| Literature DB >> 29562541 |
Mercè Boada1, Miguel A Santos-Santos1,2, Octavio Rodríguez-Gómez1, Montserrat Alegret1, Pilar Cañabate1, Asunción Lafuente1, Carla Abdelnour1, Mar Buendía1, Maria José de Dios1, América Morera1, Ángela Sanabria1, Laura Campo3, Agustín Ruiz1, Lluís Tárraga1.
Abstract
Alzheimer's disease (AD) research is at a critical time. The global society is increasingly aware of the frightening rate of growth of the human and financial burden caused by this condition and of the urgent need to halt its progression. Consequently, the scientific community holds great responsibility to quickly put in place and optimize the machinery necessary for testing new treatments or interventions. In this context demand for participants for AD research is at an all-time high. In this review, we will focus on a methodological factor that is increasingly recognized as a key factor that shapes trial populations and affects validity of results in clinical trials: patient engagement, recruitment, and retention. We outline specific problems relevant to patient engagement in AD including recruiting enough participants, difficulties in participant retention, ensuring the recruited sample is representative of the general AD population, the burden of screening failures, and new challenges related to recruiting in preclinical disease. To address the urgent need for more research studying the applicability and cost-effectiveness of different recruitment strategies across different settings and nationalities, we describe the Models of Patient Engagement for Alzheimer's Disease (MOPEAD) project, a public-private partnership promoted by the Innovative Medicine Initiative (IMI), which will provide a large multinational quantitative analysis comparing different innovative recruitment models. We also discuss strategies that address each problem and draw on the experience of Fundació ACE to argue that focusing resources on comprehensive AD centers that offer coordinated clinical and social care and participate in basic and clinical research, is an effective and efficient way of implementing many of the discussed strategies.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; Fundació ACE; MOPEAD; clinical trials; community outreach; patient engagement; recruitment; retention
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29562541 PMCID: PMC5870013 DOI: 10.3233/JAD-170866
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Alzheimers Dis ISSN: 1387-2877 Impact factor: 4.472
Problems and remedial strategies in patient engagement for AD research
| Problems and remedial strategies in patient engagement for AD research |
| *Increase awareness and improve attitudes towards research via advertising, education, and community outreach campaigns. |
| *Maximize referrals through coordination with primary care and other local medical centers and establishment of best practice guidelines for screening for cognitive impairment. |
| *Increase potential pool of participants by expansion and coordination of existing participant registries. |
| *Increase the number of recruited subjects by expanding the number of recruiting sites. |
| *Target outreach and adapt trials to the needs of care-givers, especially non-spousal care-givers. |
| *Make participation more rewarding and foster a sense of purpose by improving communication and giving regular feedback to participants. |
| *Evaluation of patients’ social circumstances and support resources to direct them to appropriate studies and trials. |
| *Establish a relationship of trust through integrated and continued clinical and social care. |
| *Implementation of community based participatory research methodology. |
| *Combining community outreach with increasing recruitment efforts in “satellite clinics” which primarily attend minority populations generally due to their geographical location. |
| *Ensure availability of appropriate diagnostic tests and clinical expertise in the recruiting center by: |
| *Recruiting from the same center where patients are diagnosed and followed |
| *Recruiting at centers that participate in basic and clinical research programs |
| *Requires far-reaching strategies that act upon multiple levels to engage a primarily non-memory clinic population. |
| *Large informative campaigns directed at the general public explaining the urgency of halting AD’s progression and the importance of early diagnosis and research to achieve this goal. |
| *Innovative initiatives that facilitate the arrival of cognitively intact individuals to memory clinics (such as the Open House Initiative). |
| *Existence of registries of cognitively healthy individuals who are potentially willing to participate in research studies. |
| *Existence of observational cohorts with available biomarker data in which participants are asked upon entry about their willingness to enroll in clinical trials in the case of positivity. |