| Literature DB >> 34515544 |
Viswatej Avutu1, Aaron R Weiss2, Damon R Reed3, Safia K Ahmed4, Wendy A Allen-Rhoades5, Yen-Lin E Chen6, Lara E Davis7, Bree R Eaton8, Douglas S Hawkins9, Danny J Indelicato10, Shreyaskumar R Patel11, R Lor Randall12, Denise K Reinke13, Richard F Riedel14, Thomas J Scharschmidt15, Katherine A Thornton1, Dian Wang16, Katherine A Janeway17, Lisa M Kopp18.
Abstract
ARST1321, a trial of patients with advanced soft tissue sarcoma, was the first National Clinical Trials Network study codeveloped by pediatric and adult consortia with two treatment cohorts. We report on the findings of a survey to identify barriers to enrolling adolescent and young adult patients (15-39 years) onto the nonchemotherapy arm. The survey response rate was 31% with a 70% completion rate. Common identified reasons for low accrual in order of decreasing frequency included insufficient funding, lack of study awareness or interest, competing trials, toxicity concerns, philosophical differences in the therapy backbone, and regulatory and infrastructure barriers. Clinical Trials.gov ID: NCT02180867.Entities:
Keywords: NCTN; clinical trials; cooperative groups; enrollment barriers; survey
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34515544 PMCID: PMC9354033 DOI: 10.1089/jayao.2021.0103
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Adolesc Young Adult Oncol ISSN: 2156-5333 Impact factor: 1.757