Introduction

The exact prevalence of childhood chronic kidney disease (CKD) and kidney failure is unknown, with an estimated prevalence of 55–60 per million age-related population [1]. Childhood-onset CKD/kidney failure is associated with lifelong and life-altering morbidities, with patients experiencing nausea, anorexia, delayed growth, fatigue, social isolation, impaired cognitive function, depression, and low self-esteem [2,3,4]. Children with kidney failure report significantly lower health-related quality of life compared to healthy children [5]. Identifying and addressing these morbidities is critical to improving quality of life for these children.

Healthcare providers commonly rely on quantitative laboratory, imaging, or histopathological measures of kidney health to assess disease progression and determine treatment options. However, trial data in adults suggests that important decisions, such as timing of dialysis initiation, should be guided by symptom severity rather than laboratory testing (e.g., estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR)) alone [6, 7].

Symptom burden has been identified as a top research priority by patient partners of the Canadians Seeking Solutions and Innovations to Overcome CKD (Can-SOLVE CKD) Strategic Patient Oriented Research (SPOR) network, aimed to improve care for patients living with CKD [8]. Discussions among patient partners, healthcare providers, and policy-makers led to priority themes for kidney research, where decreasing symptoms of advanced CKD was endorsed as a top priority by both adult and pediatric nephrology groups.

Symptoms of CKD/kidney failure are highly variable, with children experiencing a range of symptoms and severities at different times during their disease progression. Furthermore, the impact of the symptoms may vary for children with similar symptoms. Currently, there is no validated, disease-specific symptom assessment tool for children with CKD/kidney failure.

PROs are measurements based on direct patient reports about the status of their health and disease, without interpretation by healthcare providers or caregivers [9]. While emerging studies have shown that children with CKD want more involvement in treatment decision-making [10], a pediatric CKD-specific PRO is not currently available. A validated pediatric CKD PRO has the potential to significantly improve patient-provider communications and enable children and adolescents to become partners in their care. It may also guide clinical decision-making surrounding treatment initiation or disease management, standardize evaluation of existing and future treatments, and enable longitudinal assessment of quality of care.

The objective of this study was to identify symptoms most relevant to children with CKD and kidney failure and develop a PRO measure for assessing frequency and impact of these symptoms. We describe here the process of developing the PRO-Kid questionnaire.

Materials and methods

Study design and context

This was a cross-sectional cognitive interviewing study of children with CKD/kidney failure to develop and evaluate the patient- and caregiver-specific content and face validity of a novel symptom assessment tool: PRO-Kid questionnaire. The study was conducted at The Hospital for Sick Children (SickKids, Toronto, Ontario) and the Health Sciences Centre Children’s Hospital (Winnipeg, Manitoba).

Development of the PRO-Kid questionnaire

We identified the most relevant, pre-existing, validated, and published tools for use in children with CKD/kidney failure. Relevant tools were the Symptom Screening in Pediatrics (SSPedi, used in pediatric oncology [11]); the Memorial Symptom Assessment Scale (MSAS, with versions validated for children with cancer age 7–12 and 10–18 years [12, 13]); the Patient-Reported Outcome Measurement Information System (PROMIS®, for use across many illnesses [14]); and the Edmonton Symptom Assessment System-Revised: Renal (ESAS-r:R, for adults with kidney failure [15]). While the SSPedi is specific for use in children, and the MSAS is validated in patients 7 years and older, neither is disease-specific to CKD/kidney failure and may not capture symptoms important to children with CKD/kidney failure. PROMIS® also lacks the specificity required to delineate CKD/kidney failure-specific symptom burden, as it was not specifically designed for pediatric CKD/kidney failure. Furthermore, the PROMIS® is long and can be challenging to use as a bedside tool to document disease progression. Finally, the ESAS-r:R, while disease-specific, was not designed nor validated for use in children.

After careful review of the content and structure of these existing validated tools (i.e., the SSPedi, MSAS, PROMIS®, and ESAS-r:R), two team members (MMA and AD) developed an initial draft of the PRO-Kid questionnaire template, drawing on items included in the existing questionnaires which, in the opinion of the investigators, were relevant to a pediatric CKD population. This initial list of items was then iteratively revised through feedback and modifications from investigator and patient team members. Thirteen symptoms, capturing emotional, cognitive, and physical elements were identified as most relevant to children with CKD/kidney failure. Given the importance of understanding the burden of symptoms, both frequency and impact (i.e., how bothersome the symptom is in their everyday life) were included for assessment. A 5-point scale ranging from “not at all” to “always” was created to evaluate frequency, and “not at all” to “extremely bothered” for impact. Prior literature has shown the appropriateness of such scales for PRO tools in children at least 8 years old [16]. Finally, a recall period of 7 days was selected based on existing tools and consensus (AR, KW, MZ, SD, AD, MMA) that 7 days would capture the most immediate symptoms. A 1-month recall period has been reported to be too long, while fewer than 7 days may be too short to capture pertinent symptoms [17].

