| Literature DB >> 19001484 |
Merrick Zwarenstein1, Shaun Treweek, Joel J Gagnier, Douglas G Altman, Sean Tunis, Brian Haynes, Andrew D Oxman, David Moher.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The CONSORT statement is intended to improve reporting of randomised controlled trials and focuses on minimising the risk of bias (internal validity). The applicability of a trial's results (generalisability or external validity) is also important, particularly for pragmatic trials. A pragmatic trial (a term first used in 1967 by Schwartz and Lellouch) can be broadly defined as a randomised controlled trial whose purpose is to inform decisions about practice. This extension of the CONSORT statement is intended to improve the reporting of such trials and focuses on applicability. Methods At two, two-day meetings held in Toronto in 2005 and 2008, we reviewed the CONSORT statement and its extensions, the literature on pragmatic trials and applicability, and our experiences in conducting pragmatic trials. Recommendations We recommend extending eight CONSORT checklist items for reporting of pragmatic trials: the background, participants, interventions, outcomes, sample size, blinding, participant flow, and generalisability of the findings. These extensions are presented, along with illustrative examples of reporting, and an explanation of each extension. Adherence to these reporting criteria will make it easier for decision makers to judge how applicable the results of randomised controlled trials are to their own conditions. Empirical studies are needed to ascertain the usefulness and comprehensiveness of these CONSORT checklist item extensions. In the meantime we recommend that those who support, conduct, and report pragmatic trials should use this extension of the CONSORT statement to facilitate the use of trial results in decisions about health care.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2008 PMID: 19001484 PMCID: PMC3266844 DOI: 10.1136/bmj.a2390
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ ISSN: 0959-8138
Key differences between trials with explanatory and pragmatic attitudes, adapted from a table presented at the 2008 Society for Clinical Trials meeting by Marion Campbell, University of Aberdeen
| Question | Efficacy—can the intervention work? | Effectiveness—does the intervention work when used in normal practice? |
| Setting | Well resourced, “ideal” setting | Normal practice |
| Participants | Highly selected. Poorly adherent participants and those with conditions which might dilute the effect are often excluded | Little or no selection beyond the clinical indication of interest |
| Intervention | Strictly enforced and adherence is monitored closely | Applied flexibly as it would be in normal practice |
| Outcomes | Often short term surrogates or process measures | Directly relevant to participants, funders, communities, and healthcare practitioners |
| Relevance to practice | Indirect—little effort made to match design of trial to decision making needs of those in usual setting in which intervention will be implemented | Direct—trial is designed to meet needs of those making decisions about treatment options in setting in which intervention will be implemented |
Comparison of trial that was highly explanatory in attitude with trial that was highly pragmatic
| Highly explanatory attitude (NASCET7) | Highly pragmatic attitude (Thomas et al8) | |
|---|---|---|
| Question | Among patients with symptomatic 70-99% stenosis of carotid artery can carotid endarterectomy plus best medical therapy reduce outcomes of major stroke or death over next two years compared with best medical therapy alone? | Does a short course of acupuncture delivered by a qualified acupuncturist reduce pain in patients with persistent non-specific low-back pain? |
| Setting | Volunteer academic and specialist hospitals with multidisciplinary neurological-neurosurgical teams and high procedure volumes with low mortality in US and Canada | General practice and private acupuncture clinics in UK |
| Participants | Symptomatic patients stratified for carotid stenosis severity, with primary interest in severe carotid stenosis (high risk) group, who were thought to be most likely to respond to endarterectomy. Exclusions included mental incompetence and another illness likely to cause death within 5 years. Patients also were temporarily ineligible if they had any of seven transient medical conditions (eg, uncontrolled hypertension or diabetes) | Anyone aged 18-65 with non-specific low back pain of 4-52 weeks’ duration who were judged to be suitable by their general practitioner. There were some exclusion criteria, eg those with spinal disease |
| Intervention | Endarterectomy had to be carried out (rather than stenting or some other operation), but the surgeon was given leeway in how it was performed. Surgeons had to be approved by an expert panel, and were restricted to those who had performed at least 50 carotid endarterectomies in the past 24 months with a postoperative complication rate (stroke or death within 30 days) of less than 6%. Centre compliance with the study protocol was monitored, with the chief investigator visiting in the case of deficiencies | Acupuncturists determined the content and number of treatments according to patients’ needs |
| Outcomes | The primary outcome was time to ipsilateral stroke, the outcome most likely to be affected by carotid endarterectomy. Secondary outcomes: all strokes, major strokes, and mortality | Primary outcome was bodily pain as measured by SF-36. Secondary outcomes included use of pain killers and patient satisfaction |
