Scientific Review of Protocols to Enhance Informativeness of Global Health Clinical Trials

Author:

Burford Belinda1ORCID,Norman Thea2,Dolley Shawn3

Affiliation:

1. National Coalition of Independent Scholars

2. Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation

3. Open Global Health

Abstract

Abstract Background Trial informativeness describes the likelihood of a clinical trial to have a meaningful impact on clinical practice, research or policy decisions. A dedicated scientific review process for protocols at the post-funding stage is not common, yet is an opportunity to enhance trial informativeness. The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation (BMGF), as one of the largest non-industry funders of clinical trials in the world, created a group called Design, Analyze, Communicate (DAC). DAC began expert scientific reviews of a sample of grantees’ trial protocols in 2019. We categorized and quantified areas of scientific review feedback provided for 52 clinical trial protocols submitted to DAC over a 3-year period. Knowledge of feedback themes offers insight into potential areas of trial design weakness, which may be helpful in considering the types of support best offered in the early stages of trial design for global health clinical trials. Methods We conducted a retrospective analysis of protocol review feedback provided by DAC to grantees. Protocols were submitted to BMGF between 2020–2022. A qualitative content analysis was conducted by developing a codebook of clinical trial methodology topics and subtopics, and systematically coding free-text review feedback. Manual text classification of individual feedback statements enabled quantification and frequency analysis of review feedback. Results A total of 1537 individual recommendations were made across all 52 protocols. The median number of recommendations per protocol was 28 (range: 13 to 52), covering a wide range of issues related to clinical trial design, implementation, analysis, and impact. Nearly half of all recommendations (47%) were characterized by the review team as high priority. The areas with the highest frequency of recommendations were Statistics and Data Analysis, Trial Procedures, and Intervention/Dose. Conclusions This study provides a taxonomy of scientific review feedback topic areas that can be used to categorize clinical trial design topics. The high number of recommendations per protocol review across several distinct topic areas highlights the need for a scientific review to enhance informativeness of global health clinical trials. This review must take place prior to trial initiation and review teams should include statistical and trial design expertise with additional expertise tailored to trial/intervention type and phase.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

Reference27 articles.

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2. Harms From Uninformative Clinical Trials;Zarin DA;JAMA,2019

3. The proportion of randomized controlled trials that inform clinical practice;Hutchinson N;eLife,2022

4. Avoidable waste of research related to inadequate methods in clinical trials;Yordanov Y;BMJ,2015

5. Dolley S, Norman T, McNair D, Hartman D. A Maturity Model for the Scientific Review of Clinical Trial Designs and Their Informativeness [Internet]. Public Health and Healthcare; 2023 Apr [cited 2023 Oct 13]. Available from: https://www.preprints.org/manuscript/202304.0147/v1.

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