Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri, United States.
Department of Emergency Medicine, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri, United States.
Appl Clin Inform. 2021 Mar;12(2):293-300. doi: 10.1055/s-0041-1727153. Epub 2021 Apr 7.
Clinical trials performed in our emergency department at Barnes-Jewish Hospital utilize a centralized infrastructure for alerting, screening, and enrollment with rule-based alerts sent to clinical research coordinators. Previously, all alerts were delivered as text messages via dedicated cellular phones. As the number of ongoing clinical trials increased, the volume of alerts grew to an unmanageable level. Therefore, we have changed our primary notification delivery method to study-specific, shared-task worklists integrated with our pre-existing web-based screening documentation system.
To evaluate the effects on screening and recruitment workflow of replacing text-message delivery of clinical trial alerts with study-specific shared-task worklists in a high-volume academic emergency department supporting multiple concurrent clinical trials.
We analyzed retrospective data on alerting, screening, and enrollment for 10 active clinical trials pre- and postimplementation of shared-task worklists.
Notifications signaling the presence of potentially eligible subjects for clinical trials were more likely to result in a screen ( < 0.001) with the implementation of shared-task worklists compared with notifications delivered as text messages for 8/10 clinical trials. The change in workflow did not alter the likelihood of a notification resulting in an enrollment ( = 0.473). The Director of Research reported a substantial reduction in the amount of time spent redirecting clinical research coordinator screening activities.
Shared-task worklists, with the functionalities we have described, offer a viable alternative to delivery of clinical trial alerts via text message directly to clinical research coordinators recruiting for multiple concurrent clinical trials in a high-volume academic emergency department.
巴恩斯-犹太医院的急诊科开展的临床试验利用集中式基础设施进行提醒、筛选和入组,基于规则的提醒发送给临床研究协调员。以前,所有提醒都是通过专用手机发送短信。随着正在进行的临床试验数量的增加,提醒的数量增长到了难以管理的水平。因此,我们已经将主要通知传递方式更改为与我们现有的基于网络的筛选文档系统集成的特定于研究的共享任务工作列表。
评估在支持多个同时进行的临床试验的高容量学术急诊科中,用特定于研究的共享任务工作列表代替临床试验提醒的短信传递,对筛选和招募工作流程的影响。
我们分析了在实施共享任务工作列表之前和之后,10 项活跃临床试验的提醒、筛选和入组的回顾性数据。
与短信通知相比,通知潜在合格的临床试验受试者的通知更有可能导致筛选(<0.001),对于 8/10 的临床试验而言都是如此。工作流程的改变并没有改变通知导致入组的可能性(=0.473)。研究主任报告说,花在重新引导临床研究协调员筛选活动上的时间大大减少了。
共享任务工作列表(如我们所述)为在高容量学术急诊科中为招募多个同时进行的临床试验的临床研究协调员提供了一种可行的替代方案,替代了通过短信直接发送临床试验提醒。