| Literature DB >> 31455384 |
Devin S McCaskell1, Alexander J Molloy1, Laura Childerhose2,3, F Aileen Costigan1, Julie C Reid2, Magda McCaughan4, France Clarke3, Deborah J Cook4,5, Jill C Rudkowski5,6, Christopher Farley7, Tim Karachi5,6, Bram Rochwerg5,6, Anastasia Newman2,8, Alison Fox-Robichaud5,8, Margaret S Herridge9, Vincent Lo10, Deanna Feltracco11, Karen Ea Burns11, Rebecca Porteous12, Andrew J E Seely12, Ian M Ball13, Amy Seczek2, Michelle E Kho14,15,16.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Clinical trials management can be studied using project management theory. The CYCLE pilot randomized controlled trial (RCT) was conducted to determine the feasibility of a future rehabilitation trial of early in-bed cycling in the intensive care unit (ICU). In-bed cycling is a novel intervention, not typically available in ICUs. Implementation of this intervention requires personnel with specialized clinical expertise caring for critically ill patients and use of the in-bed cycle. Our objective was to describe the implementation and conduct of our pilot RCT using a project management approach.Entities:
Keywords: Critical care; Project management; Randomized controlled trial; Rehabilitation; Trial management
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31455384 PMCID: PMC6712681 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-019-3634-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Fig. 1CYCLE pilot RCT schema. Participants were randomized within the first 4 days of mechanical ventilation (MV) to either 30 min of cycling plus routine physiotherapy or routine physiotherapy alone. Physical performance measures were collected at 3 time points: ICU awakening (Test #1), ICU discharge (Test #2), and hospital discharge (Test #3). Physical performance measures included manual muscle testing, the 30-s sit-to-stand test, the 2-min walk test, quadriceps femoris strength measured with a hand-held dynamometer, and the PFIT-s. The PFIT-s at hospital discharge was the primary outcome
Outcome measures by project management phases
| Project management phase | Project outcome measures |
|---|---|
| Initiation | • Time from REB submission to approval |
| • Grant success rate | |
| • Time to first enrolment | |
| Planning | • Time from site REB submission to approval |
| • Time from site contracts submissions to approval | |
| • Number of and types of personnel trained | |
| • Number of training sessions | |
| • Materials prepared by the Methods Centre | |
| • Time to first enrolment | |
| Execution | • Consent rate overall |
| • Enrolment rate per month per site | |
| • Proportion of trained personnel who performed trial activities | |
| • Number of case report forms completed | |
| • Data query rate | |
| • Time to clean data | |
| Monitoring and controlling | • Intervention fidelity by site |
| • Intervention delivery (e.g. cycling) | |
| • Primary outcome measure collection (e.g. PFIT-s) | |
| • Number of recruitment weeks lost and reasons by site | |
| • Number of patients screened per 1 participant enrolled by site | |
| • Number of eligible non-randomized patients and reasons | |
| • Number of in-person training sessions required after start-up |
Fig. 2Timeline of CYCLE pilot RCT. Activities completed by the Methods Centre and participating sites from initial REB submission until the data were cleaned are summarized. Key milestones included receipt of funding, ethics and contracts approval, patient enrolment, and data cleaned. Training sessions included cycling intervention, physical performance measures, and/or protocol training. One of the Site 2 training sessions occurred after enrolling their last participant because we anticipated additional opportunities for recruitment
Fig. 3Actual and theoretical enrolment with increased physiotherapist resources in CYCLE pilot RCT. Theoretical additional enrolment was calculated assuming an 80% consent rate for all eligible non-randomized patients due to insufficient physiotherapist resources or no physiotherapist available. Site labels indicate the month during which the respective sites enrolled their first participant
Five trial management lessons learned from the CYCLE pilot RCT
| Lessons learned | Relevant phase(s) | Examples from the CYCLE pilot RCT |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Prepare and anticipate site needs | Initiation | Complete material preparation whilst waiting for approval to enrol participants. The Methods Centre prepared grant applications, case report forms, screening log templates, operations manuals, regulatory binders, training binders, training session slide decks, and other materials whilst applying for REB approval and negotiating institutional contracts at other sites. Preparatory work prevented later delays in the trial life cycle |
