| Literature DB >> 31675992 |
Katie Biggs1, Daniel Hind2, Mike Bradburn2, Lizzie Swaby2, Steve Brown3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Increasingly, pragmatic randomised controlled trials are being used to evaluate surgical interventions, although they present particular difficulties in regards to recruitment and retention.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31675992 PMCID: PMC6823948 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-019-3649-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Costing of research nurse time per centre
| Activity | Cost |
|---|---|
| Year 1 (recruitment and follow-up): | |
| Research nurse to screen and recruit patients (recruitment activity). | Research costs (research acitivty): 0.3 whole time equivalent (WTE) of a research nurse for the 12 month recruitment period for research activity. |
| Undertake data collection for the research, data entry, monitoring and meeting attendance (research activity). | Service support costs (recruitment activity): 0.7 WTE - We looked the LRNs to make up a full time post (based on our assumption about recruitment activity). |
| Year 2 (follow-up only): | |
| 12 month follow-up (a half hour telephone interview plus data entry) and closeout visit, plus support for any monitoring and audit activity required. | Research costs: £300 per participant recruited |
Fig. 1Participant recruitment graph. Reproduced with permission from Brown et al. 2016 [27]
Reasons for non-enrolment to the trial
| Reason | Frequency |
|---|---|
| Not eligible |
|
| Patient not approached |
|
| Clinical decision | 41 |
| Patient did not attend appointment/uncontactable | 26 |
| Unknown | 42 |
| Patient approached |
|
| Patient preference | 251 |
| Patient preference for RBL | 128 |
| Patient preference for HAL | 70 |
| Patient did not want any intervention or treatment | 39 |
| Patient preference for other surgery | 5 |
| Patient preference for immediate treatment | 3 |
| Patient preference related to general anaesthetic | 6 |
| Patient unsure or declined (no further reason given) | 29 |
| Other reason | 12 |
| Total |
|
Adapted with permission from Brown et al. 2016 [27]. HAL haemorrhoidal artery ligation, RBL rubber band ligation
Bold text represents the higher-level reason for non-recruitment, with the detailed breakdown provided by the non-bold text
Bold text represents the higher-level reason for non-recruitment, with the detailed breakdown provided by the non-bold text
Reason for withdrawal (reasons for withdrawal from treatment are indicated under “Prior to treatment”)
| Reason for withdrawal | HAL | RBL |
|---|---|---|
| Prior to treatment | ||
| Found to be ineligible after randomisation | 0 | 2 |
| Participant withdrew consent | 15 | 3 |
| Lost to follow up prior to procedure | 6 | 2 |
| Symptoms resolved/treated elsewhere | 2 | 1 |
| Ineligible at time of procedure | 1 | 0 |
| After treatment | ||
| Participant withdrew consent | 0 | 3 |
Reproduced with permission from Brown et al. 2016 [27]. HAL haemorrhoidal artery ligation, RBL rubber band ligation
Fig. 2Time to procedure by site and treatment arm (days). HAL, haemorrhoidal artery ligation; RBL, rubber band ligation
Fig. 3Time to withdrawal (prior to treatment) by site and treatment arm (days). Figure includes only those sites experiencing participant attrition prior to treatment. HAL, haemorrhoidal artery ligation; RBL, rubber band ligation
Fig. 4Baseline patient-reported haemorrhoid symptom score and incontinence as taken on day of procedure. HAL, haemorrhoidal artery ligation; RBL, rubber band ligation
Agreement between self-completed measures of symptoms, incontinence, EQ-5D-5 L, and pain pre-randomisation and pre-treatment (baseline)
| Measure | Mean change (95% agreement limits) | Difference in mean change | Ratio of variances | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| HAL | RBL | |||
| Haemorrhoid symptom score | 0.0 (−3.0, 3.0) | 0.1 (−3.0, 3.1) | −0.1 ( | 0. 96 ( |
| EQ-5D-5L | −0.01 (− 0.13, 0.11) | −0.00 (− 0.12, 0.11) | −0.01 ( | 1.11 ( |
| Vaizey Faecal incontinence score | −0.1 (−5.6, 5.3) | 0.4 (−2.7, 3.5) | −0.5 ( | 3.14 (p < 0.001) |
| VAS pain | 0.2 (− 3.8, 4.2) | −0.0 (− 2.5, 2.4) | 0.2 ( | 2.63 ( |
Reproduced with permission from Brown et al. 2016 [27]. HAL haemorrhoidal artery ligation, RBL rubber band ligation, EQ-5D-5L Euroqol - 5 dimensions - 5 levels questionnaire, VAS visual analogue scale
Fig. 5Source of primary outcome data collection. GP, general practitioner
Data sources for recurrence at one year
| RBL ( | HAL ( | |
|---|---|---|
| Recurrence at one year (total) | 87 (49%) | 48 (30%) |
| Self-reported recurrencea | 37 (29%b) | 34 (29%b) |
| Data from GP and consultant questionnairesa | 60 (35%) | 23 (14%) |
Adapted with permission from Brown et al. 2016 [27]. HAL haemorrhoidal artery ligation, RBL rubber band ligation, GP general practitioner
aIndividuals may contribute data to both measures of recurrence
bDenominator is number of patients returning questionnaire
Fig. 6Participant flow diagram. Reproduced with permission from Brown et al. 2016 [27]. HAL, haemorrhoidal artery ligation; RBL, rubber band ligation, GP, general practitioner