| Literature DB >> 32106827 |
K Robinson1,2, F Allen3, J Darby3, C Fox4, A L Gordon5,6,7, J C Horne3, P Leighton8, E Sims9, P A Logan3,10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Trials are at risk of contamination bias which can occur when participants in the control group are inadvertently exposed to the intervention. This is a particular risk in rehabilitation studies where it is easy for trial interventions to be either intentionally or inadvertently adopted in control settings. The Falls in Care Homes (FinCH) trial is used in this paper as an example of a large randomised controlled trial of a complex intervention to explore the potential risks of contamination bias. We outline the FinCH trial design, present the potential risks from contamination bias, and the strategies used in the design of the trial to minimise or mitigate against this. The FinCH trial was a multi-centre randomised controlled trial, with embedded process evaluation, which evaluated whether systematic training in the use of the Guide to Action Tool for Care Homes reduced falls in care home residents. Data were collected from a number of sources to explore contamination in the FinCH trial. Where specific procedures were adopted to reduce risk of, or mitigate against, contamination, this was recorded. Data were collected from study e-mails, meetings with clinicians, research assistant and clinician network communications, and an embedded process evaluation in six intervention care homes. During the FinCH trial, there were six new falls prevention initiatives implemented outside the study which could have contaminated our intervention and findings. Methods used to minimise contamination were: cluster randomisation at the level of care home; engagement with the clinical community to highlight the risks of early adoption; establishing local collaborators in each site familiar with the local context; signing agreements with NHS falls specialists that they would maintain confidentiality regarding details of the intervention; opening additional research sites; and by raising awareness about the importance of contamination in research among participants.Entities:
Keywords: Care home research; Contamination; Falls; Randomised controlled trials
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32106827 PMCID: PMC7047395 DOI: 10.1186/s12874-020-00925-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Res Methodol ISSN: 1471-2288 Impact factor: 4.615
Potential mechanisms for introducing contamination bias within the FinCH trial
| Mechanism for potential risk | Potential action impacting on the trial |
|---|---|
| Detail of the intervention in the study documentation | FinCH trial study documentation outlined that the trial was evaluating the guide to action tool as a way of reducing falls for care homes residents. This documentation was discussed with care home managers to allow informed consent. Care home managers could review their existing falls management strategies and consider using the Guide to Action tool. |
| NHS clinicians delivering training package to care home staff | Falls specialists had access to the confidential training manual which formed the intervention. Clinicians could share this with other colleagues and care home staff considering this as best practice. Clinicians may have changed their behaviour and practice in their day to day clinical practice following their involvement in the FinCH trial. This might not be a conscious process. |
| Care home staff and managers move between homes | Care home staff that received the FinCH intervention training may move to a care home in the control arm and share their knowledge and skills. Conversely skills in the intervention homes could be lost following the training if care staff leave the home. |
| Publishing the development of the FinCH intervention and the feasibility trial | There has been a growing trend to publish trial protocols and development work to allow transparency in the research process [ |
| Unable to blind therapists, care staff and care home residents to whether they are allocated to the intervention or control arm | Awareness of the group allocation could influence the response to subjective outcomes such as the quality of life measures completed by care home staff and residents. |
| Promotion of the study findings throughout the duration of the trial | Researchers are encouraged to engage with a wide range of stakeholders throughout the research process to maximise impact and to prepare for impact at the end of the study. The FinCH study was discussed in a wide variety of forums which included Enabling Research in Care Home (EnRICH) forums, TV news bulletins, and national conferences, care home communities of practice, commissioning groups and patient and public involvement groups. |
Strategies used to minimise contamination in FinCH
| Mechanism for potential risk | Strategies used in FinCH to minimise the risk |
|---|---|
| Detail of the intervention in the study documentation | Discussion by research staff at the set-up meetings about the importance of continuing with usual care for the control group to act as a comparator. |
| NHS clinicians delivering training package to care home staff | Falls specialists were asked to sign a confidentiality agreement to state that they wouldn’t share the training manual. |
| Care home staff and managers move between homes | Data on the number of care home staff leaving and starting at each home was collected to allow discussion of the results in view of this data. It was however not feasible to collect data on where new staff were joining from and where staff leaving were going to work, however summarised numbers allowed a description of the frequency and extent of movement of care home staff. |
| Publishing the development of the FinCH intervention and the feasibility trial | The intervention manual was not published prior to the study completion. |
| Unable to blind therapists, care staff and care home residents to whether they are allocated to the intervention or control arm | Blinding of research assistants collecting the primary outcome of the number of falls. The FinCH administrator telephoned care homes prior to the research assistant visiting to remind the home that the RA should remain blinded to the group allocation. Cluster randomisation was used at the level of each care home to ensure that the training and delivery of the Guide to Action Tool was delivered across the whole home. |
| Promotion of the study findings throughout the duration of the trial | Meetings with clinical teams and commissioning groups to emphasise that the study findings were not yet ready to implement into practice. The content of the intervention was not described in detail when the study team were invited to present the on-going trial information and conferences and high profile impact events. |
| FinCH intervention developed using best available evidence and national guidelines | Dialogue with clinical teams who were preparing to deliver the FinCH intervention in control sites. The study team engaged in discussion with clinical teams and commissioners regarding the FinCH trial and the risk of delivering the FinCH intervention in control care homes during the trial. Strategies were put in place to allow the clinical teams to continue to deliver and develop their commissioned services in care homes not involved in the FinCH study. The study team ensured they were offering continued engagement with clinical teams reporting on the progress of the study, and directing them to current evidence that was likely to help them to develop strategies to implement their falls programmes, once the outcome of the FinCH trial was known. |