| Literature DB >> 29566721 |
Chalachew Alemayehu1, Geoffrey Mitchell2, Jane Nikles3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Clinical trials for identification of efficient and effective new diagnostic and treatment modalities are needed to address disproportionately high burden of communicable (e.g., HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria) and non-communicable diseases (e.g., diabetes) in developing countries. However, gross under-representation in global clinical trial platforms contributes to sustained health inequity in these countries. We reviewed the literature on barriers facing clinical researchers in developing countries for conducting clinical trials in their countries.Entities:
Keywords: Barriers; Clinical trials; Developing countries
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29566721 PMCID: PMC5863824 DOI: 10.1186/s12939-018-0748-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Equity Health ISSN: 1475-9276
Fig. 1PRISMA 2009 flow diagram for study selection
Summary of included studies
| Author, location | Subjects (n) | Type | Focus | Main findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Seruga, Africa: 4 countries, Asia: 5 countries, Central/ South America: six countries and 8 developed countries [ | Oncologists with clinical trial experience (39 from LMICs and 41 from HICs) | Quantitative/Web based survey | Barriers | Lack of funding, lack of competent authorities and ethical procedures, lack of research materials, lack of time or competing priorities, concerns about insurance/indemnification coverage, lack of trained personnel, lack of patients/patient accrual |
| Schlaff, Latin America (Chile), the Middle East (Egypt), Europe (Greece), China, India, Australia, and the, United States [ | Senior and accomplished investigators (7 participants, one from each country) | Qualitative | Barriers | India: Funding is limited, regulation impediments, misinformation about research |
| Siegfried, South Africa [ | Investigators and other clinical stakeholders (19) | Qualitative/ Key informant interviews | Barriers and need for additional training | Impediments in ethics processes, high cost of trials, the potential burden of trial conduct on clinical care, insufficient skilled researchers |
| Ranasinghe, China [ | Health professionals conducted (40) | Qualitative/in-depth interviews | Barriers | Lack of leadership support for implementing quality improvement, lack of resources, fears of patient disputes and litigation, healthcare funding constraints, high out-of-pocket expenses, and patients’ refusal to participate |
| Franzen, Ethiopia [ | Health researchers and stakeholders with research interest (20) | Qualitative/ in-depth interviews ( | Barriers and facilitators | Barriers: Human and material capacity, regulatory and other administrative bottlenecks, operational hurdles, awareness, confidence and motivation |
| Franzen, Ethiopia and Cameroon [ | Local health-researchers, senior stakeholders and regulators (72) | Qualitative/ in-depth | Barriers and facilitators | Shared barriers: System and organisational barriers like low resources, weak regulatory and administrative systems, few learning opportunities, little human and material capacity, and few incentives for doing research. |
| Cardoso, Sub-Saharan Africa ( | 303 key-informant interviews (clinical researchers and other clinical trial stakeholders) | Qualitative/key informant interview and literature review | Status and barriers | Levels/sustainability of funding, policymakers’ understanding of the importance of research, infrastructure in research institutions and Human resources available. |
| Gomez, Latin America countries ( | 92 medical oncologists | Quantitative/Survey | Barriers | Complex regulatory process, low budgets, high costs, poor financial management, and time constraint. |
| Sulthan, Saudi Arabia [ | 100 | Quantitative/Survey | Perception and barriers | Long approval process, shortage of human resource and lack of the institutional support, lack of encouragement, lack of awareness among the research professionals and the general public |
| Al-Dorzi, Saudi Arabia [ | 186 medical staff | Quantitative/Survey | Interest and barriers | lack of time, financial compensation and encouragement and lack of training of research |
Thematic and sub thematic presentation of barriers for conducting clinical trials
| No | Barriers for conducting clinical trial | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Thematic barriers | Sub-themes | References | |
| 1 | Lack of financial and human capacity | Lack of funding | [ |
| Lack of skilled personnel | [ | ||
| Lack of awareness and motivation | [ | ||
| 2 | Ethical and regulatory system obstacles | Delay of approval decisions | [ |
| Unskilled authorities | [ | ||
| Complex and strict ethical and regulatory system | [ | ||
| 4 | Lack of research environment | Lack of infrastructure | [ |
| Lack of research materials/facilities | [ | ||
| Lack of conducive scientific atmosphere | [ | ||
| 5 | Operational barriers | Unsupportive administrative system | [ |
| Lack of/difficult patient recruitment | [ | ||
| 6 | Competing demands | Lack of time | [ |
| Other competing priorities | [ | ||