Proposed scoring system

Each item on the PRO-Kid questionnaire is rated on a 5-point scale for the dimensions of frequency and impact. Scores are summed to yield a component score for each of frequency and impact. Component scores are then summed to yield a total composite score. Higher scores indicate higher symptom burden. Assessment of this proposed scoring system should be evaluated through future research.

Participants

Patients (Patient Group) were included if they were age 8–18 years, diagnosed with CKD GFR category (G) 2–5 (eGFR < 90 ml/min/1.73 m2, determined by bedside Schwartz equation [18]), or kidney failure, on peritoneal or hemodialysis. Children > 7 were selected because they are able to complete self-report questionnaires [19]. Patients were excluded if they had an intellectual disability that affected their ability to complete the questionnaire or interview, were unable to speak or understand English, or had undergone kidney transplantation.

Parents and/or legal guardians of children with CKD/kidney failure were included in the Caregiver Group. They did not need to be parents or legal guardians of children enrolled in the Patient Group; however, child-parent dyads were permitted. Caregivers were excluded if they had an intellectual disability that affected their ability to complete the questionnaire or interview or were unable to speak or understand English.

Sampling strategy

Purposive sampling by the investigators at each site (AD, MMA) was used to ensure that participants encompassed the range of age, sex, and CKD stage representative of this population. To achieve this, investigators identified male and female children from their practice who spanned the ages eligible for inclusion (8–18 years), from stages 2–5 CKD including dialysis. Potential participants were approached to determine their interest in study participation during their routine visit to nephrology clinic.

We did not have a specific a priori sample size; cognitive interviewing continued until information saturation was reached (i.e., no new information was being generated from interviews) [20].

Data collection methods

Data elements

Demographic information pertaining to the Patient Group was collected via self-report or caregiver report. For the Caregiver Group, demographic and clinical information was collected on the child with CKD/kidney failure from the caregiver participant. Demographic information included sex, age, ethnicity, primary diagnosis, grade level, location in a rural vs. urban setting, distance from home to treatment center, and highest level of education of the child’s primary caregiver. Clinical information pertaining to the Patient Group was obtained from the patient’s electronic medical record and included need for G-tube, intermittent bladder catheterizations, eGFR, CKD stage based on eGFR [18], and dialysis modality. All data were entered into a password-protected Research Electronic Data Capture (REDCap [21]) database at SickKids.

Cognitive interviews

Cognitive interviews were used to assess the content and face validity of the PRO-Kid questionnaire and to make iterative modifications. Cognitive interviewing is an established technique to evaluate PRO questionnaires, by assessing the respondent’s understanding of questions or words [20]. An experienced clinical research manager (NAJ, MSc) with no prior relationship to the study participants received specialized training by Survey Research Group (SRG), a program of the Public Health Institute (Sacramento, California; https://www.phi.org/). To maintain consistency, a single interviewer conducted all interviews at both sites. Participants were informed that the facilitator was a researcher involved in the study but had no personal motivations for engaging in the research. Participants were also informed that the purpose of the interviews was to understand the symptoms experienced by patients with CKD/kidney failure in order to develop a tool to assess the burden of symptoms in a clinical setting. A research assistant from each site participated in the interviews as a field note recorder.

All interviews were conducted virtually using the Microsoft Teams online video communications platform. Participants were provided with a link to join the meeting, along with instructions on how to use the program. Participants without access to a computer or internet were able to schedule their interviews at their regular hospital appointment. Interviews of children and their caregivers were conducted separately to mitigate biasing of responses. However, caregivers were permitted to stay in the room while children were interviewed. Each participant was interviewed once during a 30–min session, with no repeat interviews.

Interviews began with open-ended questions, to probe how living with CKD affects the child. Participants were also asked to comment on the symptoms that would be most relevant to include in a symptom assessment questionnaire, based on their own experience. Children and caregivers were then asked to electronically complete the PRO-Kid questionnaire, using the survey function through REDCap. The interviewer guided participants if needed as they completed the questionnaire, including providing a pre-defined set of synonyms to clarify the meaning of any words that the participant did not understand (e.g., “bug” to describe symptoms that were “bothersome”) or reading questions aloud to participants verbatim.

