| Literature DB >> 29490702 |
Patricia Healy1,2, Sandra Galvin3,4, Paula R Williamson5, Shaun Treweek6, Caroline Whiting7, Beccy Maeso7, Christopher Bray8, Peter Brocklehurst9, Mary Clarke Moloney10, Abdel Douiri11, Carrol Gamble5, Heidi R Gardner6, Derick Mitchell12, Derek Stewart13, Joan Jordan12, Martin O'Donnell3,14, Mike Clarke3,15, Sue H Pavitt16, Eleanor Woodford Guegan17, Amanda Blatch-Jones17, Valerie Smith3,18, Hannah Reay19, Declan Devane3,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite the problem of inadequate recruitment to randomised trials, there is little evidence to guide researchers on decisions about how people are effectively recruited to take part in trials. The PRioRiTy study aimed to identify and prioritise important unanswered trial recruitment questions for research. The PRioRiTy study - Priority Setting Partnership (PSP) included members of the public approached to take part in a randomised trial or who have represented participants on randomised trial steering committees, health professionals and research staff with experience of recruiting to randomised trials, people who have designed, conducted, analysed or reported on randomised trials and people with experience of randomised trials methodology.Entities:
Keywords: James Lind Alliance; Participation in randomised trials; Priority setting partnership; Recruitment challenges; Survey; Trial methodology
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29490702 PMCID: PMC5831203 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-018-2544-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Initial PRioRiTy survey questions
| 1 | What questions or comments do you have (if any) about improving how trials are planned and designed? |
| 2 | What questions or comments do you have (if any) about improving how trials are carried out? |
| 3 | What questions or comments do you have (if any) about the information people are given when they join a trial? |
| 4 | What questions or comments do you have (if any) about trial recruiters who invite people to take part? |
| 5 | What questions or comments do you have (if any) about the motivation of people in joining a trial? |
| 6 | Do you have any other questions or comments? |
Completeness of initial survey
| Demographic questions | Number | Completed (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Consent to participate (yes) | 790 | 100% |
| Age (scale) | 777 | 98% |
| Respondent’s role in trials | 717 | 91% |
| Where respondent lives | 720 | 91% |
| Gender | 711 | 90% |
| Affiliated trial subject | 711 | 90% |
| Wish to be involved in future research (yes/no) | 713 | 90% |
| Specific open-ended feedback questions | ||
| “How trials are planned and designed” | 382 | 48% |
| “How trials are carried out” | 350 | 44% |
| “Information people are given when they join a trial” | 359 | 45% |
| “Trial recruiters who invite people to take part” | 291 | 37% |
| “The motivation of people in joining a trial” | 314 | 40% |
| “Other questions or comments” | 149 | 19% |
Initial survey respondent roles
| Which one of the following best describes your main role in a randomised trial? | ||
|---|---|---|
| Answer options | Number | Percentage |
| A person invited to take part in a trial | 83 | 12 |
| A researcher involved in recruiting participants | 154 | 21 |
| A non-researcher (e.g. clinician or health professional) involved in recruiting participants | 77 | 11 |
| A principal/chief investigator | 124 | 17 |
| A researcher involved in aspects of the trial other than frontline recruitment | 183 | 26 |
| A trial methodologist (someone who specializes in the methods of how trials are designed, run, analysed and reported) | 87 | 12 |
| Other (please specify) | 9 | 1 |
| Totala | 717 | 100 |
aData were missing in 73 respondents
Summary of initial survey respondents affiliated trial subject areas
| Trial subject area | Number | Percentage |
|---|---|---|
| Oncology/haematology – cancer | 142 | 20 |
| Neurology – neurodegenerative diseases, vascular Diseases | 93 | 13 |
| Cardiovascular diseases | 44 | 6 |
| Mental health | 42 | 6 |
| Metabolism – diabetes mellitus | 38 | 5 |
| Orthopaedics/musculoskeletal | 34 | 5 |
| Reproductive Health | 34 | 5 |
| Gastroenterology – hepatology, nephrology | 29 | 4 |
| Paediatrics/neonates | 22 | 3 |
| Respiratory | 20 | 3 |
| Inflammatory conditions (e.g. osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, fibromyalgia) | 15 | 2 |
| Surgery | 15 | 2 |
| Ophthalmology | 14 | 2 |
| Vaccines – preventive vaccines | 13 | 2 |
| Dementia/ageing | 12 | 2 |
| Infectious diseases | 9 | 1 |
| Dermatology | 7 | 1 |
| Palliative care | 4 | 1 |
| Involved in multiple trials | 38 | 5 |
| Other | 79 | 11 |
| Totala | 704 | 100% |
aData were missing or response was “Do not know” in 86 respondents
Interim survey respondent roles
| Which one of the following best describes your main role in a randomised trial? | ||
|---|---|---|
| Answer options | Number | Percentage |
| A person invited to take part in a trial | 108 | 13 |
| A researcher involved in recruiting participants | 146 | 18 |
| A non-researcher (e.g. clinician or health professional) involved in recruiting participants | 63 | 8 |
| A principal / chief investigator | 186 | 23 |
| A researcher involved in aspects of the trial other than frontline recruitment | 206 | 25 |
| A trial methodologist (someone who specialises in the methods of how trials are designed, run, analysed and reported) | 90 | 11 |
| Other | 3 | < 1 |
