| Literature DB >> 35597988 |
Emily C O'Brien1,2, Jeremy Sugarman3, Kevin P Weinfurt4,5, Eric B Larson6, Patrick J Heagerty7, Adrian F Hernandez5,8, Lesley H Curtis4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The COVID-19 pandemic has considerably disrupted nearly all aspects of daily life, including healthcare delivery and clinical research. Because pragmatic clinical trials are often embedded within healthcare delivery systems, they may be at high risk of disruption due to the dual impacts on the conduct of both care and research.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Pragmatic clinical trials; Research participation
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35597988 PMCID: PMC9123729 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-022-06385-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.728
Active Collaboratory demonstration projects at the outset of the pandemic
| Acronym ( | Trial name | Therapeutic area |
|---|---|---|
| ACP PEACE ( | Improving Advance Care Planning: Promoting Effective and Aligned Communication in the Elderly | Cancer |
| EMBED ( | Pragmatic Trial of User-Centered Clinical Decision Support to Implement Emergency Department-Initiated Buprenorphine for Opioid Use Disorder | Opioid use disorder |
| GGC4H ( | Guiding Good Choices for Health: Testing Feasibility and Effectiveness of Universal Parent-Focused Prevention in Three Healthcare Systems | Adolescent behavioral health |
| HiLo ( | Pragmatic Trial of Higher vs. Lower Serum Phosphate Targets in Patients Undergoing Hemodialysis | Hemodialysis |
| ICD-Pieces ( | Improving Chronic Disease Management with Pieces | Chronic kidney disease, diabetes and hypertension |
| Nudge ( | Personalized Patient Data and Behavioral Nudges to Improve Adherence to Chronic Cardiovascular Medications | Cardiovascular disease |
| PRIM-ER ( | Primary Palliative Care for Emergency Medicine | Palliative care |
| BackInAction ( | Pragmatic Trial of Acupuncture for Chronic Low Back Pain in Older Adults | Chronic pain |
| FM-TIPS ( | Fibromyalgia TENS in Physical Therapy Study | Fibromyalgia/chronic pain |
| NOHARM ( | Nonpharmacologic Options in Postoperative Hospital-based and Rehabilitation Pain Management | Post-surgical pain |
| OPTIMUM ( | Group-based Mindfulness for Patients with Chronic Low Back Pain in the Primary Care Setting | Chronic pain |
| PROVEN ( | Pragmatic Trial of Video Education in Nursing Homes | Advanced care planning |
| SPOT ( | Suicide Prevention Outreach Trial | Behavioral health |
| TSOS ( | A Policy-Relevant U.S. Trauma Care System Pragmatic Trial for PTSD and Comorbidity (Trauma Survivors Outcomes and Support) | Behavioral health |
Stakeholders supporting demonstration project intervention adaptation in response to COVID-19
| Funding agency | Collaboratory Coordinating Center | Health systems | Trial team |
|---|---|---|---|
∙ Funding agency leadership ∙NIH Program Officer | ∙ Biostatistics and Study Design Core ∙ Coordinating Center ∙ Electronic Health Records Core ∙ Ethics and Regulatory Core ∙ Health Care Systems Interactions Core | ∙ Health system managers, clinic liaisons, site healthcare providers, and site support staff ∙ Information Technology leadership ∙ Non-study team members from the research institutions ∙ Nursing leadership ∙ Practice leadership ∙ Provider organization leadership | ∙ Biostatisticians ∙ Data and safety monitoring board ∙ Intervention experts ∙ Trial stakeholder panel ∙ Trial steering committee and executive committee members |
Considerations for measurement and analysis of COVID-19 impacts by PICOTS domain
| PICOTS | Document/measure | Analysis/report |
|---|---|---|
| Patient population | ∙ Measure changes to participant demographic and clinical characteristics ∙ Measure changes to access/attitudes (i.e., Coronavirus Impact Scale) ∙ Evaluate COVID-related methods for electronic phenotyping | ∙ Compare characteristics over time periods (i.e., pre and post March 2020) ∙ Compare characteristics over time periods defined by local COVID status or impacts on research conduct |
| Intervention of interest | ∙ Document modifications to ensure the safety of patients and providers ∙ Document/measure changes to the methods to communicate and deliver intervention ∙ Document/measure changes to any components or mechanisms associated with intervention | ∙ Compare engagement in intervention components over time periods ∙ Consider modification to primary analysis to adjust (stratify) for COVID phases ∙ Consider sensitivity analyses that restrict to periods of time based on COVID status ∙ Consider subgroup (interaction) analysis of heterogeneity of treatment effect (HTE) across COVID time periods ∙ Consider time-specific mediation analysis to evaluate putative mechanisms across COVID time periods |
| Comparison intervention | ∙ Document modifications to ensure the safety of patients and providers ∙ Measure trends in concomitant care over time | ∙ Compare engagement in comparison (usual care) over time periods ∙ Clarify the estimand of interest—typically the average treatment effect that averages over explicit patient and time characteristics while potentially controlling certain factors ∙ Consider subgroup (interaction) analysis of HTE across COVID time periods ∙ Report the consequence of COVID impacts that are specific to the study design (i.e., parallel randomized trials will be impacted differently from crossover or stepped-wedge designs) |
| Outcome(s) | ∙ Document/measure changes in the way that clinical assessments and patient-reported outcomes are obtained ∙ Measure the impact of COVID-related distress on patient-reported outcomes | ∙ Report the psychometric properties of any modified measures ∙ Consider analysis of subgroups based on patient-reported characteristics at baseline that are predictive of outcomes or COVID susceptibility ∙ Describe temporal trends in patient-reported outcomes ∙ Evaluate patterns and correlates of missing data over time to assess differential non-response |
| Timing | ∙ Document COVID status at the regional level over time ∙ Document COVID status at the clinic level over time ∙ Measure participant-level impact of COVID over time ∙ Consider evaluation of participant outcomes at longer (shorter) lags to determine potential impacts on response trajectories | ∙ Consider effect modification with proximal measures of COVID impact (patient level, clinic level) ∙ Describe longitudinal trajectories in patient outcomes across treatment groups and across COVID time periods |
| Setting | ∙ Document the research setting (modality) for both intervention delivery and participant assessment | ∙ Describe differences in intervention, comparison, and concomitant care across specific research settings ∙ Describe differences in outcomes across research settings |