After completing the questionnaire, participants completed another short interview, where the interviewer assessed the ease of completion of the questionnaire, evaluated understandability of each item using cognitive probing, and assessed the face and content validity of each item on the questionnaire. Participants were also asked to comment on their understanding of the rating scales and timeline (i.e., “in the past week”) used in the questionnaire. Participants were asked about each item’s importance and whether the symptom bothers them enough to ask about it regularly. Finally, participants were asked whether any symptoms were missing from the questionnaire that they felt should be included and whether there were any items that they felt could be removed from the questionnaire.

All interviews were audio recorded. Following each interview, information from the audio recordings was used to augment and amend the field notes for accuracy and completeness. Transcripts of the interviews were not provided to participants for comment and/or correction.

Data processing and analysis

Data was coded and thematic content analysis conducted (NAJ) using NVivo (https://qsrinternational.com/nvivo). The study team (NAJ, AD, MMA, AR, SD, KW, MZ) reviewed responses from the interviews on an ongoing basis as participants completed the study, to determine whether the questionnaire warranted modification. Results were reviewed after the first 10 participants and again after 15 and 24 participants had been interviewed. Standards for decision-making regarding questionnaire item modification were determined a priori via consensus from the study team. Items were assessed as requiring modification if at least 30% of participants found an item “hard” or “very hard” to understand or at least 30% had interviewer ratings of “incorrect” for their understandability. Any symptoms identified as not bothersome enough to ask about regularly by at least 70% were removed. Any new symptoms endorsed by at least 70% were added to subsequent versions of the questionnaire in order to obtain other participants’ perspectives on whether or not the item was relevant and important. Participants did not provide feedback on the findings; however, parent partners reviewed and provided feedback on the overall study results.

Statistical analysis

Patient and caregiver characteristics were summarized as mean and standard deviation (SD) for continuous variables, or frequencies and percentages for categorical variables. Symptom clusters were identified as symptoms that patients often endorsed together. A hierarchical analysis was performed to understand the symptoms most frequently endorsed in each of three domains: physical, emotional, and cognitive. These domains were selected a priori by the research team (AR, KW, SD, MZ, AD, MMA) to ensure that the final questionnaire would cover the full range of symptoms experienced by patients. This analysis was conducted prior to participants viewing the PRO-Kid questionnaire and was based solely on the open-ended portion of each interview.

Results

Sample characteristics

A total of 11 children and 13 caregivers were enrolled. Nine child-caregiver dyads were from the same family. Four individual parents and two individual children also participated. Demographic data on all participating children is summarized in Table 1.

Table 1 Demographic data for children with CKD/kidney failure

PRO-Kid questionnaire data was missing for one child, who did not save their questionnaire results prior to exiting the survey; however, interview data was still obtained. On average, participants took 5 min to complete the questionnaire and did not require any assistance from the interviewer (Fig. 1).

Fig. 1
figure 1

Final PRO-Kid questionnaire

Cluster identification from cognitive interviews

Prior to participants viewing the questionnaire, open-ended feedback from the cognitive interviews demonstrated symptoms endorsed in the three domains established a priori: emotional, physical, and cognitive. Emotional symptoms included sadness/depression, anxiety, frustration, and feeling left out. Physical symptoms included concerns over physical size (i.e., short stature), swelling, temperature, shortness of breath, weakness, headache, nausea/vomiting, constipation, itching, kidney pain, stomach ache, not wanting to eat, and changes in taste of food. Problems with sleep were also described by participants in terms of tiredness/exhaustion, waking up to urinate, feeling tired, or feeling restless. Cognitive symptoms included lack of ability to focus and issues with school. Frequency of symptom endorsement at the first interim assessment (after 10 participants had been interviewed) is described in Table 2.

Table 2 Symptom endorsement by the first 10 patients and caregivers

A variety of symptom clusters were revealed (Fig. 2). For example, we noticed that participants who endorsed feeling tired as a frequent and/or burdensome symptom were also likely to report waking up to urinate and feeling restless during the daytime. Similarly, feelings of sadness, anxiety, and frustration were often clustered together.

Fig. 2
figure 2

Concept map of symptom clusters arising from cognitive interviews

Hierarchical analysis

Results of the hierarchical analysis are outlined in Fig. 3. The most common emotional symptoms were feeling left out and sadness/depression. The most common cognitive symptom identified was a lack of focus. The most common physical symptoms elucidated were tiredness/exhaustion, nausea, not wanting to eat, vomiting, and changes in taste of food.

Fig. 3
figure 3

Hierarchical map of themes arising from cognitive interviews. Size of each component box represents the relative frequency with which each symptom was described during the cognitive interviews

Addition of questionnaire items

Feeling left out was not initially included in our draft PRO-Kid questionnaire but was consistently endorsed by the majority of participants during the open-ended feedback portion of the interviews, at the time of the first interim analysis (8/10 participants). Therefore, this item was added to the subsequent iterations of the questionnaire, after the first 10 interviews were completed and analyzed.

