Beatrice Mainoli1,2, Tiago Machado1,2, Gonçalo S Duarte1,2,3, Luísa Prada1,2, Nilza Gonçalves1,2,4, Joaquim J Ferreira1,2, João Costa5,6,7,8. 1. Laboratory of Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics, Faculdade de Medicina, Universidade de Lisboa, Avenida Prof. Egas Moniz, 1649-028, Lisbon, Portugal. 2. Instituto de Medicina Molecular, Faculdade de Medicina, Universidade de Lisboa, Lisbon, Portugal. 3. Centro de Estudos de Medicina Baseada na Evidência, Faculdade de Medicina, Universidade de Lisboa, Lisbon, Portugal. 4. Nova IMS - Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Lisbon, Portugal. 5. Laboratory of Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics, Faculdade de Medicina, Universidade de Lisboa, Avenida Prof. Egas Moniz, 1649-028, Lisbon, Portugal. jncosta@fm.ul.pt. 6. Instituto de Medicina Molecular, Faculdade de Medicina, Universidade de Lisboa, Lisbon, Portugal. jncosta@fm.ul.pt. 7. Centro de Estudos de Medicina Baseada na Evidência, Faculdade de Medicina, Universidade de Lisboa, Lisbon, Portugal. jncosta@fm.ul.pt. 8. Cochrane Movement Disorders Group, Lisbon, Portugal. jncosta@fm.ul.pt.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The COVID-19 pandemic continues to rage on, and clinical research has been promoted worldwide. We aimed to assess the clinical and methodological characteristics of treatment clinical trials that have been set forth as an early response to the COVID-19 pandemic. METHODS: First, we reviewed all registered clinical trials on COVID-19. The World Health Organization International Trials Registry Platform and national trial registries were searched for COVID-19 trials through April 19th, 2020. For each record, independent researchers extracted interventions, participants, and methodological characteristics. Second, on September 14th, 2020 we evaluated the recruitment status and availability of the results of COVID-19 treatment trials previously identified. RESULTS: In April 2020, a total of 580 trials evaluating COVID-19 treatment were registered. Reporting quality was poor (core participant information was missing in 24.1 to 92.7%). Between 54.0 and 93.8% of the trials did not plan to include older people or those with a higher baseline risk. Most studies were randomised (67.9%), single-centre (58.3%), non-industry-funded (81.1%), to be conducted in China (47.6%), with a median duration of 184 days and a median sample size of 100 participants. Core endpoints (mortality, clinical status, and hospitalization length) were planned to be assessed in 5.2 to 13.1% of the trials. Five months later, 66 trials (11.4%) were reported as "Completed", and only 46 (7.9%) had public results available. One hundred forty-four of 580 trials (24.8%) either had the status "Not yet recruiting" or "Suspended", and 18 (3.1%) trials were prematurely stopped ("Terminated" or "Withdrawn") The number of completed trials and trials with results are much lower than anticipated, considering the planned follow-up. CONCLUSIONS: Our results raise concerns about the success of the initial global research effort on COVID-19 treatment. The clinical and methodological characteristics of early COVID-19 treatment trials limit their capability to produce clear answers to critical questions in the shortest possible time.
BACKGROUND: The COVID-19 pandemic continues to rage on, and clinical research has been promoted worldwide. We aimed to assess the clinical and methodological characteristics of treatment clinical trials that have been set forth as an early response to the COVID-19 pandemic. METHODS: First, we reviewed all registered clinical trials on COVID-19. The World Health Organization International Trials Registry Platform and national trial registries were searched for COVID-19 trials through April 19th, 2020. For each record, independent researchers extracted interventions, participants, and methodological characteristics. Second, on September 14th, 2020 we evaluated the recruitment status and availability of the results of COVID-19 treatment trials previously identified. RESULTS: In April 2020, a total of 580 trials evaluating COVID-19 treatment were registered. Reporting quality was poor (core participant information was missing in 24.1 to 92.7%). Between 54.0 and 93.8% of the trials did not plan to include older people or those with a higher baseline risk. Most studies were randomised (67.9%), single-centre (58.3%), non-industry-funded (81.1%), to be conducted in China (47.6%), with a median duration of 184 days and a median sample size of 100 participants. Core endpoints (mortality, clinical status, and hospitalization length) were planned to be assessed in 5.2 to 13.1% of the trials. Five months later, 66 trials (11.4%) were reported as "Completed", and only 46 (7.9%) had public results available. One hundred forty-four of 580 trials (24.8%) either had the status "Not yet recruiting" or "Suspended", and 18 (3.1%) trials were prematurely stopped ("Terminated" or "Withdrawn") The number of completed trials and trials with results are much lower than anticipated, considering the planned follow-up. CONCLUSIONS: Our results raise concerns about the success of the initial global research effort on COVID-19 treatment. The clinical and methodological characteristics of early COVID-19 treatment trials limit their capability to produce clear answers to critical questions in the shortest possible time.
Authors: Robert W Yeh; Linda R Valsdottir; Michael W Yeh; Changyu Shen; Daniel B Kramer; Jordan B Strom; Eric A Secemsky; Joanne L Healy; Robert M Domeier; Dhruv S Kazi; Brahmajee K Nallamothu Journal: BMJ Date: 2018-12-13
Authors: Reed Ac Siemieniuk; Jessica J Bartoszko; Dena Zeraatkar; Elena Kum; Anila Qasim; Juan Pablo Díaz Martinez; Ariel Izcovich; Francois Lamontagne; Mi Ah Han; Arnav Agarwal; Thomas Agoritsas; Maria Azab; Gonzalo Bravo; Derek K Chu; Rachel Couban; Tahira Devji; Zaira Escamilla; Farid Foroutan; Ya Gao; Long Ge; Maryam Ghadimi; Diane Heels-Ansdell; Kimia Honarmand; Liangying Hou; Quazi Ibrahim; Assem Khamis; Bonnie Lam; Christian Mansilla; Mark Loeb; Anna Miroshnychenko; Maura Marcucci; Shelley L McLeod; Sharhzad Motaghi; Srinivas Murthy; Reem A Mustafa; Hector Pardo-Hernandez; Gabriel Rada; Yamna Rizwan; Pakeezah Saadat; Charlotte Switzer; Lehana Thabane; George Tomlinson; Per O Vandvik; Robin Wm Vernooij; Andrés Viteri-García; Ying Wang; Liang Yao; Yunli Zhao; Gordon H Guyatt; Romina Brignardello-Petersen Journal: BMJ Date: 2020-07-30
Authors: Stefanie Wüstner; Sara Hogger; Daniela Gartner-Freyer; Andrea Lebioda; Katharina Schley; Friedhelm Leverkus Journal: Front Public Health Date: 2022-02-18