Haenssgen Marco J, Charoenboon Nutcha, Do Nga T T, Althaus Thomas, Khine Zaw Yuzana, Wertheim Heiman F L, Lubell Yoel
Centre for Tropical Medicine and Global Health, Nuffield Department of Clinical Medicine, University of Oxford, Old Road Campus, Roosevelt Drive, Oxford, OX3 7FZ, UK.
CABDyN Complexity Centre, Saïd Business School, University of Oxford, Park End Street, Oxford, OX1 1HP, UK.
Trials. 2019 Feb 8;20(1):111. doi: 10.1186/s13063-019-3215-9.
Context matters for the successful implementation of medical interventions, but its role remains surprisingly understudied. Against the backdrop of antimicrobial resistance, a global health priority, we investigated the introduction of a rapid diagnostic biomarker test (C-reactive protein, or CRP) to guide antibiotic prescriptions in outpatient settings and asked, "Which factors account for cross-country variations in the effectiveness of CRP biomarker test interventions?"
We conducted a cross-case comparison of CRP point-of-care test trials across Yangon (Myanmar), Chiang Rai (Thailand), and Hanoi (Vietnam). Cross-sectional qualitative data were originally collected as part of each clinical trial to broaden their evidence base and help explain their respective results. We synthesised these data and developed a large qualitative data set comprising 130 interview and focus group participants (healthcare workers and patients) and nearly one million words worth of transcripts and interview notes. Inductive thematic analysis was used to identify contextual factors and compare them across the three case studies. As clinical trial outcomes, we considered patients' and healthcare workers' adherence to the biomarker test results, and patient exclusion to gauge the potential "impact" of CRP point-of-care testing on the population level.
We identified three principal domains of contextual influences on intervention effectiveness. First, perceived risks from infectious diseases influenced the adherence of the clinical users (nurses, doctors). Second, the health system context related to all three intervention outcomes (via the health policy and antibiotic policy environment, and via health system structures and the ensuing utilisation patterns). Third, the demand-side context influenced the patient adherence to CRP point-of-care tests and exclusion from the intervention through variations in local healthcare-seeking behaviours, popular conceptions of illness and medicine, and the resulting utilisation of the health system.
Our study underscored the importance of contextual variation for the interpretation of clinical trial findings. Further research should investigate the range and magnitude of contextual effects on trial outcomes through meta-analyses of large sets of clinical trials. For this to be possible, clinical trials should collect qualitative and quantitative contextual information for instance on their disease, health system, and demand-side environment.
ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT02758821 registered on 3 May 2016 and NCT01918579 registered on 7 August 2013.
医疗干预措施的成功实施离不开具体情境,但令人惊讶的是,其作用仍未得到充分研究。在全球卫生重点关注的抗菌药物耐药性背景下,我们调查了一种快速诊断生物标志物检测(C反应蛋白,即CRP)在门诊环境中用于指导抗生素处方的情况,并提出问题:“哪些因素导致了CRP生物标志物检测干预措施在不同国家的效果存在差异?”
我们对缅甸仰光、泰国清莱和越南河内的CRP即时检测试验进行了跨案例比较。横断面定性数据最初是作为每项临床试验的一部分收集的,以拓宽其证据基础并帮助解释各自的结果。我们综合了这些数据,形成了一个大型定性数据集,包括130名访谈和焦点小组参与者(医护人员和患者)以及近100万字的文字记录和访谈笔记。采用归纳主题分析法确定情境因素,并在三个案例研究中进行比较。作为临床试验结果,我们考虑了患者和医护人员对生物标志物检测结果的依从性,以及患者排除情况,以评估CRP即时检测在人群层面的潜在“影响”。
我们确定了对干预效果有情境影响的三个主要领域。首先,对传染病的感知风险影响了临床使用者(护士、医生)的依从性。其次,卫生系统情境与所有三个干预结果相关(通过卫生政策和抗生素政策环境,以及通过卫生系统结构和随之而来的使用模式)。第三,需求方情境通过当地就医行为、对疾病和药物的普遍观念以及由此产生的卫生系统利用情况的差异,影响了患者对CRP即时检测的依从性以及被排除在干预之外的情况。
我们的研究强调了情境差异对解释临床试验结果的重要性。进一步的研究应通过对大量临床试验的荟萃分析,调查情境对试验结果影响的范围和程度。要做到这一点,临床试验应收集定性和定量的情境信息,例如关于其疾病、卫生系统和需求方环境的信息。
ClinicalTrials.gov,2016年5月3日注册的NCT02758821和2013年8月7日注册的NCT01918579。