Mackenzie Amelia C L, Chung Stephanie, Hoppes Emily, Miller Nora, Burke Anne E, Achilles Sharon L, Allen C Leigh, Bahamondes Luis, Blithe Diana L, Brache Vivian, Callahan Rebecca L, Cartwright Alice F, Clancy Kathryn B H, Colli Enrico, Cordova-Gomez Amanda, Costenbader Elizabeth C, Creinin Mitchell D, Critchley Hilary O D, Doncel Gustavo F, Dorflinger Laneta J, Edelman Alison, Faustmann Thomas, Gerlinger Christoph, Haddad Lisa B, Hennegan Julie, Juliato Cássia Raquel Teatin, Kibira Simon P S, Mansour Diana, Martinez Andres, Matteson Kristen A, Maybin Jacqueline A, Mickler Alexandria K, Nanda Kavita, Nwachukwu Chukwuemeka E, OlaOlorun Funmilola M, Peine Kevin J, Polis Chelsea B, Vieira Carolina Sales, Sitruk-Ware Regine, Smit Jennifer A, Solomon Marsden, Soule Lisa M, Taylor Douglas, Tolley Elizabeth E, Vandeputte Olivia
Global Health and Population, FHI 360, Washington, DC, United States.
Global Health and Population, FHI 360, Durham, NC, United States; Department of Maternal and Child Health, University of North Carolina Gillings School of Global Public Health, Chapel Hill, NC, United States.
Contraception. 2025 Jun;146:110829. doi: 10.1016/j.contraception.2025.110829. Epub 2025 Jan 27.
We sought to develop consensus recommendations for measurement and analysis of data on contraceptive-induced menstrual changes (CIMCs) in contraceptive clinical trials. We built upon previous standardization efforts over the last 50 years and prioritized input from a variety of global experts and current regulatory authority guidance on patient-reported outcomes.
We completed a formal consensus-building process with an interdisciplinary group of 57 experts from 30 organizations and 14 countries in five global regions who work across academia, nonprofit research organizations, the pharmaceutical industry, and funding agencies. Smaller topical working groups drafted and revised recommendations.
We developed 44 consensus recommendations, including research approaches to establish the evidence for future improvement in the measurement and analysis of CIMC data and guidance for investigators to implement presently. Priority recommendations call for simplification of terminology to make measurement accessible and patient-centered, accounting for intrinsic and extrinsic factors that may impact outcomes during study design and recruitment, standardized data collection of primary CIMC and acceptability outcomes, and harmonized approaches for analysis of these data, including addressing missing data.
By virtually convening a large group of global experts working across disciplines and sectors via a formal methodology, we developed consensus recommendations that will improve the current and future measurement and analysis of CIMC data in contraceptive clinical trials. Using these standardized approaches will permit valid and reliable contraceptive product labeling on CIMC outcomes that matter to users and greater comparability across trials that can inform clinical guidance and contraceptive counseling.
Consensus recommendations on measuring bleeding changes and related outcomes in contraceptive clinical trials can improve reporting of standardized, patient-centered outcomes in future product labeling. These improvements can enable healthcare providers to offer more relevant guidance on contraceptives and users to make more informed decisions about their choice of method.
我们试图为避孕药临床试验中避孕药引起的月经变化(CIMC)数据的测量和分析制定共识性建议。我们基于过去50年的标准化工作,并优先考虑来自全球各地的众多专家的意见以及当前监管机构关于患者报告结局的指导方针。
我们与来自全球五个地区30个组织和14个国家的57位专家组成的跨学科小组完成了一个正式的共识建立过程,这些专家来自学术界、非营利性研究组织、制药行业和资助机构。较小的专题工作组起草并修订了建议。
我们制定了44条共识性建议,包括确立证据以在未来改进CIMC数据测量和分析的研究方法,以及供研究人员当前实施的指导方针。优先建议要求简化术语以使测量易于操作并以患者为中心,在研究设计和招募过程中考虑可能影响结局的内在和外在因素,对主要CIMC和可接受性结局进行标准化数据收集,以及对这些数据进行统一分析的方法,包括处理缺失数据。
通过采用正式方法虚拟召集一大群跨学科和跨部门的全球专家,我们制定了共识性建议,这将改进避孕药临床试验中CIMC数据当前和未来的测量与分析。使用这些标准化方法将能够在对使用者重要的CIMC结局方面进行有效且可靠的避孕药产品标签标注,并提高各试验之间的可比性,从而为临床指导和避孕药咨询提供依据。
关于避孕药临床试验中测量出血变化及相关结局的共识性建议可以改善未来产品标签中标准化、以患者为中心的结局报告。这些改进可以使医疗保健提供者能够提供更相关的避孕药指导,使用者能够就其避孕方法的选择做出更明智的决定。