Sheffield Clinical Trials Research Unit, School of Health and Related Research, The University of Sheffield, Regents Court, Regent Street, Sheffield, S1 4DA, England.
Medical Care Research Unit, School of Health and Related Research, The University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK.
BMC Med Res Methodol. 2022 Apr 29;22(1):128. doi: 10.1186/s12874-022-01609-6.
Many clinical trial procedures were often undertaken in-person prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, which has resulted in adaptations to these procedures to enable trials to continue. The aim of this study was to understand whether the adaptations made to clinical trials by UK Clinical Trials Units (CTUs) during the pandemic have the potential to improve the efficiency of trials post-pandemic.
This was a mixed methods study, initially involving an online survey administered to all registered UK CTUs to identify studies that had made adaptations due to the pandemic. Representatives from selected studies were qualitatively interviewed to explore the adaptations made and their potential to improve the efficiency of future trials. A literature review was undertaken to locate published evidence concerning the investigated adaptations. The findings from the interviews were reviewed by a group of CTU and patient representatives within a workshop, where discussions focused on the potential of the adaptations to improve the efficiency of future trials.
Forty studies were identified by the survey. Fourteen studies were selected and fifteen CTU staff were interviewed about the adaptations. The workshop included 15 CTU and 3 patient representatives. Adaptations were not seen as leading to direct efficiency savings for CTUs. However, three adaptations may have the potential to directly improve efficiencies for trial sites and participants beyond the pandemic: a split remote-first eligibility assessment, recruitment outside the NHS via a charity, and remote consent. There was a lack of published evidence to support the former two adaptations, however, remote consent is widely supported in the literature. Other identified adaptations may benefit by improving flexibility for the participant. Barriers to using these adaptations include the impact on scientific validity, limitations in the role of the CTU, and participant's access to technology.
Three adaptations (a split remote-first eligibility assessment, recruitment outside the NHS via a charity, and remote consent) have the potential to improve clinical trials but only one (remote consent) is supported by evidence. These adaptations could be tested in future co-ordinated 'studies within a trial' (SWAT).
在 COVID-19 大流行之前,许多临床试验程序通常都是亲自进行的,这导致了这些程序的调整,以使其能够继续进行。本研究的目的是了解英国临床试验单位(CTU)在大流行期间对临床试验所做的调整是否有可能提高大流行后的试验效率。
这是一项混合方法研究,最初涉及对所有注册的英国 CTU 进行在线调查,以确定因大流行而进行调整的研究。从选定的研究中挑选代表进行定性访谈,以探讨所做的调整及其对未来试验效率的潜在影响。进行了文献综述,以找到有关所调查调整的已发表证据。访谈的结果由一组 CTU 和患者代表在一个研讨会上进行审查,讨论重点是这些调整对提高未来试验效率的潜力。
通过调查确定了 40 项研究。选择了 14 项研究,并对 15 名 CTU 工作人员进行了有关调整的访谈。研讨会包括 15 名 CTU 和 3 名患者代表。调整并没有被视为直接为 CTU 节省效率。但是,有三个调整有可能在大流行后直接提高试验现场和参与者的效率:远程优先的资格评估拆分、通过慈善机构在 NHS 之外招聘以及远程同意。没有发表的证据支持前两个调整,但是远程同意在文献中得到了广泛支持。其他确定的调整可能会通过提高参与者的灵活性而受益。采用这些调整的障碍包括对科学有效性的影响、CTU 作用的局限性以及参与者获得技术的机会。
有三个调整(远程优先的资格评估拆分、通过慈善机构在 NHS 之外招聘以及远程同意)有可能改善临床试验,但只有一个(远程同意)得到了证据的支持。这些调整可以在未来的协调“试验内研究”(SWAT)中进行测试。