| Literature DB >> 36068637 |
Victoria Shepherd1, Fiona Wood2,3, Katie Gillies4, Abby O'Connell5, Adam Martin6, Kerenza Hood7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The number of interventions to improve recruitment and retention of participants in trials is rising, with a corresponding growth in randomised Studies Within Trials (SWATs) to evaluate their (cost-)effectiveness. Despite recognised challenges in conducting trials involving adults who lack capacity to consent, until now, no individual-level recruitment interventions have focused on this population. Following the development of a decision aid for family members making non-emergency trial participation decisions on behalf of people with impaired capacity, we have designed a SWAT to evaluate the decision aid in a number of host trials (CONSULT). Unlike in recruitment SWATs to date, the CONSULT intervention is aimed at a 'proxy' decision-maker (a family member) who is not a participant in the host trial and does not receive the trial intervention. This commentary explores the methodological and ethical considerations encountered when designing such SWATs, using the CONSULT SWAT as a case example. Potential solutions to address these issues are also presented. DISCUSSION: We encountered practical issues around informed consent, data collection, and follow-up which involves linking the intervention receiver (the proxy) with recruitment and retention data from the host trial, as well as issues around randomisation level, resource use, and maintaining the integrity of the host trial. Unless addressed, methodological uncertainty about differential recruitment and heterogeneity between trial populations could potentially limit the scope for drawing robust inferences and harmonising data from different SWAT host trials. Proxy consent is itself ethically complex, and so when conducting a SWAT which aims to disrupt and enhance proxy consent decisions, there are additional ethical issues to be considered.Entities:
Keywords: Dementia; Informed consent; Mental capacity; Proxy; RCTs; Recruitment; Research methodology; SWATs; Stroke
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36068637 PMCID: PMC9450319 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-022-06705-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.728
Summary of the main methodological and ethical considerations when designing SWAT in trials involving adults lacking capacity and proposed solutions
| Methodological and/or ethical area | Description of the issue | Proposed solutions |
|---|---|---|
| Maintaining the integrity of the host trial | Impact on recruitment and retention rates from interventions aimed at improving proxy decision-making is unclear | • Undertake assessment of host trial context to ensure suitability for the SWAT and anticipate issues with embedding the intervention and/or SWAT • Adopt an exploratory approach to obtaining and analysing recruitment and retention data in host trials • Record and report factors affecting intervention effectiveness and/or implementation, and impact on the host trial |
| Identifying a suitable outcome measure | Far smaller amount of methodological research in trials involving adults lacking capacity, therefore less is known about appropriate outcomes and measurement instruments | • Factor in the need for preliminary work to establish relevant outcomes and outcome measurement instruments (including measurement timing) • Consider whether work is needed to develop or adapt (and validate) outcome measurement instruments prior to SWAT |
| Unpredictability of sample sizes | SWAT sample size is dependent on the host trials, which may be more heterogeneous and have greater uncertainty than for SWATs in other populations | • Work with the host trial team to assess the likely proportion of participants who will lack capacity (as a whole and by site) and the proportion expected to have a personal consultee/legal representative • Encourage reporting of capacity status and involvement of consultees/legal representatives in trials involving adults lacking capacity to inform future SWATs |
| Challenges in consent and data collection | SWAT participant is not generally a participant in the host trial and so does not usually provide their own consent or data for the host trial | • Incorporate flexibility into the design of the SWAT to enable alignment with host trial processes, and so minimise burden for trials and SWAT participants |
| Uncertainties about the resources needed to deliver the intervention | Trials involving adults lacking capacity are more resource-intensive and so determining the cost of delivering recruitment/retention intervention and conducting a SWAT is particularly important in these trials | • Explore how best to collect resource use data from proxies as non-participants in the host trial and from trial teams • Work is needed to disentangle the costs of delivering the intervention and SWAT from those needed to deliver the host trial • Additional work is needed to determine the most appropriate perspective for economic evaluations in these SWATs |