From the Department of Neurological Sciences (D.H.), Rush University, Chicago, IL; Department of Neurology (A.R.R., M.B.), University of Miami, FL; Department of Neurology (J.M.G.), University of California San Francisco; Massachusetts General Hospital (A.V.), Boston; Member Insights Department (C.C.), American Academy of Neurology, Minneapolis, MN; Department of Neurology (B.M.K.), University of Colorado, Denver; and Department of Neurology (M.G.), University of Virginia, Charlottesville.
Neurology. 2018 Apr 10;90(15):e1347-e1354. doi: 10.1212/WNL.0000000000005295. Epub 2018 Mar 16.
To study and provide an update on the state of clinical research in neurology in the United States.
US American Academy of Neurology members and chairs of departments of neurology were surveyed regarding clinical research in 2016. NIH data on the neuroscience pipeline and extramural grant funding were also collected.
The response rate was 32% (n = 254) for nonchair researchers and 58% (n = 67) for department chairs. Researcher respondents were on average 50 years old, 66% were men, and 81% were actively conducting clinical research, with phase II/III clinical trials and outcome measure studies being the most common type of research conducted. Time to conduct research, recruitment, and administrative burden were the major barriers reported. According to department chairs, funding and training opportunities in patient-oriented research have increased over the last 10 years. Overall, applicants to neuroscience-specific NIH institutes for extramural funding have decreased over the same time period.
The state of clinical research in neurology has remained relatively stable over the last 10 years, but neurologists still have barriers in conducting clinical research. There has been an interval decrease in neuroscience applicants for NIH funding, which raises concerns about the pipeline and future of clinical research in neurology. These results will serve as a reference for the development of solutions to these issues.
研究并提供美国神经病学临床研究的现状更新。
对美国神经病学学会会员和神经病学系主任进行了 2016 年临床研究的调查。还收集了 NIH 神经科学管道和校外资助的数据。
非主席研究员的回复率为 32%(n=254),而系主任的回复率为 58%(n=67)。研究人员的平均年龄为 50 岁,66%为男性,81%正在积极开展临床研究,其中第二/三期临床试验和结果测量研究是最常见的研究类型。开展研究、招募和行政负担的时间是报告的主要障碍。根据系主任的说法,过去 10 年来,患者导向研究的资金和培训机会有所增加。总体而言,在同一时期,申请神经科学特定 NIH 研究所的外部资助的申请人有所减少。
过去 10 年来,神经病学临床研究的状况相对稳定,但神经科医生在开展临床研究方面仍存在障碍。NIH 资助的神经科学申请人数量出现了间隔性下降,这令人担忧神经科学临床研究的管道和未来。这些结果将为解决这些问题提供参考。