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For the TIG Product Impact on Individual Health use case, the following assumptions are common to the FT and QS domains as well as the Clinical Classifications use case of the RS domain. 

All standard QRS supplement development is coordinated with the CDISC SDS QRS Subteam as the governing body. The process involves drafting the controlled terminology and defining instrument-specific standardized values for qualifier, timing, and result variables to populate the SDTMIG FT, QS, and RS domains. These supplements are developed based on user demand and therapeutic area standards development needs. Sponsors should always consult the CDISC website to review the terminology and supplements prior to modeling any QRS instrument.

    1. Sponsors may participate and/or request the development of additional QRS supplements and terminology through the CDISC SDS QRS subteam and the Controlled Terminology QRS subteam.
      1. Once generated, the QRS supplement is posted on the CDISC website (https://www.cdisc.org/standards/foundational/qrs).
      2. Sponsors should always consult the published QRS supplements for guidance on submitting derived information in SDTMIG-based domains.


NumRecord or Variable PopulationImplementation
1 Instrument Name

The name of an instrument is represented --CAT and may be either abbreviations or longer names. Applicants will reference CDISC Controlled Terminology: 

  • The QRS Naming Rules for --CAT, --TEST, and --TESTCD and the list of QRS instruments that have published CDISC Controlled Terminology with NCI/EVS are available at: https://www.cdisc.org/standards/terminology/controlled-terminology.
  • Refer to the following CDISC Controlled Terminology codelists for QRS instrument --CAT terminology:
    • Category of Clinical Classification
    • Category of Functional Test
    • Category of Questionnaire
  • QRS --TESTCD/--TEST terminology codelists are listed separately by instrument name.       
2Subcategories for Groups of Items/Questions

Names of subcategories for groups of items/questions are described under the --SCAT variable. --SCAT values are not included in the CDISC Controlled Terminology system but rather controlled as described in the QRS supplements in which they are used.

3Numeric Standardized Responses

When numeric standardized responses assigned to text responses (e.g., mild, moderate, severe being 1, 2, 3) are documented in the QRS CRF instructions, a user manual, a website specific to the QRS instrument, or another reference document, the numeric responses will be represented in the tabulation dataset. This is irrespective of data collection (e.g., when a QRS CRF does not include numeric standardized responses for collected text).

4Derived Records for Results

Applicants will consult published QRS supplements for guidance on submitting derived information in a QRS domain. Derived variable results in QRS are usually considered captured data. If applicants operationally derive variable results in a new record, then this will be represented in --DRVFL.

The following rules apply for “total”-type scores in QRS datasets.

  • QRS subtotal, total, etc. scores listed on the CRF are considered captured data and are included in the instrument’s controlled terminology.
  • QRS subtotal, total, etc. scores not listed on the CRF but documented in an associated instrument manual or reference paper are considered captured data and are included in the instrument’s controlled terminology.
  • QRS subtotal, total, etc. scores not listed on the CRF, but known to be included in eData by applicants are considered captured data and are included in the instrument’s controlled terminology. The QRS instrument’s controlled terminology is considered extensible for this case and the subtotal or total score should be requested to be added.
    • Any imputations/calculations done to numeric “standardized responses” to produce the total score via transforming numeric “standardized responses” are done as part of analysis.
  • The QRS instrument subtotal or total score, which is the sum of the numeric responses for an instrument, is populated in --ORRES, --STRESC, and --STRESN. It is considered a captured subtotal or total score without any knowledge of the applicant data management processes related to the score.
    • If operationally derived by the applicant, it is the sponsor's responsibility to set the --DRVFL flag based on their eCRF process to derive subtotal and total scores. An investigator-derived score written on a CRF will be considered a captured score and not flagged. When subtotal and total scores are derived by the applicant, the derived flag (--DRVFL) is set to "Y". However, when the subtotal and total scores are received from a central provider or vendor, the value would go into --ORRES and --DRVFL would be null.
5Multiple Repeats of a Question

The variable --REPNUM variable is populated when there are multiple repeats of the same question. When records are related to the first trial of the question, the variable --REPNUM should be set to "1". When records are related to the second trial of the same question, --REPNUM should be set to "2", and so forth.

6Instrument Version Number

The actual version number of an instrument is represented in the --CAT value as designated by the QRS Terminology Team. If it is determined that this is not the case for an instrument:

  • Notify the QRS Terminology Team that the instrument has a specific or multiple version numbers. This team will assist in providing an resolution on how the situation will be handled.
  • Consider the use of the --GRPID variable to indicate the instrument's version number prior to a decision by the QRS Terminology Team.
  • The applicant is expected to provide information about the version used for each QRS instrument in the metadata (using the Comments column in the Define-XML document). This could be provided as value-level metadata for --CAT.
  • The sponsor is expected to provide information about the scoring rules in the metadata.
7

If the variable --TEST is represented with verbatim text >40 characters, represent the abbreviated meaningful text in --TEST within 40 characters and describe the full text of the item in the study metadata. If the verbatim item response (e.g., --QSORRES) is >200 characters, represent the abbreviated meaningful text in QSORRES within the 200 characters and describe the full text in the study metadata; see Section 4 of the QRS supplement. See Section 4.5.3, Text Strings that Exceed the Maximum Length for General Observation-class Domain Variables, for further information.

    1. The instrument’s annotated CRF can also be used as a reference for the full text in both of these situations.
8Evaluator

If needed, evaluators may be represented in SUPP-- datasets and variables --EVAL and --EVALID will not be used. 

9Allowable Variables

Any identifiers, timing variables, or findings general observation class qualifiers may be added to a QRS domain, but the following qualifiers would generally not be used: --POS, --BODSYS, --ORNRLO, --ORNRHI, --STNRLO, --STNRHI, --STRNC, --NRIND, --XFN, --LOINC, --SPEC, --SPCCND, --LOC, --FAST, --TOX, --TOXGR, --SEV.

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