| Literature DB >> 26847517 |
Einar Marius Hjellestad Martinsen1, Elise Orvedal Leiten2, Per Sigvald Bakke2, Tomas Mikal Lind Eagan2,3, Rune Grønseth3.
Abstract
Bronchoscopy is the preferred method for collecting biological samples from the lower airways of subjects in clinical research. However, ensuring participation in clinical research can be challenging when the research includes an invasive procedure. For this report we reviewed the literature to look for information on participation in research bronchoscopy studies to better design our own study, the Bergen COPD Microbiome study (MicroCOPD). We performed a systematic literature search on participation in research bronchoscopy studies in February 2014 using the search engines of PubMed and EMBASE. The literature search resulted in seven relevant papers. Motivation was an end point in six of the seven papers, but reasons for declining participation and recruitment strategies also seemed important. Human subjects participate in research bronchoscopy studies for personal benefit and altruistic reasons. Inconvenience associated with research, in addition to fear of procedures, is considered a barrier. Radio, especially news stations, generated the most inquiries for a clinical study involving bronchoscopy. There is a lack of information on participation in research bronchoscopy studies in the literature. A bronchoscopy study has been initiated at Haukeland University Hospital, Bergen, Norway, to examine the role of the microbiome in COPD, and participation will be explored as a substudy.Entities:
Keywords: COPD; clinical research; human volunteers; motivation; refusal to participate; research subjects
Year: 2016 PMID: 26847517 PMCID: PMC4742466 DOI: 10.3402/ecrj.v3.29511
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Clin Respir J ISSN: 2001-8525
Modified PICO scheme used for a literature review on participation in research bronchoscopy studies
| P1 | P2 | I | O |
|---|---|---|---|
| COPD (MeSH) | Patients (MeSH) | Bronchoscopy (MeSH) | Patient participation (MeSH) |
| COPD (tw) | Patients (tw) | Bronchoscopy (tw) | Participation (tw) |
| Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (tw) | Participants (tw) | Response (tw) | |
| Human volunteers (MeSH) | Non-response (tw) | ||
| Volunteers (tw) | Attitude (MeSH) | ||
| Study (MeSH major topic) | Attitude (tw) | ||
| Trial (MeSH major topic) | Motivation (MeSH) | ||
| Research subjects (MeSH) | Motivation (tw) | ||
| Research subjects/psychology (MeSH) | Refusal to participate (MeSH) | ||
| Clinical research (MeSH) | Refusal to participate (tw) | ||
| Informed consent (MeSH) | |||
| Participation rate, patient (MeSH) | |||
| Participation rate (tw) | |||
| Patient selection (MeSH) | |||
| Patient selection (tw) | |||
| Advertising as topic (MeSH) | |||
| Advertising (tw) | |||
| Risk assessment (MeSH) | |||
| Risk assessment (tw) | |||
| Altruism (MeSH) | |||
| Altruism (tw) | |||
| Perception (tw) |
The P1 column was excluded in the final search due to a paucity of results.
P, population; I, intervention; C, comparison; O, outcomes; MeSH, medical subject headings; tw, text words
Number of retrieved papers for a literature search in the databases PubMed and EMBASE on participation in research bronchoscopy studies according to classification criteria
| Classification criteria | PubMed | EMBASE |
|---|---|---|
| Non-English/non-Scandinavian language | 102 | None |
| Case studies/series | 82 | 427 |
| Secondary publications | 116 | 108 |
| Non-human studies | 7 | None |
| Participation not a major topic | 674 | 443 |
| Papers common to PubMed and EMBASE searches | 7 | |
Secondary publications included reviews, expert panels, letters, guidelines, and so on. The EMBASE search excluded studies in languages other than English and Scandinavian languages, as well as non-human studies
Overview of the included papers after a literature search on participation in research bronchoscopy studies
| Author, year of publication, country (reference) | Study objective | Main outcomes | Population | Inclusion criteria | Design | Purpose of bronchoscopy | Bronchoscopy procedure | Relevant findings | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lipman, 1998, United Kingdom and United States (14) | Examine acceptability of research bronchoscopy in asymptomatic HIV subjects | Pre- and post-bronchoscopic participation motives, willingness to undergo second procedure. Response rates | Responders: 75 | HIV-infected individuals, 18–60 years | No acute/chronic respiratory disease, IV drug use or antiretroviral therapy | Prospective semistructured, self-completed questionnaires | Harvest cell populations from the lung | Bronchoscopy with BAL | Response rate: 70% |
| Mtunthama, 2008, Malawi and United Kingdom (15) | Examine adequacy of study information, motives for participation, and complication rate in a research bronchoscopy study | Participation motives, perceived sufficiency of study information, self-reported adverse events | 100 | Malawian volunteers | None given | Prospective. Interviews with both open and closed questions | Determine factors underlying susceptibility to respiratory infection among adults | Bronchoscopy with BAL | Response rate: not given |
| Kerrison, 2008, United Kingdom (12) | Examine patients’ experience of clinical research | Participation motives, importance of referral and consent procedures, sufficiency of study information | 18 in bronchoscopy study | Six clinical studies | None given | Retrospective qualitative study. Telephone interviews, questionnaires or focus groups | Identify and sample suspicious lesions | Fluorescence bronchoscopy and optical biopsy | Response rate: 64% in bronchoscopy substudy |
| Kye, 2009, USA (13) | Examine various recruitment strategies | Response rates and cost calculations | 137 | Healthy ex-smokers, ≥30 pky | No contraindications for bronchoscopy or celecoxib, no use of certain medications or no cancer | Prospective study. Telephone interviews | Examination and sampling | White light and fluorescence bronchoscopy with BAL and bronchial biopsies | Response rate: 3.1% |
| Schook, 2010, Netherlands (17) | Examine whether participation in a smoking cessation trial could influence smoking cessation | Smoking cessation rate and influence of participation on cessation | 146 | Healthy current or former smokers, ≥20 pky | No serious comorbid disease, FEV1 below 1000 mL or use of systemic or inhaled corticosteroids in previous year | Retrospective study. Questionnaire-based telephone interviews | Examination | Autofluorescence or white light bronchoscopy with biopsies | Response rate: 73% |
| Patel, 2012, United Kingdom (16) | Examine methods and participation in a lung cancer screening study | Participation motives, declining reasons, and views on screening method | 60 | Current or ex-smokers, ≥20 pky and or ≥20 years, with mild to moderate COPD | No serious comorbid disease, life expectancy ≥5 years | Prospective qualitative study. Semi-structured interviews | Examination | Fluorescence bronchoscopy with biopsies | Response rate: not given |
| Chudleigh, 2013, United Kingdom (11) | Examine recruitment and retention of CF infants and healthy controls, as well as parental attitudes to participation | Participation motives, benefits, and disadvantages. Response rates | Cases: 85 | Infants with and without CF, including parents | CF: no contraindicated disorders, no preterms. Healthy controls: no medical and/or social contraindications, ≥2500 g | Prospective longitudinal, observational study. Self-completed questionnaires | Examination | Bronchoscopy with BAL | Response rate: 69% (CF), 21% (healthy controls) |
BAL, bronchoalveolar lavage; COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; CF, cystic fibrosis; FEV1, Forced expiratory volume; pky, pack-years.