Center for Medical Psychology and Evidence Based Decision Making, The University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia.
Clin Trials. 2011 Feb;8(1):70-6. doi: 10.1177/1740774510392392.
Clinical trials registries are now operating in the USA, Europe, Australia, China, and India and more are planned. Trial registries could be an excellent source of information about clinical trials for patients and others affected by cancer as well as health care professionals, but may be difficult for patients to navigate and use.
An opportunity arose in Australia to develop a consumer friendly cancer clinical trials website (Australian Cancer Trials Online (ACTO), www.australiancancertrials.gov.au) using an automated data feed from two large clinical trial registries. In this article, we describe aspects of this new website, and explore ways in which such a website may add value to clinical trial data which are already collected and held by trial registries.
The development of ACTO was completed by a Web company working in close association with staff at the Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry (ANZCTR), and with consumer representatives. Data for the website were sourced directly and only from clinical trial registries, thus avoiding the creation of an additional trials database. It receives an automated, daily data feed of newly registered cancer clinical trials from both the ANZCTR and Clinical Trials.gov.
The development of ACTO exemplifies the advantage of a local clinical trial registry working with consumers to provide accessible information about cancer clinical trials to meet consumers' information needs. We found that the inclusion of a lay summary added substantial value for consumers, and recommend that consideration be given to adding a lay summary to the mandatory data items collected by all trial registries. Furthermore, improved navigation, decision support tools, and consistency in data collection between clinical trial registries will also enable consumer websites to provide additional value for users.
Clinical trial registration is not compulsory in Australia. If the additional cancer items (including a lay summary) are not provided by registrants of cancer trials on ANZCTR, this can compromise the quality and usefulness of the data for the end-user, in this case consumers, as they may encounter gaps in the data.
Expanding the World Health Organization Trial Registration Data Set to include this additional information, particularly the lay summary, would be valuable. A well-coordinated system of clinical trial registration is critical to the success of efforts to provide better access for all to inform about clinical trials.
临床试验注册现在在美国、欧洲、澳大利亚、中国和印度等地运行,计划还将在更多地方建立。临床试验注册可能是患者和癌症相关人员以及医疗保健专业人员了解临床试验的绝佳信息来源,但患者可能难以理解和使用。
澳大利亚有机会利用来自两个大型临床试验注册处的自动数据馈送,开发一个面向患者的癌症临床试验网站(澳大利亚癌症临床试验在线(ACTO),www.australiancancertrials.gov.au)。本文描述了这个新网站的各个方面,并探讨了这种网站如何为临床试验注册处已经收集和保存的临床试验数据增加价值。
该网站由一家网络公司与澳大利亚和新西兰临床试验注册处(ANZCTR)的工作人员以及消费者代表密切合作开发。网站的数据直接来自临床试验注册处,只来自临床试验注册处,因此避免了创建额外的试验数据库。它每天从 ANZCTR 和 ClinicalTrials.gov 自动接收新注册的癌症临床试验的实时数据。
ACTO 的开发体现了当地临床试验注册处与消费者合作的优势,能够提供有关癌症临床试验的可访问信息,以满足消费者的信息需求。我们发现,包含通俗易懂的摘要为消费者增加了实质性的价值,并建议考虑为所有临床试验注册处收集的强制性数据项添加通俗易懂的摘要。此外,改善导航、决策支持工具以及临床试验注册处之间的数据收集一致性也将使消费者网站为用户提供更多价值。
在澳大利亚,临床试验注册并非强制性要求。如果 ANZCTR 上注册的癌症试验没有提供额外的癌症项目(包括通俗易懂的摘要),这可能会影响最终用户(在此情况下为消费者)数据的质量和有用性,因为他们可能会遇到数据空白。
扩大世界卫生组织临床试验注册数据集中的这一额外信息,特别是通俗易懂的摘要,将是有价值的。一个协调良好的临床试验注册系统对于努力为所有人提供更好的临床试验信息渠道至关重要。