Division of Pediatric Hematology and Oncology, Department of Pediatrics, Oregon Health and Science University, Portland, Oregon.
Oregon Clinical and Translational Research Institute, Oregon Health and Science University, Portland, Oregon.
Pediatr Blood Cancer. 2021 Apr;68(4):e28907. doi: 10.1002/pbc.28907. Epub 2021 Jan 26.
Within pediatric oncology, parental decision making regarding participation in clinical trials that aim to reduce therapy to mitigate side effects is not well studied. The recently completed Children's Oncology Group trial for standard-risk acute lymphoblastic leukemia (AALL0932) included a reduction in maintenance therapy, and required consent for randomization immediately prior to starting maintenance. At our institution, 40% of children enrolled on AALL0932 were withdrawn from protocol therapy prior to randomization due to parental choice. This study sought to identify factors that impacted parental decision making regarding randomization on AALL0932.
Parents of children enrolled on AALL0932 at our institution were eligible if their child met criteria for the average-risk randomization. Parents were invited to participate in a 30-50-minute phone interview. Questions focused on factors that shaped parental decision making about randomization, as well as their perspectives about the clinical trial experience more generally.
Fear of receiving less therapy and subsequent relapse was the predominant reason to decline randomization. Reasons given for consenting to randomization included trust in the physician, altruism, hope for less therapy, and potential for fewer side effects. Parents also reflected on ways to support future families making decisions about clinical trial participation.
While many parents recognize the importance of clinical trials aiming to mitigate side effects, the fear of their own child relapsing with less than standard therapy may dissuade them from study participation. Recognizing and addressing these concerns will be important for enrollment and retention in future clinical trials.
在儿科肿瘤学中,父母对于参与旨在减少治疗以减轻副作用的临床试验的决策尚未得到充分研究。最近完成的儿童肿瘤学组标准风险急性淋巴细胞白血病(AALL0932)试验包括减少维持治疗,并要求在开始维持治疗前立即对随机分组进行同意。在我们的机构中,由于父母的选择,40%入组 AALL0932 的儿童在随机分组前退出了协议治疗。本研究旨在确定影响父母对 AALL0932 随机分组决策的因素。
如果其孩子符合平均风险随机分组标准,我们机构中入组 AALL0932 的儿童的父母符合参加本研究的条件。邀请父母参加 30-50 分钟的电话访谈。问题集中在影响父母随机分组决策的因素,以及他们对临床试验经验的看法。
担心接受较少的治疗和随后的复发是拒绝随机分组的主要原因。同意随机分组的原因包括对医生的信任、利他主义、希望减少治疗和潜在的更少副作用。父母还思考了支持未来家庭对临床试验参与做出决策的方法。
虽然许多父母认识到旨在减轻副作用的临床试验的重要性,但他们担心自己的孩子接受低于标准治疗的复发可能会阻止他们参与研究。认识和解决这些问题对于未来临床试验的入组和保留非常重要。