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肿瘤临床试验知情同意书的内容和可读性。

The contents and readability of informed consent forms for oncology clinical trials.

机构信息

Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.

出版信息

Am J Clin Oncol. 2010 Aug;33(4):387-92. doi: 10.1097/COC.0b013e3181b20641.

Abstract

OBJECTIVES

To compare the quality of informed consent forms (ICF) for different trial phases, funding sources, oncology subspecialties, disease settings, and intervention modalities.

METHODS

ICF for prospectively conducted clinical trials were examined for their descriptions of benefits and risks, study alternatives, voluntary participation, and confidentiality. Readability was assessed with Flesch Reading Ease (FRE) score and Flesch-Kincaid Reading Grade Level.

RESULTS

Among 262 evaluable trials, ICF contained an average of 3982 words, 379 sentences, and 10.5 pages. The mean FRE score and Reading Grade Level were 61.2 and 7.4, respectively. All ICF explicitly stated that the intervention was investigational. Only 2 (1%) promised direct personal benefits, 16 (6%) suggested the chance of cure or prolonged survival, and 89 (34%) indicated a potential for tumor response. Conversely, 239 (91%) mentioned the risk of serious harms, 217 (83%) admitted that some side effects could be unknown or unpredictable, and 126 (48%) reported hospitalization or death as a possibility. Alternatives to participation, right to withdraw from study, and data confidentiality were addressed in 242 (92%), 254 (97%), and 260 (99%) ICF, respectively. Hematology, industry-funded, metastatic, and systemic therapy trials were most likely to highlight major risks (P < 0.05). Readability was better in phase I trials and in studies, which were performed by medical oncologists, sponsored by governmental agencies, conducted in the metastatic setting, and involved systemic therapy (P < 0.05).

CONCLUSIONS

ICF had acceptable readability and provided a realistic overview of the benefits and risks of clinical trials, but the potential for hospitalization or fatality was underreported.

摘要

目的

比较不同试验阶段、资金来源、肿瘤亚专科、疾病背景和干预方式的知情同意书(ICF)的质量。

方法

检查前瞻性临床试验的 ICF 中对获益和风险、研究替代方案、自愿参与和保密性的描述。使用 Flesch 阅读容易度(FRE)评分和 Flesch-Kincaid 阅读年级水平评估可读性。

结果

在 262 项可评估的试验中,ICF 平均包含 3982 个单词、379 个句子和 10.5 页。平均 FRE 评分和阅读年级水平分别为 61.2 和 7.4。所有 ICF 均明确表示干预措施为研究性的。只有 2 项(1%)承诺直接个人获益,16 项(6%)暗示治愈或延长生存的机会,89 项(34%)表明有肿瘤反应的可能性。相反,239 项(91%)提到严重伤害的风险,217 项(83%)承认某些副作用可能未知或不可预测,126 项(48%)报告住院或死亡的可能性。242 项(92%)、254 项(97%)和 260 项(99%)的 ICF 分别解决了参与替代方案、退出研究的权利和数据保密性的问题。血液学、工业资助、转移性和全身治疗试验最有可能突出主要风险(P < 0.05)。I 期试验和由医学肿瘤学家进行的、由政府机构资助的、在转移性背景下进行的、涉及全身治疗的研究的可读性更好(P < 0.05)。

结论

ICF 的可读性可接受,并提供了临床试验获益和风险的现实概述,但对住院或死亡的潜在风险报道不足。

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