After participants had viewed the questionnaire, specific questions were asked regarding the items, wording, and format. Problems with thinking or concentrating was the only item that consistently required clarification by the interviewer to help participants understand what was meant. Accordingly, the qualifier of “not able to focus” was added to subsequent iterations of the questionnaire. Once this qualifier was added, no further questions were asked by participants.

None of the items included on the questionnaire were endorsed as being unnecessary or irrelevant by any participant. Therefore, none of the items were removed. No participants expressed issues with the terms used to describe each item, the scale used, or the recall period. The final questionnaire is shown in Fig. 1.

Discussion

PRO measures are increasingly recognized as an essential component of quality care delivery for patients with chronic disease. While symptoms can be subjective, PRO instruments quantitatively measure patient perspectives of health and disease, which can be incorporated into both clinical care and research [9]. This study represents a first step toward bridging this critical patient-centered healthcare gap, through the development of a PRO tool specifically for children and adolescents with CKD/kidney failure that can be used with ease in the clinical setting.

Important clinical decisions such as timing of initiation of kidney replacement therapy are guided by the presence and severity of uremic symptoms [22]. Randomized trials in adults show no benefit to early dialysis initiation based on estimated kidney function, and that symptoms should guide this decision [7, 23]. A recent cross-sectional survey of Canadian Pediatric Nephrologists by our research group showed significant practice variation regarding timing of dialysis initiation [22], a reflection of the subjectivity of symptoms in the clinical setting and lack of objective symptom assessment tools for this population. In other clinical areas, including oncology, evidence-based guidelines have been developed to manage symptoms identified by PROs [24]. There exists no such validated, disease-specific symptom assessment tool for children with CKD/kidney failure.

Our final 14-item questionnaire represents the spectrum of physical, cognitive, and emotional symptoms endorsed most frequently by our pediatric CKD/kidney failure study cohort, covering the full range of symptoms that fall within the different domains of illness. The use of open-ended cognitive interviewing techniques in conjunction with specific feedback on each iteration of the PRO-Kid questionnaire lend credence to the fact that all items thought to be important by patients and caregivers were included in the final version of the questionnaire. This methodology also supports the notion that there were no extraneous items included that were unnecessary to describe the symptom burden experienced by these children.

Participants were able to complete the final version of the questionnaire with ease, in 5 min or less, and without assistance from the interviewer or study staff, further supporting the feasibility of administration of this questionnaire clinically. For a tool designed for use in a busy clinical setting with multiple competing priorities, the simplicity with which the PRO-Kid questionnaire can be administered and completed is of critical importance.

A variety of PROs are available for use in other clinical contexts; however, none of the existing PROs were specifically developed for use in the pediatric CKD and kidney failure population. The present study garnered elements from pediatric-specific oncology tools [11,12,13], including the type of symptoms most relevant to children with chronic illness, age-appropriate language, and scales used to assess severity and impact of disease, and period of symptom recall.

Prior to study initiation, our group felt that some items on the ESAS-r:R [15]—a validated PRO that reliably assesses symptom changes longitudinally in adult hemodialysis patients [25]—may be irrelevant to children. However, there were no items deemed to be irrelevant by our participants. In spite of this, the language used in the ESAS-r:R may be difficult for some children to understand, and the 10-point scale is also potentially problematic for young children.

Furthermore, few of the existing measures assessed a range of symptom attributes (i.e., frequency and impact) [26]. A valid, symptom-focused instrument with a short recall period and assessment of multiple symptom attributes is therefore critical to improve symptom assessment among patients with kidney failure [26].

Recent literature has pointed to the importance of assessing life participation in children with CKD [27]. Life participation is a term meant to capture the full range of daily activities in which an individual may be engaged [28]. In our study, children and caregivers consistently endorsed feeling left out as a critical symptom to include in the PRO-Kid tool. The inclusion of this item in our tool fills a previously unmet need among all other published tools for use in this population [27].

As a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, our study was pivoted to an entirely virtual platform. This included the transition from a paper-based questionnaire to an electronic questionnaire delivered through REDCap. Consequently, a limitation of this study is that the PRO-Kid tool was assessed solely through this electronic platform and was not assessed using a paper form. This may ultimately prove to be more convenient in a clinical setting, capturing scores in electronic medical records. Furthermore, all interactions with the interviewer occurred through videoconferencing rather than in-person, which may have hindered the ability of the research team to pick up on subtle non-verbal cues from participants about their symptom burden.

Conclusion

Future research should seek to validate the PRO-Kid questionnaire in a larger cohort of pediatric patients with CKD and kidney failure. The PRO-Kid questionnaire should serve as a novel clinical and research tool and has the potential to significantly improve clinical care for children living with CKD.