| Literature DB >> 33138847 |
Thomas Salaets1, Emilie Lavrysen2, Anne Smits2, Sophie Vanhaesebrouck3, Maissa Rayyan2, Els Ortibus2, Jaan Toelen2, Laurence Claes4, Karel Allegaert2,5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Although recruiting newborns is ethically challenging, clinical trials remain essential to improve neonatal care. There is a lack of empirical data on the parental perspectives following participation of their neonate in a clinical trial, especially at long term. The objective of this study is to assess experiences and emotions of parents, long term after trial participation in an interventional drug trial.Entities:
Keywords: Clinical bio-ethics; Neonatal clinical trials
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33138847 PMCID: PMC7607657 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-020-04787-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Fig. 1Flow chart of the study. Flow chart indicates eligibility and response rate (only considering complete responses)
Baseline characteristics of survey respondents
| Baseline characteristics per respondent | |
|---|---|
| Sex, | |
| Father | 36 (29) |
| Mother | 87 (71) |
| Parent of twins, | 50 (41) |
| Parent of twins that were both in trial, | 24 (20) |
| Partner also responded to survey, | 20 (16) |
| Age at completion of questionnaire, mean in years (± sd) | 41.8 (± 5.6) |
| Age at participation in study, median in years (Q1–Q3) | 31.7 (28.9–34.9) |
| Time since participation in study, median in years (Q1–Q3) | 11.5 (5.1–12.2) |
| Trial, | |
| SMOF | 30 (24) |
| NIRTURE | 46 (37) |
| LAIF | 7 (6) |
| DORIPENEM | 9 (7) |
| NEOPROP | 31 (25) |
| Education, | |
| Lower secondary education | 11 (9) |
| Higher secondary education | 31 (25) |
| Higher education outside university | 44 (36) |
| Academic education (university degree) | 37 (30) |
| BSID-II, mean (± sd)a | |
| Mental index | 99.0 (± 18.5) |
| Motor index | 95.8 (± 19.8) |
| Total PedsQL, median (Q1–Q3)a | 81.7 (73.3–91.7) |
Baseline characteristics of survey respondents (n = 123)
aBSID-II (Bayley scale of infant development II) or PedsQL (pediatric quality of life scale) of the respondent’s child that participated in the trial. If both members of a twin participated in the trial only the lowest value is reported
Fig. 2Descriptive results part I. Descriptive results of the construct scales evaluating (i) contentment on trial participation, (ii) perceived influence of the trial on care and health and (ii) emotional consequences of trial participation (n=98). Median values of construct scales are expressed on 6 point Likert scales indicating agreement from 1 (strong disagreement) to 6 (strong agreement). Color bars show relative data distribution of binned scales (%). Cronbach’s α indicates reliability of the construct scales
Fig. 3Descriptive results part II . Descriptive results of the construct scales and items evaluating awareness of and distress about typical clinical trial characteristics (n=35-71). Median values of construct scales are expressed on 6 point Likert scales indicating agreement from 1 (strong disagreement) to 6 (strong agreement). Color bars show relative data distribution of binned scales (%). Cronbach’s α indicates reliability of the construct scales