| Planning | Submit documents for REB and contracts as soon as possible at each site. In multicentre clinical trials, individual sites will require varying amounts of time to reach milestones. Be prepared to support sites with efficient systems by providing sample REB documents (e.g. protocols, consent forms). Aid sites by addressing questions and revisions quickly and completing as much trial preparation as possible whilst awaiting approvals | |
| Planning | Select personnel with relevant experience and skill sets at each site to become team member early in the project life cycle | |
| We engaged ICUs through the Canadian Critical Care Trials Group, and the research coordinators at these sites had experience screening and obtaining consent from ICU patients’ and/or their substitute decision makers. In our trial, screening for eligibility, obtaining informed consent, and randomization all had to occur within 4 days, a relatively short period of time from ICU admission. Obtaining informed consent from ICU patients’ substitute decision makers can be challenging [ | ||
| Training of frontline physical therapy clinicians comprised the majority of the CYCLE pilot RCT’s planning phase. We engaged physical therapy clinicians (physiotherapists, physiotherapist assistants/occupational therapist assistants) with experience assessing and treating similar patient populations to deliver the intervention and collect physical performance measures | ||
| Planning | Tailor training to individual site needs and experience levels. In the CYCLE pilot RCT, the ICU physiotherapists at Site 1 had cycling experience from a previous trial [ | |
| Frontline clinician training should be planned sufficiently in advance to ensure that they are comfortable and competent with trial activities [ | ||
| Execution | Start data management early in the trial life cycle and anticipate data cleaning for at least 6 months after completing data collection | |
| 2. Communicate regularly with participating sites | Monitoring and controlling | Regular personalized communication between the central management team and site personnel is essential. Weekly communication allowed site personnel to notify the Methods Centre about trial challenges, such as staffing issues. As a result, the Methods Centre trained new personnel to minimize effects on recruitment and protocol adherence. Maintaining communication and a professional but personal relationship with trial personnel is challenging and requires significant time, but results in a more successful trial [ |
| 3. Proactively analyse and act on process measure data | Monitoring and controlling | Use screening logs to monitor clinical trial recruitment. From our screening log data, we identified a high consent rate but also had a high eligible non-randomized rate. Most eligible non-randomized patients were related to ICU physiotherapist capacity, suggesting that continuous recruitment depended on the availability of these frontline clinicians. The Methods Centre responded to this need by training additional personnel. We trained physiotherapists from other areas of the hospital and physiotherapist assistants/occupational therapist assistants to conduct physical performance measures to try to reduce the extra clinical responsibility of ICU physiotherapists |
| 4. Develop contingency plans | Monitoring and controlling | Anticipate losing at least 10% recruitment time lost due to staffing gaps. Although our trial met its target sample size earlier than expected, we lost 13% of potential recruitment weeks due to leaves of absence, vacation, and staff turnover. Eligible participants could not be approached for consent without physiotherapist capacity to enrol and conduct the intervention. Our results suggest that both the number and availability of frontline therapists was an important factor in rehabilitation trials |
| Monitoring and controlling | Be prepared to train approximately one-third more trial personnel and allocate time and study budget to provide training sessions throughout the trial. We trained extra physiotherapists, physiotherapist assistants/occupational therapist assistants, research assistants, and research coordinators to replace personnel who changed roles and to account for staffing gaps | |
| 5. Express appreciation to participating sites | Execution | Express appreciation to frontline clinicians for their contributions. The CYCLE pilot RCT’s success relied on frontline clinicians dedicated to protocol fidelity for cycling and outcomes data. Clinicians added the trial activities to their usual workload. During the trial, we provided training certificates and recognized Canadian National Physiotherapy Month by offering therapists coffee gift cards. We acknowledged research coordinators, research assistants, ICU physiotherapists, and outcomes assessors in our publications. Recognizing the efforts of clinicians involved in the trial helps to ensure continued involvement and protocol adherence [ |
This table outlines the 5 key lessons learned from the CYCLE pilot RCT
RCT randomized controlled trial, REB research ethics board, ICU intensive care unit