| Literature DB >> 21943406 |
Martine C de Vries1, Mirjam Houtlosser, Jan M Wit, Dirk P Engberts, Dorine Bresters, Gertjan J L Kaspers, Evert van Leeuwen.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Pediatric oncology has a strong research culture. Most pediatric oncologists are investigators, involved in clinical care as well as research. As a result, a remarkable proportion of children with cancer enrolls in a trial during treatment. This paper discusses the ethical consequences of the unprecedented integration of research and care in pediatric oncology from the perspective of parents and physicians.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21943406 PMCID: PMC3229434 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6939-12-18
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Ethics ISSN: 1472-6939 Impact factor: 2.652
Description of different types of research in pediatric oncology
| Type of research | Description |
|---|---|
| Randomized Controlled Trials (RCT) | The random allocation of different treatments to patient-subjects. The best available treatment is compared to one or more regimens that are expected to either improve overall survival or lessen toxicity with equivalence of outcome. Most 'front-line' pediatric cancer studies are phase III randomized controlled trials. |
| Clinical Controlled Trial (CCT) | Evaluation of singe-arm treatment protocols by clinical and epidemiological data collection and systematic analysis of disease characteristics, actual treatment, treatment results and side-effects. Current treatment results are compared to historical results and to results obtained by other research groups. |
| Laboratory research using tissue from patients | Unraveling the pathogenesis of childhood cancers, characterization of tumor biology, detection of new treatment targets and identification of novel prognostic factors. For this purpose left over blood, bone marrow or cerebrospinal fluid is used, or additional biological specimens are taken at defined moments during treatment. In fact, permission is often asked for storage of biological materials in a cell bank for future, as yet not specified research. |
Summary of study characteristics
| Author & Date [reference] | Setting | Methodology | Sample characteristics |
|---|---|---|---|
| Vries e.a. 2010 [ | Pediatric oncology | - Retrospective interviews | Physicians |
| Kodish e.a. 2004 [ | Pediatric oncology | - Observations | Parents |
| Wiley e.a. 1999 [ | Pediatric oncology | - Questionnaire (retrospective) | Parents |
| Stevens e.a. 2002 [ | Pediatric oncology | - Retrospective interviews | Parents |
| Chappuy e.a. 2010 [ | Pediatric oncology | - Retrospective interviews | Parents |
| Dermatis e.a. 1990 [ | Pediatric oncology | - Questionnaire (retrospective) | Parents |
| Levi e.a. 2000 [ | Pediatric oncology | - Focus group interviews (retrospective) | Parents |
| Van Stuijvenberg e.a. 1998 [ | Pediatric general practice | - Questionnaire (retrospective) | Parents |
| Tait e.a. 1998 [ | Pediatric anesthesia | - Questionnaire (retrospective) | Parents |
| Singhal e.a. 2002 [ | Neonatology | - Questionnaire (retrospective) | Parents |
| Reynolds e.a. 2007 [ | Pediatric endocrinology | - Interviews (hypothetical decisions about research) | Parents |
| Kupst e.a. 2003 [ | Pediatric oncology | - Retrospective interviews | Parents |
| Snowdon e.a. 1997 [ | Neonatology | - Questionnaire (retrospective) | Parents |
| Eiser e.a. 2005 [ | Pediatric oncology | - Retrospective interviews | Parents |
| Heneghan e.a. 2004 [ | Pediatric general practice | - Focus group interviews | Parents |
| McKenna e.a. 2010 [ | Pediatric oncology | - Questionnaire (retrospective) | Parents |
| Appelbaum e.a. 1982 [ | Adult psychiatry | - Observations | Adult patients |
| Joffe e.a. 2001 [ | Adult oncology | - Questionnaire (retrospective) | Adult patients |
| Taylor 1992 [ | Adult oncology | - Questionnaire (retrospective) | Physicians |
| Taylor e.a. 1994 [ | Adult & pediatric oncology | - Questionnaire (retrospective - quantitative study) | Physicians |
| Joffe e.a. 2002 [ | Adult & pediatric oncology | - Questionnaire (retrospective) | Physicians |
| Instone e.a. 2008 [ | Adult gastroenterology | - Observations | Physicians + nurses, n = 19 |
Awareness points and recommendations for communication in relation to type of research
| Type of research | Awareness* | Recommendations for communication |
|---|---|---|
* Confidentiality and privacy are not explicitly discussed in this paper. Apparently, parents and physicians do not experience these concepts as problematic or are not aware of them. Still, confidentiality and privacy are basic concepts in research ethics and should be discussed with parents. For completeness they are mentioned in the Table, in order for the Table to be used as a list to 'tick off' when communicating research with parents.