Cardiovascular Diseases Clinical Trial
Official title:
Does Paying Subjects to Participate in Research Improve Recruitment and Increase the Proportion of Socially Deprived and Elderly Participants?
Patient recruitment into clinical trials is a major challenge and the elderly, socially deprived and those with multiple co-morbidities are often under-represented. The idea of paying patients an incentive to participate in research is controversial and evidence is needed to evaluate this as a recruitment strategy. This study aims to assess the impact on recruitment into five current clinical trials of a £100 incentive payment and whether this payment will attract more elderly and socially deprived patients.
In the UK, it is already common practice to reimburse out-of-pocket expenses eg travelling
expenses and parking charges to patients participating in clinical research studies, but not
to give any other incentives. This contrasts with healthy volunteer studies where financial
payments are often made to encourage participation in studies.
There are few data on how payments to patients in the UK would influence the recruitment and
demographic structure of patients recruited to clinical research studies.
The single biggest cost of clinical trials in the UK is the cost of recruiting suitable
subjects. The Academy of Medical Sciences report on the UK clinical trials environment, "A
new pathway for the regulation and governance of health research", provided a comprehensive
review of the barriers faced in running clinical trials . However, other barriers to
recruitment exist after these hurdles have been overcome. Importantly, in our experience, of
100 suitable subjects identified as suitable to be entered into a study only about 14% are
actually randomised. Most of the identified suitable subjects do not reply to invitation
letters from their doctor and some patients who do reply decline the invitation to
participate. Campaigns to engage the public on the importance of research have had modest
effects on improving the awareness about trials but no measurable effect on willingness to
participate .
An important finding is that those subjects who do participate in clinical trials usually
have much lower rates of events than predicted from observational data. This is probably
because trials attract subjects who care about their own health and the health of others and
these subjects exhibit good 'health behaviour'. Those subjects with less good health
behaviour and who constitute the subjects who suffer more consequences from their disorders
in the real world, do not participate in trials as readily. The result is that trial
participants tend to be middle class, middle aged, low risk subjects. These subjects are
unrepresentative of the population at large or the population who will eventually get most of
the prescribing (lower class, elderly and high risk). In addition, including only low risk
subjects may result in studies being abandoned because the low event rates make achieving a
statistically reliable result futile.
How can we address this issue within an ethical framework?
The findings from one trial currently running casts some light on this issue. The Streamlined
Celecoxib versus standard therapy Outcome Trial (SCOT) is currently running in both the UK
and Denmark. Trial recruitment in Denmark is significantly better than in the Scotland. We
think that this is because in Denmark, all patients pay the full price for their medications
and trial participation means that they get their medication free. In Scotland where
recruitment is lower, all prescriptions are free anyway so there is no such incentive. Thus
there appears to be a financial incentive for Danish patients to participate.
The present proposal seeks to study the effect of payments on recruitment.
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