| Total | 802 | 98 |
Summary of interim survey respondents affiliated trial subject areas
| Trial subject area | Number | Percentage |
|---|---|---|
| Oncology/haematology – cancer | 161 | 21 |
| Neurology – neurodegenerative diseases, vascular diseases | 77 | 10 |
| Cardiology – cardiovascular disease | 62 | 8 |
| Orthopaedics/musculoskeletal | 56 | 7 |
| Mental health | 51 | 7 |
| Metabolism – diabetes mellitus | 47 | 6 |
| Vaccines – preventive vaccines | 45 | 6 |
| Reproductive health | 33 | 4 |
| Critical care | 24 | 3 |
| Infectious diseases | 21 | 3 |
| Gastroenterology – hepatology, nephrology | 18 | 2 |
| Surgery | 16 | 2 |
| Respiratory | 15 | 2 |
| Paediatrics/neonates | 13 | 2 |
| Inflammatory conditions (e.g. osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, fibromyalgia) | 11 | 1 |
| Ophthalmology | 9 | 1 |
| Involved in multiple trials | 34 | 4 |
| Other | 82 | 11 |
| Totala | 785 | 96 |
aData missing in 30 respondents
The “Top 10” research questions prioritised
| Overall ranking | Uncertainty as research question |
|---|---|
| 1 | How can randomised trials become part of routine care and best utilise current clinical care pathways? |
| 2 | What information should trialists communicate to members of the public who are being invited to take part in a randomised trial in order to improve recruitment to the trial? |
| 3 | Does patient/public involvement in planning a randomised trial improve recruitment? |
| 4 | What are the best approaches for designing and delivering information to members of the public who are invited to take part in a randomised trial? |
| 5 | What are the barriers and enablers for clinicians/healthcare professionals in helping conduct randomised trials? |
| 6 | What are the key motivators influencing members of the public’s decisions to take part in a randomised trial? |
| 7 | What are the best approaches to ensure inclusion and participation of under-represented or vulnerable groups in randomised trials? |
| 8 | What are the best ways to predict recruitment rates to a randomised trial and what impact do such predictions have on recruitment? |
| 9 | What are the best approaches to optimise the informed consent process when recruiting participants to randomised trials? |
| 10 | What are the advantages and disadvantages to using technology during the recruitment process? |
Fig. 1Collating and analysing survey responses and developing questions for consensus
Evidence checking
| Uncertainty as research question | Evidence reviewed (878 screened, 76 full text, 34 extracted) |
|---|---|
| 1. How can randomised trials become part of routine care and best utilise current clinical care pathways? | • No evidence available |
| 2. What information should trialists communicate to members of the public who are being invited to take part in a randomised trial in order to improve recruitment to the trial? | • No evidence available |
| 3. Does patient/public involvement in planning a randomised trial improve recruitment? | • No evidence available |
| 4. What are the best approaches for designing and delivering information to members of the public who are invited to take part in a randomised trial? | • Bonevski, B.; Randell, M.; Paul, C.; Chapman, K.; Twyman, L.; Bryant, J.; Brozek, I.; Hughes, C. Reaching the hard-to-reach: a systematic review of strategies for improving health and medical research with socially disadvantaged groups. BMC Medical Research Methodology 2014; 14:42. |
| 5. What are the barriers and enablers for clinicians/healthcare professionals in helping conduct randomised trials? | • Newington, L.; Metcalfe, A. Researchers’ and clinicians’ perceptions of recruiting participants to clinical research: a thematic meta-synthesis. Journal of Clinical Medicine Research 2014;6(3):162-72 |
| 6. What are the key motivators influencing members of the public’s decisions to take part in a randomised trial? | • Limkakeng Limkakeng, A.; Phadtare, A.; Shah, J.; Vaghasia, M.; Wei, D. Y.; Shah, A.; Pietrobon, R.Willingness to participate in clinical trials among patients of Chinese heritage: a meta-synthesis. PLoS ONE [Electronic Resource] 2013; 8(1):e51328. |
| 7. What are the best approaches to ensure inclusion and participation of under-represented or vulnerable groups in randomised trials? | • Bellera, C.; Praud, D.; Petit-Moneger, A.; McKelvie-Sebileau, P.; Soubeyran, P.; Mathoulin-Pelissier, S. Barriers to inclusion of older adults in randomised controlled clinical trials on non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma: a systematic review. Cancer Treatment Reviews 2013;39(7):812-817 |
| 8. What are the best ways to predict recruitment rates to a randomised trial and what impact do such predictions have on recruitment? | • Cooper, C. L.; Hind, D.; Duncan, R.; Walters, S.; Lartey, A.; Lee, E.; Bradburn, M.A rapid review indicated higher recruitment rates in treatment trials than in prevention trials. Journal of Clinical Epidemiology 2015;68(3):347-54 |
| 9. What are the best approaches to optimise the informed consent process when recruiting participants to randomised trials? | • Farrell, E. H.; Phillips, K.; Morgan, B.; Savage, K.; Lewis, V.; Whistance, R. N.; Kelly, M.; Mann, M.; Blazeby, J. M.; Kinnersley, K.; Edwards, A. G. K. Audio-visual aids for informed consent for invasive healthcare procedures: A systematic review. British Journal of Surgery 2013;100:60 |
| 10. What are the advantages and disadvantages to using technology during the recruitment process? | • No evidence available |