Le-Rademacher Jennifer G, Storrick Elizabeth M, Jatoi Aminah, Mandrekar Sumithra J
Department of Health Sciences Research, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN.
Department of Oncology, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN.
Mayo Clin Proc Innov Qual Outcomes. 2019 May 27;3(2):176-182. doi: 10.1016/j.mayocpiqo.2019.01.002. eCollection 2019 Jun.
To report the results of a survey conducted among Mayo Clinic medical oncologists, hematologists, and cancer prevention specialists to better understand the current practice of determining whether an adverse event that a patient experience in a clinical trial is related to the drug under investigation, a process commonly known as attribution, as well as to formulate recommendations for an improved system.
An electronic survey was developed and conducted (from August 2 through 29, 2017) among 165 medical oncologists, hematologists, and cancer prevention specialists at the 3 Mayo Clinic sites: Rochester, Minnesota; Scottsdale, Arizona; and Jacksonville, Florida. The survey included 21 items that queried clinicians about their clinical practice and trial experience, their training and process in adverse event attribution assignment, and their recommendations for improving the current attribution system.
Thirty-seven percent (61 of 165) of physicians responded to the survey. The median number of years in clinical practice was 15 (range, 1-64) and that of clinical trial experience 12. Eighty-nine percent (54 of 61) had served as a trial principal investigator. Only 15% (9 of 60) of responders reported having received any formal attribution training. Eighty percent (48 of 60) were confident about their ability to assign attribution. Seventy-five percent (45 of 60) consulted their colleagues or study chair when assigning attribution. Sixty-seven percent (40 of 60) recommended formal training to improve attribution accuracy.
Very few clinical trialists in our survey received any formal training for adverse event attribution, yet most identified formal training as effective means to improve attribution accuracy. These data underscore an unmet need of formal adverse event attribution training among clinical trialists.
报告一项针对梅奥诊所医学肿瘤学家、血液学家和癌症预防专家开展的调查结果,以更好地了解目前确定患者在临床试验中经历的不良事件是否与所研究药物相关这一过程(通常称为归因)的实际情况,并为改进该系统制定建议。
设计并开展了一项电子调查(2017年8月2日至29日),调查对象为梅奥诊所三个地点(明尼苏达州罗切斯特、亚利桑那州斯科茨代尔和佛罗里达州杰克逊维尔)的165名医学肿瘤学家、血液学家和癌症预防专家。该调查包含21个项目,询问临床医生他们的临床实践和试验经验、不良事件归因分配的培训和流程,以及他们对改进当前归因系统的建议。
37%(165名中的61名)的医生回复了调查。临床实践的中位年数为15年(范围1 - 64年),临床试验经验的中位年数为12年。89%(61名中的54名)曾担任试验主要研究者。只有15%(60名中的9名)的回复者报告接受过任何正式的归因培训。80%(60名中的48名)对自己进行归因分配的能力有信心。75%(60名中的45名)在进行归因分配时会咨询同事或研究负责人。67%(60名中的40名)建议进行正式培训以提高归因准确性。
在我们的调查中,很少有临床试验人员接受过不良事件归因的正式培训,但大多数人认为正式培训是提高归因准确性的有效方法。这些数据凸显了临床试验人员对正式不良事件归因培训的需求未得到满足。