| Literature DB >> 35057841 |
Caroline Cake1, Emma Ogburn2, Heather Pinches3, Garry Coleman4, David Seymour5, Fran Woodard4, Sinduja Manohar5, Marjia Monsur6, Martin Landray7, Gaynor Dalton4, Andrew D Morris5, Patrick F Chinnery8, F D Richard Hobbs2, Christopher Butler2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The COVID-19 pandemic has presented unique challenges for rapidly designing, initiating, and delivering therapeutic clinical trials. PRINCIPLE (Platform Randomised Trial of Treatments in the Community for Epidemic and Pandemic Illnesses) is the UK national platform investigating repurposed therapies for COVID-19 treatment of older people in the community at high risk of complications. Standard methods of patient recruitment were failing to meet the required pace and scale of enrolment. This paper describes the development and appraisal of a near real-time, data-driven, ethical approach for enhancing recruitment in community care by contacting people with a recent COVID-19 positive test result from the central NHS Test and Trace service within approximately 24-48 h of their test result.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Clinical trials; Data; Healthcare; Primary care; Public and patient involvement and engagement; Recruitment
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35057841 PMCID: PMC8771189 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-021-05965-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Overview of programmes and organisations involved
| Organisation / programme | Description |
|---|---|
| The National Core Studies (NCS) programme | This programme was established in 2020 and is using health data and research to inform the long-term response to COVID-19 and is accelerating progress in establishing a world-leading health data and research infrastructure for the future. |
| The Clinical Trials Therapeutics NCS | This study was established in 2020 to accelerate delivery of large scale COVID-19 trials, working in partnership with the DHSC Therapeutics Task Force. |
| The Data and Connectivity NCS | This study was established in 2020 to increase the use of data to inform decision makers and catalyse COVID-19 research. The Data and Connectivity NCS is led by HDR UK and the Office for National Statistics. |
| Health Data Research UK (HDR UK) | This institute was established to unite the UK’s health data to enable discoveries that improve people’s lives. By making health data safely available to researchers and innovators, it will be possible to more rapidly develop improved understanding of disease and approaches to prevent, treat and cure them. |
| NHS DigiTrials | This is the Health Data Research hub for data-enabled Clinical Trials and is a partnership between NHS Digital, the University of Oxford Big Data Institute, IBM and Microsoft. |
| The UK’s national COVID-19 testing programme | The UK’s national COVID-19 testing programme generates testing outcome data at an individual level. This data flows from the testing programme (Test & Trace) in England into NHS Digital. By 26 November 2020, there had been nearly 40 million virus tests conducted and over 18,000 positive cases per day recorded in the UK [ |
Fig. 1Overview process diagram for test data route to the clinical trial
Fig. 2Number of people registered into PRINCIPLE
Recruitment into PRINCIPLE, number of people
| Date | Total recruitment into PRINCIPLE |
|---|---|
| 1 October 2020 | 1013 |
| 1 November 2020 | 1521 |
| 1 December 2020 | 2274 |
| 20 December 2020 | 2802 |
Call outcomes (for people identified via the NHSD test data). After 24 November, age range of contacts changed from 50+ to 65–75 years
| Call outcomes | 13–24 Nov No. of calls | 25 Nov–4 Dec No. of calls | Total No. of calls | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| % | % | % | ||||
| Interested, information sent | 123 | 16.8% | 203 | 10.6% | 326 | 12.4% |
| Enrolled over the phone | 4 | 0.5% | 87 | 4.6% | 91 | 3.4% |
| Not eligible | 116 | 15.9% | 413 | 21.6% | 529 | 20.0% |
| No answer, left message | 297 | 40.6% | 592 | 31.0% | 889 | 33.7% |
| No answer, unable to leave message | 32 | 4.4% | 147 | 7.7% | 179 | 6.8% |
| Not interested or not wish to take part | 152 | 20.8% | 363 | 19.0% | 515 | 19.5% |
| Hung up, did not wish to be contacted | 0 | 0.0% | 38 | 2.0% | 38 | 1.4% |
| No—other reasons | 7 | 1.0% | 65 | 3.4% | 72 | 2.7% |
| Total | 731 | 100.0% | 1908 | 100.0% | 2639 | 100.0% |
Fig. 3Patient and public survey responses to the question: If you had tested positive for COVID-19, and you were aged 50 and over, how comfortable would you feel? Question A = With test result and email/text/phone contact data being passed on to researchers so that they could invite you to consider participating in a national priority UK clinical trial of COVID-19 treatments? Question B = Receiving an automatic invite by email or text within 24 h of your test result inviting you to consider joining a clinical trial of possible treatments for COVID-19 illness?
Fig. 4Patient and public survey responses to the question: Given the speed at which this invite needs to be sent (i.e. soon after a COVID-19 positive test result), would you feel comfortable with receiving an invite?