Readability of Public-Facing Urologic Oncology Trial Summaries on ClinicalTrials.gov.

IF 1.7 Q4 UROLOGY & NEPHROLOGY
Avi S Baskin, Cameron J Britton, Lan Ahn Galloway, Daniel D Joyce
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Purpose: To assess the readability of clinical trial brief summaries for urologic oncology studies listed on ClinicalTrials.gov and evaluate readability variation by cancer type, time, or study sponsor.

Materials and methods: We analyzed all clinical trials related to 6 urologic cancers registered on ClinicalTrials.gov. We extracted the brief summary and calculated surface metrics (word count, sentence length, vocabulary size, and abbreviation count) and 5 standard readability scores including the Flesch-Kincaid Grade Level (FKGL) and Flesch Reading Ease (FRE). We used interrupted time series analysis to assess readability trends, with 2017 as the intervention point following the NIH's clear language guidance release. We categorized sponsor types (government, academic, and industry) to compare readability across sponsor groups.

Results: We identified 17,175 trials across 6 cancer types. The average FKGL was 18.7 and FRE was 7.4. The median length was 24 (IQR 20-30) words. Interrupted time series analysis showed that from 2000 to 2016, brief summaries became increasingly more complex with FKGL rising and FRE decreasing (both P < .01). After the plain language guidance from the NIH, readability improved with FKGL decreasing and FRE increasing (both P < .01). Government-sponsored trials were most readable (FKGL = 16.0, FRE = 27.3), followed by academic (FKGL 18.1, FRE 8.7) and industry (FKGL 19.1, FRE 7.3); all differences were significant (P < .01).

Conclusions: Brief summaries of urologic oncology trials on ClinicalTrials.gov remain highly complex requiring a graduate level reading ability. There is improvement since NIH's plain language directive. Efforts to enhance the clarity of clinical trial descriptions are needed to support informed patient participation.

ClinicalTrials.gov上面向公众的泌尿系统肿瘤试验总结的可读性。
目的:评估ClinicalTrials.gov上列出的泌尿系统肿瘤临床试验摘要的可读性,并评估不同癌症类型、时间或研究发起人的可读性差异。材料和方法:我们分析了在ClinicalTrials.gov上注册的所有与六种泌尿系统癌症相关的临床试验。我们提取了简短的摘要,并计算了表面指标(字数、句子长度、词汇量、缩写计数)和五个标准可读性分数,包括Flesch- kincaid Grade Level (FKGL)和Flesch Reading Ease (FRE)。我们使用中断时间序列分析来评估可读性趋势,并将2017年作为NIH明确语言指导发布后的干预点。我们对赞助商类型(政府、学术、行业)进行了分类,以比较不同赞助商组的可读性。结果:我们确定了6种癌症类型的17,175项试验。平均FKGL为18.7,FRE为7.4。中位长度为24 (IQR 20-30)字。中断时间序列分析显示,从2000年到2016年,简要摘要变得越来越复杂,FKGL上升,FRE下降。结论:ClinicalTrials.gov上的泌尿系统肿瘤试验简要摘要仍然高度复杂,需要研究生水平的阅读能力。自美国国立卫生研究院的简易语言指令以来,情况有所改善。需要努力提高临床试验描述的清晰度,以支持知情的患者参与。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Urology Practice
Urology Practice UROLOGY & NEPHROLOGY-
CiteScore
1.80
自引率
12.50%
发文量
163
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