是时候向前迈进了:为帮助研究人员设计包容性临床试验而制定指南的方法和结果。

IF 3.9 3区 医学 Q1 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
K Biggs, K Hullock, C Dix, J A Lane, H Green, S Treweek, F Shiely, V Shepherd, A Willis, T Isaacs, C Cooper
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:在设计临床试验时,必须将所有可能从试验干预措施中受益的人群纳入其中。目前已开发出多个框架,帮助研究人员在设计试验时考虑纳入特定服务不足群体的障碍,但在如何实施这些框架方面缺乏实用指导。本文介绍了 ACCESS 项目、项目各阶段的研究成果以及我们就如何设计更具包容性的试验而制定的指南(STEP UP):STEP UP 指南的开发分为五个阶段:(1)范围界定文献综述;(2)"圆桌 "讨论会议;(3)试验的重新设计;(4)访谈;(5)指导文件的编写,其中包括公众投稿者和 ACCESS 团队的意见:40 多名专家为 ACCESS 项目做出了贡献,其中包括患者和公众、临床医生、NHS 研究人员、试验专家和其他学者。范围审查确定了几种用于提高包容性的策略,主要是围绕招募设置,但对这些策略的评估很少。圆桌 "讨论确定了英国和爱尔兰为提高包容性而采用的其他策略,这些策略被分为以下几类:沟通、社区参与、招募地点、患者信息、灵活性、招募设置、同意程序、监督、研究人员培训和激励措施。通过将 INCLUDE 三个框架(种族、社会经济劣势、同意能力受损)中的一个框架应用于一项试验,利用这些策略重新设计了三项现有试验,从而为指南提出了关键建议。在与利益相关者的访谈中探讨了有关实施的问题,并确定了关键的促进因素:资助者要求提供有关纳入的信息、有时间和资金来实施战略、专职人员、试验方案的灵活性,以及在设计阶段考虑纳入服务不足的群体。STEP UP 指南可在 http://step-up-clinical-trials.co.uk 免费获取:研究人员应考虑包容性,以制定最初的试验设计决策。试验团队和资助者需要确保试验获得实施 STEP UP 指南所需的资源和时间,并增加招募多元化人群的机会。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Time to STEP UP: methods and findings from the development of guidance to help researchers design inclusive clinical trials.

Background: It is important to design clinical trials to include all those who may benefit from the intervention being tested. Several frameworks have been developed to help researchers think about the barriers to inclusion of particular under-served groups when designing a trial, but there is a lack of practical guidance on how to implement these frameworks. This paper describes the ACCESS project, the findings from each phase of the project and the guidance we developed (STEP UP) on how to design more inclusive trials.

Methods: Development of the STEP UP guidance had five phases: (1) Scoping literature review, (2) 'roundtable' discussion meetings, (3) redesign of trials, (4) interviews and (5) guidance document development, with input from public contributors and the ACCESS team.

Results: Over 40 experts contributed to the ACCESS project-patients and the public, clinicians, NHS research staff, trialists and other academics. The scoping review identified several strategies being used to improve inclusion, mostly around recruitment settings, but there was little evaluation of these strategies. The 'roundtable' discussions identified additional strategies being used across the UK and Ireland to improve inclusion, which were grouped into: Communication, Community engagement, Recruitment sites, Patient information, Flexibility, Recruitment settings, Consent process, Monitoring, Training for researchers and Incentives. These strategies were used to redesign three existing trials by applying one of the three INCLUDE frameworks (ethnicity, socioeconomic disadvantage, impaired capacity to consent) to one trial each, to produce the key recommendations for the guidance. Issues around implementation were explored in stakeholder interviews and key facilitators were identified: funders requesting information on inclusion, having the time and funding to implement strategies, dedicated staff, flexibility in trial protocols, and considering inclusion of under-served groups at the design stages. The STEP UP guidance is freely available at http://step-up-clinical-trials.co.uk .

Conclusion: Researchers should consider inclusivity to shape initial trial design decisions. Trial teams and funders need to ensure that trials are given both the resources and time needed to implement the STEP UP guidance and increase the opportunities to recruit a diverse population.

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来源期刊
BMC Medical Research Methodology
BMC Medical Research Methodology 医学-卫生保健
CiteScore
6.50
自引率
2.50%
发文量
298
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: BMC Medical Research Methodology is an open access journal publishing original peer-reviewed research articles in methodological approaches to healthcare research. Articles on the methodology of epidemiological research, clinical trials and meta-analysis/systematic review are particularly encouraged, as are empirical studies of the associations between choice of methodology and study outcomes. BMC Medical Research Methodology does not aim to publish articles describing scientific methods or techniques: these should be directed to the BMC journal covering the relevant biomedical subject area.
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