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为试验招募患者向医疗保健专业人员支付报酬:系统评价与定性研究

Payment to healthcare professionals for patient recruitment to trials: systematic review and qualitative study.

作者信息

Raftery J, Bryant J, Powell J, Kerr C, Hawker S

机构信息

Wessex Institute for Health Research and Development, University of Southampton, UK.

出版信息

Health Technol Assess. 2008 Apr;12(10):1-128, iii. doi: 10.3310/hta12100.

Abstract

OBJECTIVES

To review UK guidelines regarding the use of financial incentives for healthcare professionals to become involved in clinical trials, and to survey perceptions and current practice.

DATA SOURCES

Electronic databases were searched from inception to June 2006. Interviews were held with NHS healthcare professionals, research managers from the pharmaceutical industry and members of the public.

REVIEW METHODS

From the searches, 634 identified studies were assessed for inclusion in the systematic review, but only three met the criteria for data extraction. Fifty-eight individuals were interviewed: 38 chief investigators, six non-research active clinicians, eight public and six pharmaceutical managers. Investigators were selected from those funded by the HTA Programme, the other by 'snowballing' and personal contact.

RESULTS

The evidence from the literature was limited and inconclusive. In UK guidelines, the issues around payments to clinicians or patients were implied rather than stated, usually linked to discussion of conflict of interest and disclosure of any such conflicts. Developments in NHS research governance had led to increased transparency in all payments for research participation and for payments to be made to NHS Trusts rather than individual clinicians. While reimbursement of costs incurred by research was strongly supported by the interviewees, payments to incentivise recruitment were not. A code of practice was suggested for payments in publicly funded trials, which was closely linked to the principles of Good Clinical Practice in research. Factors such as interest in the topic, scope for patient benefit and good communication were considered more important than payment. Interviews with the general public indicated low levels of awareness of the existence of payments to clinicians linked to patient recruitment in trials, and unanimous support for full disclosure. Interviews with managers in the pharmaceutical industry showed greater familiarity with payments for research involvement. GPs were seen as the only group for whom scope existed for individual payments. Concerns were expressed by the pharmaceutical company interviewees at the rising cost of research and unnecessary bureaucracy.

CONCLUSIONS

The ethical stances outlined in Good Clinical Practice in research were widely endorsed by the three groups interviewed. These allow reasonable payments to clinicians, subject to disclosure of any possible conflicts of interest. The potential for incentivising clinicians to recruit was limited as any payments should be based on the cost of inputs and should not be made to individuals but to their host organisation. NHS professionals were concerned that payments could damage the quality of research and also considered full disclosure to patients as challenging. Patients and members of the public favoured full disclosure and payment of expenses to patients involved in research. Pharmaceutical company interviewees viewed payment to the NHS for all research activities as normal and highly regulated. They complained that the prices charged were high and so variable that they required benchmarking. Considerable scope exists for compiling data on the factors that help and hinder the progress of clinical trials and also for experimenting with different incentives to encourage involvement in clinical research. Further research should focus on improved reporting of those organisational aspects of trials that are known to affect recruitment; retrospective analysis of the factors associated with different levels of recruitment to RCTs; prospective comparative research on trial recruitment; qualitative research on participants' experiences of being involved in different kinds of trials, and proposals to include within trials experiments with payments methods.

摘要

目的

回顾英国关于使用经济激励措施促使医疗保健专业人员参与临床试验的指南,并调查相关看法和当前做法。

数据来源

对电子数据库从建库至2006年6月进行检索。对国民保健制度(NHS)的医疗保健专业人员、制药行业的研究经理和公众进行了访谈。

综述方法

通过检索,对634项已识别的研究进行评估以纳入系统综述,但仅有三项符合数据提取标准。共访谈了58人:38名首席研究员、6名非从事研究工作的临床医生、8名公众和6名制药公司经理。研究员从由卫生技术评估(HTA)项目资助的人员中选取,其他则通过“滚雪球”和个人联系的方式选取。

结果

文献中的证据有限且无定论。在英国指南中,关于向临床医生或患者支付报酬的问题是隐含而非明确阐述的,通常与利益冲突及任何此类冲突的披露讨论相关。NHS研究治理方面的发展使得研究参与的所有支付以及向NHS信托机构而非个体临床医生的支付更加透明。尽管受访者强烈支持报销研究产生的费用,但不支持为激励招募而支付报酬。有人建议为公共资助试验中的支付制定一套实践准则,该准则与研究中的良好临床实践原则紧密相关。对研究主题的兴趣、患者受益的范围和良好的沟通等因素被认为比支付报酬更重要。对公众的访谈表明,公众对与试验中患者招募相关的向临床医生支付报酬的知晓程度较低,并且一致支持全面披露。对制药行业经理的访谈显示他们对参与研究的支付情况更为熟悉。全科医生被视为唯一存在个体支付空间的群体。制药公司受访者对研究成本上升和不必要的官僚作风表示担忧。

结论

研究中的良好临床实践所概述的伦理立场得到了三个受访群体的广泛认可。这些立场允许在披露任何可能的利益冲突的情况下向临床医生进行合理支付。激励临床医生进行招募的可能性有限,因为任何支付都应基于投入成本,且不应支付给个人,而应支付给其所在机构。NHS专业人员担心支付可能损害研究质量,并且认为向患者全面披露具有挑战性。患者和公众支持向参与研究的患者全面披露并支付费用。制药公司受访者认为向NHS支付所有研究活动的费用是正常且受到严格监管的。他们抱怨所收取的价格过高且差异很大,需要进行基准比对。在收集有助于和阻碍临床试验进展的因素的数据以及试验不同激励措施以鼓励参与临床研究方面存在很大空间。进一步的研究应侧重于改进对已知影响招募的试验组织方面的报告;对与随机对照试验不同招募水平相关因素的回顾性分析;试验招募的前瞻性比较研究;关于参与者参与不同类型试验经历的定性研究,以及在试验中纳入支付方式实验的建议。

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