| Relevance to practice | Indirect—patients and clinicians are highly selected and it isn’t clear how widely applicable the results are | Direct—general practitioners and patients can immediately use the trial results in their decision making |
Checklist of items for reporting pragmatic trials
| Section | Item | Standard CONSORT description | Extension for pragmatic trials |
|---|---|---|---|
| Title and abstract | 1 | How participants were allocated to interventions (eg, “random allocation,” “randomised,” or “randomly assigned”) | |
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| Background | 2 | Scientific background and explanation of rationale | Describe the health or health service problem that the intervention is intended to address and other interventions that may commonly be aimed at this problem |
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| Participants | 3 | Eligibility criteria for participants; settings and locations where the data were collected | Eligibility criteria should be explicitly framed to show the degree to which they include typical participants and/or, where applicable, typical providers (eg, nurses), institutions (eg, hospitals), communities (or localities eg, towns) and settings of care (eg, different healthcare financing systems) |
| Interventions | 4 | Precise details of the interventions intended for each group and how and when they were actually administered | Describe extra resources added to (or resources removed from) usual settings in order to implement intervention. Indicate if efforts were made to standardise the intervention or if the intervention and its delivery were allowed to vary between participants, practitioners, or study sites |
| Describe the comparator in similar detail to the intervention | |||
| Objectives | 5 | Specific objectives and hypotheses | |
| Outcomes | 6 | Clearly defined primary and secondary outcome measures and, when applicable, any methods used to enhance the quality of measurements (eg, multiple observations, training of assessors) | Explain why the chosen outcomes and, when relevant, the length of follow-up are considered important to those who will use the results of the trial |
| Sample size | 7 | How sample size was determined; explanation of any interim analyses and stopping rules when applicable | If calculated using the smallest difference considered important by the target decision maker audience (the minimally important difference) then report where this difference was obtained |
| Randomisation—sequence generation | 8 | Method used to generate the random allocation sequence, including details of any restriction (eg, blocking, stratification) | |
| Randomisation—allocation concealment | 9 | Method used to implement the random allocation sequence (eg, numbered containers or central telephone), clarifying whether the sequence was concealed until interventions were assigned | |
| Randomisation—implementation | 10 | Who generated the allocation sequence, who enrolled participants, and who assigned participants to their groups | |
| Blinding (masking) | 11 | Whether participants, those administering the interventions, and those assessing the outcomes were blinded to group assignment | If blinding was not done, or was not possible, explain why |
| Statistical methods | 12 | Statistical methods used to compare groups for primary outcomes; methods for additional analyses, such as subgroup analyses and adjusted analyses | |
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| Participant flow | 13 | Flow of participants through each stage (a diagram is strongly recommended)—specifically, for each group, report the numbers of participants randomly assigned, receiving intended treatment, completing the study protocol, and analysed for the primary outcome; describe deviations from planned study protocol, together with reasons | The number of participants or units approached to take part in the trial, the number which were eligible, and reasons for non-participation should be reported |
| Recruitment | 14 | Dates defining the periods of recruitment and follow-up | |
| Baseline data | 15 | Baseline demographic and clinical characteristics of each group | |
| Numbers analysed | 16 | Number of participants (denominator) in each group included in each analysis and whether analysis was by “intention-to-treat”; state the results in absolute numbers when feasible (eg, 10/20, not 50%) | |
| Outcomes and estimation | 17 | For each primary and secondary outcome, a summary of results for each group and the estimated effect size and its precision (eg, 95% CI) | |
| Ancillary analyses | 18 | Address multiplicity by reporting any other analyses performed, including subgroup analyses and adjusted analyses, indicating which are prespecified and which are exploratory | |
| Adverse events | 19 | All important adverse events or side effects in each intervention group | |
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| Interpretation | 20 | Interpretation of the results, taking into account study hypotheses, sources of potential bias or imprecision, and the dangers associated with multiplicity of analyses and outcomes | |
| Generalisability | 21 | Generalisability (external validity) of the trial findings | Describe key aspects of the setting which determined the trial results. Discuss possible differences in other settings where clinical traditions, health service organisation, staffing, or resources may vary from those of the trial |
| Overall evidence | 22 | General interpretation of the results in the context of current evidence |