Kyte Derek, Duffy Helen, Fletcher Benjamin, Gheorghe Adrian, Mercieca-Bebber Rebecca, King Madeleine, Draper Heather, Ives Jonathan, Brundage Michael, Blazeby Jane, Calvert Melanie
Primary Care and Clinical Sciences, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, United Kingdom.
The Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2014 Oct 15;9(10):e110229. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0110229. eCollection 2014.
Qualitative evidence suggests patient-reported outcome (PRO) information is frequently absent from clinical trial protocols, potentially leading to inconsistent PRO data collection and risking bias. Direct evidence regarding PRO trial protocol content is lacking. The aim of this study was to systematically evaluate the PRO-specific content of UK National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Health Technology Assessment (HTA) programme trial protocols.
We conducted an electronic search of the NIHR HTA programme database (inception to August 2013) for protocols describing a randomised controlled trial including a primary/secondary PRO. Two investigators independently reviewed the content of each protocol, using a specially constructed PRO-specific protocol checklist, alongside the 'Standard Protocol Items: Recommendations for Interventional Trials' (SPIRIT) checklist. Disagreements were resolved through discussion with a third investigator. 75 trial protocols were included in the analysis. Protocols included a mean of 32/51 (63%) SPIRIT recommendations (range 16-41, SD 5.62) and 11/33 (33%) PRO-specific items (range 4-18, SD 3.56). Over half (61%) of the PRO items were incomplete. Protocols containing a primary PRO included slightly more PRO checklist items (mean 14/33 (43%)). PRO protocol content was not associated with general protocol completeness; thus, protocols judged as relatively 'complete' using SPIRIT were still likely to have omitted a large proportion of PRO checklist items.
The PRO components of HTA clinical trial protocols require improvement. Information on the PRO rationale/hypothesis, data collection methods, training and management was often absent. This low compliance is unsurprising; evidence shows existing PRO guidance for protocol developers remains difficult to access and lacks consistency. Study findings suggest there are a number of PRO protocol checklist items that are not fully addressed by the current SPIRIT statement. We therefore advocate the development of consensus-based supplementary guidelines, aimed at improving the completeness and quality of PRO content in clinical trial protocols.
定性证据表明,患者报告结局(PRO)信息在临床试验方案中常常缺失,这可能导致PRO数据收集不一致并存在偏倚风险。目前缺乏关于PRO试验方案内容的直接证据。本研究的目的是系统评价英国国家卫生与临床优化研究所(NIHR)卫生技术评估(HTA)项目试验方案中特定于PRO的内容。
我们对NIHR HTA项目数据库(建库至2013年8月)进行了电子检索,以查找描述包含主要/次要PRO的随机对照试验的方案。两名研究者使用专门构建的特定于PRO的方案清单以及“干预性试验标准方案条目:建议”(SPIRIT)清单,独立审查每个方案的内容。通过与第三名研究者讨论解决分歧。75个试验方案纳入分析。方案平均包含32/51(63%)条SPIRIT建议(范围16 - 41,标准差5.62)和11/33(33%)条特定于PRO的条目(范围4 - 18,标准差3.56)。超过半数(61%)的PRO条目不完整。包含主要PRO的方案包含的PRO清单条目略多(平均14/33(43%))。PRO方案内容与总体方案完整性无关;因此,使用SPIRIT判定为相对“完整”的方案仍可能遗漏很大比例的PRO清单条目。
HTA临床试验方案的PRO部分需要改进。关于PRO基本原理/假设、数据收集方法、培训和管理的信息常常缺失。这种低依从性不足为奇;有证据表明,现有的针对方案制定者的PRO指南仍然难以获取且缺乏一致性。研究结果表明,当前的SPIRIT声明未完全涵盖一些PRO方案清单条目。因此,我们提倡制定基于共识的补充指南,以提高临床试验方案中PRO内容的完整性和质量。