Data monitoring committees in pediatric randomized controlled trials registered in ClinicalTrials.gov

Author:

Machado Tiago12ORCID,Mainoli Beatrice123,Caldeira Daniel12,Ferreira Joaquim J124,Fernandes Ricardo M125ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Laboratory of Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics, Faculdade de Medicina, Universidade de Lisboa, Lisbon, Portugal

2. Instituto de Medicina Molecular João Lobo Antunes, Lisbon, Portugal

3. Clinical Research Unit, Research Center of IPO Porto (CI-IPOP), Porto, Portugal

4. Campus Neurológico Sénior (CNS), Torres Vedras, Portugal

5. Department of Pediatrics, Santa Maria Hospital, Centro Hospitalar Universitário Lisboa Norte, Lisbon, Portugal

Abstract

Background Data monitoring committees advise on clinical trial conduct through appraisal of emerging data to ensure participant safety and scientific integrity. While consideration of their use is recommended for trials performed with vulnerable populations, previous research has shown that data monitoring committees are reported infrequently in publications of pediatric randomized controlled trials. We aimed to assess the frequency of reported data monitoring committee adoption in ClinicalTrials.gov registry records and to examine the influence of key trial characteristics. Methods We conducted a cross-sectional data analysis of all randomized controlled trials performed exclusively in a pediatric population and registered in ClinicalTrials.gov between 2008 and 2021. We used the Access to Aggregate Content of ClinicalTrials.gov database to retrieve publicly available information on trial characteristics and data on safety results. Abstracted data included reported trial design and conduct parameters, population and intervention characteristics, reasons for prematurely halting, serious adverse events, and mortality outcomes. We performed descriptive analyses on the collected data and explored the influence of clinical, methodological, and operational trial characteristics on the reported adoption of data monitoring committees. Results We identified 13,928 pediatric randomized controlled trial records, of which 39.7% reported adopting a data monitoring committee, 49.0% reported not adopting a data monitoring committee, and 11.3% did not answer on this item. While the number of registered pediatric trials has been increasing since 2008, we found no clear time trend in the reported adoption of data monitoring committees. Data monitoring committees were more common in multicenter trials (50.6% vs 36.9% for single-center), multinational trials (60.2% vs 38.7% for single-country), National Institutes of Health–funded (60.3% vs 40.1% for industry-funded or 37.5% for other funders), and placebo-controlled (47.6% vs 37.5% for other types of control groups). Data monitoring committees were also more common among trials enrolling younger participants, trials employing blinding techniques, and larger trials. Data monitoring committees were more common in trials with at least one serious adverse event (52.6% vs 38.4% for those without) as well as for trials with reported deaths (70.3% vs 38.9% for trials without reported deaths). In all, 4.9% were listed as halted prematurely, most often due to low accrual rates. Trials with a data monitoring committee were more often halted for reasons related to scientific data than trials without a data monitoring committee (15.7% vs 7.3%). Conclusion According to registry records, the use of data monitoring committees in pediatric randomized controlled trials was more frequent than previously reported in reviews of published trial reports. The use of data monitoring committees varied across key clinical and trial characteristics based on which their use is recommended. Data monitoring committees may still be underutilized in pediatric trials, and reporting of this item could be improved.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Pharmacology,General Medicine

Reference30 articles.

1. Data Monitoring Committees in Clinical Trials

2. FDA Guidance for Clinical Trial Sponsors. Establishment and operation of clinical trial data monitoring committees, 2006, https://www.fda.gov/regulatory-information/search-fda-guidance-documents/establishment-and-operation-clinical-trial-data-monitoring-committees

3. Committee for medicinal products for human use (CHMP) guideline on Data Monitoring Committees

4. Standard 3: Data Monitoring Committees

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