Lindheimer JB, Lloyd PJanulewicz, Kerr K, Krengel M, Nadkarni S, Nugent S, Paris B, Reinhard M, Rumm P, Schneiderman A, Sims KJ, Steele L, Turner M, Sullivan KA, Abdullah L, Abreu M, Abu-Donia M, Aenlle K, Arocho J, Balbin E, Baraniuk J, Block K, Block M, DeBeer B, Engdahl B, Filipov N, Fletcher MAnn, Kalasinsky V, Kokkotou E, Lidie K, Little D, Loging W, Morris M, Nathanson L, Nichols MDenise, Pasinetti G, Shungu D, Waziry P, VanLeeuwen J, Younger J
Corporate AuthorsGulf War Illness Common Data Elements Working Group:, Symptoms Assessment Working Group:, Systems Assessment Working Group:
JournalLife Sci
Volume290
Pagination119818
Date Published2022 Feb 01
ISSN1879-0631
KeywordsBiomedical Research, Common Data Elements, Humans, Information Dissemination, National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (U.S.), Persian Gulf Syndrome, United States, United States Department of Veterans Affairs, Veterans Health
Abstract

AIMS: The Gulf War Illness programs (GWI) of the United States Department of Veteran Affairs and the Department of Defense Congressionally Directed Medical Research Program collaborated with experts to develop Common Data Elements (CDEs) to standardize and systematically collect, analyze, and share data across the (GWI) research community.

MAIN METHODS: A collective working group of GWI advocates, Veterans, clinicians, and researchers convened to provide consensus on instruments, case report forms, and guidelines for GWI research. A similar initiative, supported by the National Institute of Neurologic Disorders and Stroke (NINDS) was completed for a comparative illness, Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (ME/CFS), and provided the foundation for this undertaking. The GWI working group divided into two sub-groups (symptoms and systems assessment). Both groups reviewed the applicability of instruments and forms recommended by the NINDS ME/CFS CDE to GWI research within specific domains and selected assessments of deployment exposures. The GWI CDE recommendations were finalized in March 2018 after soliciting public comments.

KEY FINDINGS: GWI CDE recommendations are organized in 12 domains that include instruments, case report forms, and guidelines. Recommendations were categorized as core (essential), supplemental-highly recommended (essential for specified conditions, study types, or designs), supplemental (commonly collected, but not required), and exploratory (reasonable to use, but require further validation). Recommendations will continually be updated as GWI research progresses.

SIGNIFICANCE: The GWI CDEs reflect the consensus recommendations of GWI research community stakeholders and will allow studies to standardize data collection, enhance data quality, and facilitate data sharing.

DOI10.1016/j.lfs.2021.119818
Alternate JournalLife Sci
PubMed ID34352259
Grant ListIK2 CX001679 / CX / CSRD VA / United States
P30 ES030285 / ES / NIEHS NIH HHS / United States
Related Institute: 
MRI Research Institute (MRIRI)

Weill Cornell Medicine
Department of Radiology
525 East 68th Street New York, NY 10065