Mills Nicola, Metcalfe Chris, Ronsmans Carine, Davis Michael, Lane J Athene, Sterne Jonathan A C, Peters Tim J, Hamdy Freddie C, Neal David E, Donovan Jenny L
Department of Social Medicine, University of Bristol, UK.
Contemp Clin Trials. 2006 Oct;27(5):413-9. doi: 10.1016/j.cct.2006.04.008. Epub 2006 May 4.
Patient preferences for treatment can pose problems for the conduct of randomised controlled trials: patients with a preference may refuse participation and thereby potentially compromise external validity. Moreover, randomising patients with a preference may affect treatment efficacy and threaten internal validity.
This study compared baseline characteristics and short-term psychological outcomes of patients who selected their treatment and those who agreed to random allocation.
Men participating in the prostate testing for cancer and treatment (ProtecT) study and who were randomised to active monitoring (n=138) were compared with those who had refused randomisation and selected this management (n=180). Socio-demographic data were collected at baseline, and anxiety and depression data were collected at baseline and six month follow-up. Socio-demographic characteristics were compared across these two groups in univariable analyses, and then linear regression was used to compare levels of anxiety and depression at follow-up with adjustments for confounders.
Participants who selected active monitoring were more affluent (based on occupation details) and had less anxiety at baseline than those who were randomised. There were no differences with respect to age and marital status. Levels of anxiety and depression at six months follow-up were similar across the two groups of men.
This study found some differences at baseline between the socio-demographic and psychological status of those randomised and self-selecting treatment, but no psychological differences at short-term follow-up. Further empirical evidence is required to assess whether preferences impact upon the process and outcome of randomised controlled trials.
患者的治疗偏好可能给随机对照试验的开展带来问题:有偏好的患者可能拒绝参与,从而可能损害外部效度。此外,将有偏好的患者随机分组可能会影响治疗效果并威胁内部效度。
本研究比较了选择治疗方案的患者与同意随机分配的患者的基线特征和短期心理结局。
将参与前列腺癌检测与治疗(ProtecT)研究且被随机分配至主动监测组(n = 138)的男性与拒绝随机分组并选择该管理方式的男性(n = 180)进行比较。在基线时收集社会人口统计学数据,并在基线和随访6个月时收集焦虑和抑郁数据。在单变量分析中比较这两组的社会人口统计学特征,然后使用线性回归比较随访时的焦虑和抑郁水平,并对混杂因素进行调整。
选择主动监测的参与者比被随机分组的参与者更富裕(基于职业细节),且基线时焦虑程度更低。在年龄和婚姻状况方面没有差异。两组男性在随访6个月时的焦虑和抑郁水平相似。
本研究发现随机分组和自行选择治疗的患者在社会人口统计学和心理状态的基线方面存在一些差异,但在短期随访中没有心理差异。需要更多实证证据来评估偏好是否会影响随机对照试验的过程和结果。