Research and Innovation, Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust, Nottingham, NG7 2UH, UK.
Division of Rehabilitation, Ageing and Wellbeing, Nottingham, UK.
BMC Med Res Methodol. 2020 Feb 27;20(1):46. doi: 10.1186/s12874-020-00925-z.
Trials are at risk of contamination bias which can occur when participants in the control group are inadvertently exposed to the intervention. This is a particular risk in rehabilitation studies where it is easy for trial interventions to be either intentionally or inadvertently adopted in control settings. The Falls in Care Homes (FinCH) trial is used in this paper as an example of a large randomised controlled trial of a complex intervention to explore the potential risks of contamination bias. We outline the FinCH trial design, present the potential risks from contamination bias, and the strategies used in the design of the trial to minimise or mitigate against this. The FinCH trial was a multi-centre randomised controlled trial, with embedded process evaluation, which evaluated whether systematic training in the use of the Guide to Action Tool for Care Homes reduced falls in care home residents. Data were collected from a number of sources to explore contamination in the FinCH trial. Where specific procedures were adopted to reduce risk of, or mitigate against, contamination, this was recorded. Data were collected from study e-mails, meetings with clinicians, research assistant and clinician network communications, and an embedded process evaluation in six intervention care homes. During the FinCH trial, there were six new falls prevention initiatives implemented outside the study which could have contaminated our intervention and findings. Methods used to minimise contamination were: cluster randomisation at the level of care home; engagement with the clinical community to highlight the risks of early adoption; establishing local collaborators in each site familiar with the local context; signing agreements with NHS falls specialists that they would maintain confidentiality regarding details of the intervention; opening additional research sites; and by raising awareness about the importance of contamination in research among participants.
Complex rehabilitation trials are at risk of contamination bias. The potential for contamination bias in studies can be minimized by strengthening collaboration and dialogue with the clinical community. Researchers should recognise that clinicians may contaminate a study through lack of research expertise.
试验有受到污染偏差的风险,当对照组的参与者无意中接触到干预措施时,就会发生这种情况。在康复研究中,这是一个特别的风险,因为试验干预措施很容易在对照环境中有意或无意地被采用。本文以一项大型随机对照试验为例,探讨了一种复杂干预措施的潜在污染偏差风险,该试验名为“养老院跌倒(FinCH)”。我们概述了 FinCH 试验设计,介绍了污染偏差的潜在风险,以及在试验设计中采用的策略,以最小化或减轻这种风险。FinCH 试验是一项多中心随机对照试验,嵌入了过程评估,评估了在养老院使用《行动指南工具》的系统培训是否能减少养老院居民跌倒。从多个来源收集数据,以探讨 FinCH 试验中的污染问题。记录了为降低或减轻污染风险而采取的具体措施。数据来自研究电子邮件、与临床医生的会议、研究助理和临床医生网络通信,以及六个干预养老院的嵌入式过程评估。在 FinCH 试验期间,有六个新的预防跌倒举措在研究之外实施,这可能会污染我们的干预措施和结果。用于最小化污染的方法包括:以养老院为单位进行集群随机分组;与临床社区合作,强调早期采用的风险;在每个地点建立熟悉当地情况的当地合作者;与 NHS 跌倒专家签署协议,确保他们对干预措施的细节保密;开设更多的研究场所;并提高参与者对研究中污染重要性的认识。
复杂的康复试验有受到污染偏差的风险。通过加强与临床社区的合作和对话,可以最大限度地减少研究中污染偏差的可能性。研究人员应该认识到,由于缺乏研究专业知识,临床医生可能会污染研究。