A novel preference-informed complementary trial (PICT) design for clinical trial research influenced by strong patient preferences
Author:
Ali SaminaORCID, Hopkin Gareth, Poonai Naveen, Richer Lawrence, Yaskina Maryna, Heath Anna, Klassen Terry Paul, McCabe Chris, Drendel Amy, Hopkin Gareth, Round Jeff, Offringa Martin, Pechlivanoglou Petros, Pullenayegum Eleanor, Rios David, Auclair Marie-Christine, Kim Kelly, Bourrier Lise, Dawson Lauren, DaSilva Kamary Coriolano, Marples Pamela, Watts Rick, Thull-Freedman Jennifer, McGrath Patrick, Graham Timothy A. D., Hartling Lisa, Erickson Tannis, Foot Brendon, Schreiner Kurt, Leung Julie, Offringa Martin, Pechlivanoglou Petros, Pullenayegum Eleanor, Rios Juan David, Round Jeff, ,
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Patients and their families often have preferences for medical care that relate to wider considerations beyond the clinical effectiveness of the proposed interventions. Traditionally, these preferences have not been adequately considered in research. Research questions where patients and families have strong preferences may not be appropriate for traditional randomized controlled trials (RCTs) due to threats to internal and external validity, as there may be high levels of drop-out and non-adherence or recruitment of a sample that is not representative of the treatment population. Several preference-informed designs have been developed to address problems with traditional RCTs, but these designs have their own limitations and may not be suitable for many research questions where strong preferences and opinions are present.
Methods
In this paper, we propose a novel and innovative preference-informed complementary trial (PICT) design which addresses key weaknesses with both traditional RCTs and available preference-informed designs. In the PICT design, complementary trials would be operated within a single study, and patients and/or families would be given the opportunity to choose between a trial with all treatment options available and a trial with treatment options that exclude the option which is subject to strong preferences. This approach would allow those with strong preferences to take part in research and would improve external validity through recruiting more representative populations and internal validity. Here we discuss the strengths and limitations of the PICT design and considerations for analysis and present a motivating example for the design based on the use of opioids for pain management for children with musculoskeletal injuries.
Conclusions
PICTs provide a novel and innovative design for clinical trials with more than two arms, which can address problems with existing preference-informed trial designs and enhance the ability of researchers to reflect shared decision-making in research as well as improving the validity of trials of topics with strong preferences.
Funder
Canadian Institutes of Health Research
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Pharmacology (medical),Medicine (miscellaneous)
Cited by
6 articles.
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