患者和护理人员对卒中适应性平台试验ACT-GLOBAL的设计和执行的看法:焦点小组研究

IF 1.5 3区 医学 Q3 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Aravind Ganesh, Nora D Cristall, Brian Dewar, Michael D Hill, Carol Kenney, Ivy A Sebastian, Rose Wilson, Craig S Anderson, Xiaoying Chen, Bijoy Menon, Michel C F Shamy, Nishita Singh
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引用次数: 0

摘要

自适应平台试验代表了脑卒中研究的范式转变。我们通过一系列采用过程评估方法的焦点小组,研究了患者伴侣如何看待急性卒中国际平台试验ACT-GLOBAL(一项多因子、多臂、多阶段、随机、卒中全球适应性平台试验)的设计和执行。方法:参与者从两个综合卒中中心招募,一个在加拿大卡尔加里,一个在澳大利亚悉尼。共有21名患者伴侣和11名临床研究人员参加了四个虚拟焦点小组。一个焦点小组让重复参与者审查同意书草案和患者信息表,另一个小组播放了一段描述平台试验的视频。医师协调员介绍了平台试验概念,随后进行了促进讨论。录音被转录并与现场记录相结合。范例引用和主题分别为每个组确定,随后跨组确定。结果:患者/护理人员认为,以急性卒中为重点的适应性平台试验,如ACT-GLOBAL,为随机分配多种治疗提供了潜在的有益机会,效率更高,数据更丰富,可以改善患者护理。会议强调了看门人流程的重要性,以增加平台提出的未来问题,以确保审查的问题不会干扰日常护理,并确保安全决策最终由无冲突的各方做出。他们认识到,延迟同意是理想的,以便在适应性卒中平台内及时进行随机化/治疗,并且在可行的情况下,在与家庭意见有关的入组相关决策中优先考虑患者安全。强调了以易于理解的块、多种语言和方式提供试验信息的必要性。为了促进参与,透明、信任和双向沟通被认为是知情同意过程的关键。结论:患者-伴侣均支持自适应平台试验设计。然而,他们在执行过程中表达了重要的优先事项,同时保障了患者的自主权和安全。监督、提供患者信息的多种模式、持续参与的反馈评估和透明度被确定为有价值的组成部分。延迟同意被认为是一种实用的纳入患者的方法。类似的考虑可能适用于其他神经/医疗紧急情况的适应性平台试验。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Patient and Caregiver Perspectives on the Design and Execution of ACT-GLOBAL, a Stroke Adaptive Platform Trial: A Focus Group Study.

Introduction: Adaptive platform trials represent a paradigm shift in stroke research. We examined how patient-partners perceived the design and execution of an international platform trial in acute stroke, ACT-GLOBAL (A multi-faCtorial, mulTi-arm, multi-staGe, randomized, gLOBal Adaptive pLatform trial for stroke), through a series of focus groups with process evaluation methodology.

Methods: Participants were recruited from two comprehensive stroke centers one in Calgary, Canada and one in Sydney, Australia. Four virtual focus groups were attended by a total of 21 patient-partners and 11 clinician-researchers. One focus group had repeat attendees to review a draft consent form and patient information sheet, and one presented a video describing platform trials. Physician facilitators presented the platform trial concept followed by a facilitated discussion. Audio recordings were transcribed and combined with field notes. Exemplar quotes and themes were identified separately for each group and subsequently across groups.

Results: Patients/caregivers perceived acute stroke-focused adaptive platform trials such as ACT-GLOBAL as providing potentially beneficial opportunities to be randomized to multiple treatments, with efficiencies and richer data to improve patient care. Emphasis was given to the importance of gatekeeper processes for the addition of future questions posed by the platform to ensure examined questions would not interfere with routine care, and that safety decisions were ultimately made by nonconflicted parties. They appreciated that deferral of consent would be ideal to allow timely randomization/treatment within the adaptive stroke platform, and for patient safety to be prioritized in enrolment-related decisions with family input whenever feasible. The need to have trial information accessible in digestible chunks, multiple languages, and modalities was emphasized. To facilitate engagement, transparency, trust, and two-way communication was deemed critical to the informed consent process.

Conclusion: Patient-partners were supportive of an adaptive platform trial design. However, they expressed important priorities in their execution while safeguarding patient autonomy and safety. Oversight, multiple modes of delivering patient information, and having feedback evaluation and transparency with ongoing participation were identified as valued components. Deferral of consent was recognized as a pragmatic way to enroll patients. Similar considerations may apply to adaptive platform trials in other neurological/medical emergencies.

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来源期刊
Cerebrovascular Diseases
Cerebrovascular Diseases 医学-临床神经学
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
90
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: A rapidly-growing field, stroke and cerebrovascular research is unique in that it involves a variety of specialties such as neurology, internal medicine, surgery, radiology, epidemiology, cardiology, hematology, psychology and rehabilitation. ''Cerebrovascular Diseases'' is an international forum which meets the growing need for sophisticated, up-to-date scientific information on clinical data, diagnostic testing, and therapeutic issues, dealing with all aspects of stroke and cerebrovascular diseases. It contains original contributions, reviews of selected topics and clinical investigative studies, recent meeting reports and work-in-progress as well as discussions on controversial issues. All aspects related to clinical advances are considered, while purely experimental work appears if directly relevant to clinical issues.
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