| Literature DB >> 28506267 |
Indira S E van der Zande1, Rieke van der Graaf2, Martijn A Oudijk3, Johannes J M van Delden2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is ambiguity with regard to what counts as an acceptable level of risk in clinical research in pregnant women and there is no input from stakeholders relative to such research risks. The aim of our paper was to explore what stakeholders who are actively involved in the conduct of clinical research in pregnant women deem an acceptable level of risk for pregnant women in clinical research. Accordingly, we used the APOSTEL VI study, a low-risk obstetrical randomised controlled trial, as a case-study.Entities:
Keywords: Clinical research; Pregnant women; Qualitative research; Research ethics; Risk
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28506267 PMCID: PMC5432995 DOI: 10.1186/s12910-017-0194-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Ethics ISSN: 1472-6939 Impact factor: 2.652
Case-study: APOSTEL VI
| The APOSTEL studies are a series of studies in the field of treatment of preterm labour within the Dutch Consortium for Healthcare Evaluation and Research in Obstetrics and Gynecology (NVOG Consortium 2.0.). The APOSTEL VI study in particular assesses whether a cervical pessary prolongs pregnancy in women who have been admitted for threatened preterm birth but remained undelivered after 48 h (http://www.studies-obsgyn.nl/apostel6). Women are randomly allocated to receive either a cervical pessary or no intervention. Women participating in the study were not perceived to be at an increased risk since previous studies using the pessary had shown no foetal adverse effects and the cervical pessary was not associated with increased neonatal or maternal morbidity and mortality (APOSTEL VI Research Protocol). |
| The APOSTEL VI study took place from November 2013 until September 2016, when the study was prematurely stopped following the advice of the Data and Safety Monitoring Board (DSMB). The premature cancellation was due to the fact that after interim analysis the intervention was unlikely to improve outcome, and maternal side effects were often present in the intervention arm. |
| Our qualitative study took place from March 2015 till September 2016 and we reached saturation before the APOSTEL VI itself was cancelled. In all our interviews it was therefore assumed that the APOSTEL VI would be completed. |
Demographic characteristics professionals
| Characteristics professionals | ( |
|---|---|
| Gender | |
| Male | 11 |
| Female | 15 |
| Age | |
| 25 - 40 | 13 |
| 41 - 55 | 7 |
| >55 | 6 |
| Experience at present job (years) | |
| <5 | 13 |
| 5-10 | 6 |
| 11-15 | 4 |
| 16 - 20 | 3 |
| Profession | |
| Gynaecologist | 3 |
| Gynaecologist-in-trainingb | 6 |
| Midwifec | 5 |
| REC memberd | 5 |
| Regulator/knowledge centre | 7 |
a5 regulators from the focus group, 21 interviewees
b1 gynaecologist-in-training was a gynaecologist-not-in-training (ANIOS)
c3 research midwifes from academic hospitals
d2 REC members were also gynaecologists
Demographic characteristics pregnant women
| Characteristics pregnant women | ( |
|---|---|
| Age | |
| <25 | 1 |
| 25 - 30 | 5 |
| 31 - 40 | 8 |
| Parity | |
| Nulliparous | 9 |
| Primiparous | 2 |
| Multiparous | 3 |
| Gestational age (weeks) | |
| 25 - 30 | 5 |
| 31 - 35 | 9 |
| Education | |
| Highschool | 3 |
| Lower vocational (MBO) | 3 |
| College (HBO/WO) | 4 |
| Graduate degree | 4 |
| Partner | |
| Married | 5 |
| Living together | 9 |
| Single | 0 |
| Enrolment in study | |
| Participating in Apostel VI | 8 |
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| Not participating in Apostel VI | 6 |
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Fig. 1Flowchart of inclusions
General Topic List
| • Balancing risks and potential benefits in general; |
Representative quotations - Acceptable levels of risk in general
| Theme | Quotationsa |
|---|---|
| Continuum of acceptable risks in general | REG00, focus group LAREB: |
| Desirability of clinical research in pregnant women in general | REC01, legal expert: |
| Interest in an upper limit of acceptable risk | HCP05, gynaecologist: |
aQuotations are sometimes slightly modified in order to enhance readability
Representative quotations - Acceptable levels of risk in APOSTEL VI specifically
| Theme | Quotationsa |
|---|---|
| Perceived risks of APOSTEL VI study | HCP06, gynaecologist-in-training: |
aQuotations are sometimes slightly modified in order to enhance readability
Overview of risk continuum
| Stakeholder | What level of research risk? | What type of research is acceptable? | When is research acceptable? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Regulators (LAREB) | Zero | None | Never |
| Regulators (MEB) | Zero | Observational | Registries |
| RECs | Extremely low (below 1%) | Observational | Research that is not too demanding |
| Pregnant women | Zero | Observational | Not too demanding/useful for other women |
| Healthcare professionals | Low, at least not higher in comparison to not participating | Observational | Research that has no potential individual benefit and research that has potential individual benefit |