Brookdale Department of Geriatrics and Palliative Medicine, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, One Gustave L Levy Place, Box 1070, New York, NY, 10029, USA.
Geriatric Research Education and Clinical Center (GRECC), James J Peters VA Medical Center, Bronx, NY, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 2023 Feb;38(2):399-405. doi: 10.1007/s11606-022-07646-7. Epub 2022 May 17.
Clinical trials are needed to study topics relevant to older adults with serious illness. Investigators conducting clinical trials with this population are challenged by how to appropriately define, classify, report, and monitor serious and non-serious adverse events (SAEs/AEs), given that some traditionally reported AEs (pressure ulcers, delirium) and SAEs (death, hospitalization) are common in persons with serious illness, and may be consistent with their goals of care.
A multi-stakeholder group convened to establish greater clarity on and new approaches to address this critical issue.
Thirty-two study investigators, members of regulatory and sponsor agencies, and patient stakeholders took part.
The group met virtually four times and, using a collaborative approach, conducted a survey, select interviews, and reviewed regulatory guidance to collectively define the problem and identify a new approach.
SAE/AE challenges fell into two areas: (1) definitions and classifications, including (a) implausible relationships, (b) misalignment with patient-centered care goals, and (c) well-known associations, and (2) reporting and monitoring, including (a) limited guidance, (b) inconsistent standards across regulators, and (c) Data Safety Monitoring Board (DSMB) member knowledge gaps. Problems largely reflected practice norms rather than regulatory requirements that already support context-specific and aggregate reporting. Approaches can be improved by adopting principles that better align strategies for addressing adverse events with the type of intervention being tested, favoring routine and aggregate over expedited reporting, and prioritizing how SAE/AEs relate to patient-centered care goals. Reporting plans and decisions should follow an algorithm underpinned by these principles.
Adoption of the proposed approach-and supporting it with education and better alignment with regulatory guidance and procedures-could improve the quality and efficiency of clinical trials' safety involving older adults with serious illness and other vulnerable populations.
需要开展临床试验来研究与患有重病的老年人相关的课题。由于某些传统报告的不良事件(压疮、谵妄)和严重不良事件(死亡、住院)在患有重病的人群中很常见,并且可能与其治疗目标一致,因此,研究此类人群的研究者在如何恰当地定义、分类、报告和监测严重和非严重不良事件(SAE/AE)方面面临挑战。
召集多利益攸关方小组,以更明确地解决这一关键问题并提出新方法。
32 名研究调查员、监管和赞助机构的成员以及患者利益攸关方参加了会议。
该小组四次通过虚拟方式举行会议,并采用协作方法进行了调查、选择访谈,并审查了监管指南,以共同定义问题并确定新方法。
SAE/AE 面临的挑战分为两个方面:(1)定义和分类,包括(a)不合理的关系,(b)与以患者为中心的治疗目标不一致,以及(c)众所周知的关联;(2)报告和监测,包括(a)指导有限,(b)监管机构之间的标准不一致,以及(c)数据安全监测委员会(DSMB)成员知识差距。这些问题主要反映了实践规范,而不是已经支持特定于背景和汇总报告的监管要求。通过采用更好地将处理不良事件的策略与正在测试的干预类型相匹配的原则,可以改进方法,优先考虑 SAE/AE 与以患者为中心的治疗目标的关系,常规和汇总优于加急报告。报告计划和决策应遵循基于这些原则的算法。
采用拟议的方法,并通过教育以及与监管指导和程序更好地协调来支持该方法,可以提高涉及患有重病的老年人和其他弱势群体的临床试验安全性的质量和效率。