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RECRUITMENT AND ADHERENCE STRATEGIESEXPERIENCE FROM CLINICAL TRIALS

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Title: RECRUITMENT AND ADHERENCE STRATEGIESEXPERIENCE FROM CLINICAL TRIALS


1
RECRUITMENT AND ADHERENCE STRATEGIES/EXPERIENCE
FROM CLINICAL TRIALS
  • Jeffrey L. Probstfield, MD
  • University of Washington Schools of Medicine and
    Public Health
  • Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

2
COMPARISON OF SHEP, STOP-H, MRC-92 AND SYST-EUR
CHARACTERISTICS
3
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4
COMPARISON OF SHEP, STOP-H, MRC-92 AND SYST-EUR
CHARACTERISTICS
5
COMPARISON OF SHEP, STOP-H, MRC-92 AND
SYST-EUROUTCOMES PERCENT REDUCTION
6
SYST - EURA WORST CASE ANALYSIS?
7
RECRUITMENT
  • Successful recruitment has been documented in
    many trials Government and Industry.
  • Clinical SitesPast performance predicts future
  • Your centers carefully selected past performance
  • (http//www.fhcrc.org/science/phs/swog/recrcct/)

8
RECRUITMENTFUNDAMENTAL POINT

Friedman, Furberg and DeMets Successful
recruitment depends on developing a careful plan
with multiple strategies, maintaining
flexibility, establishing interim goals and
preparing to devote the necessary effort.
9
RECRUITMENT OF STUDY POPULATION
  • GET SUFFICIENT POPULATION,
  • IN REASONABLE TIME
  • RECRUITMENT FAILURE OCCURS
  • LATE START
  • INADEQUATE PLANNING
  • INSUFFICIENT EFFORT
  • OVERLY OPTIMISTIC EXPECTATIONS

10
RECRUITMENTBASIC ISSUES
  • Planning-sources and support
  • Strategies and sources
  • Conduct-implementation
  • Monitoring-short and long term goals
  • Problems-expect them to happen
  • Solutions-make them occur
  • Reasons for Participation

11
ADVANTAGESWIDE ENTRY CRITERIA
  • Easier screening and recruitment
  • More feasible and affordable
  • Broader range of variables and larger study size
  • More reliable overall result
  • Greater public health Impact
  • Better opportunity to test subgroup hypotheses

12
PLANNING
  • Likelihood of getting sufficient participants
  • Statistical power-assumes constant enrollment
  • Staff-organized and experience
  • Institutional support-proper facilities
  • Publicity- start before trial
  • Multiple strategies- at least 3
  • Pilot test strategies
  • Contingency plans

13
RECRUITMENT DATA13 NHLBI STUDIES
14
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15
PATIENTS RANDOMIZED
16
SELECT ACCRUAL Projected and Actual
Projected
17
ACCORD VANGUARD
18
  • ACCORD
  • MAIN TRIAL

19
STRATEGIES AND SOURCES
  • POINTS OF EMPHASIS
  • Strategies are unpredictable
  • Good relationship with medical community
  • Respect families and significant others
  • Do not be overly aggressive
  • run-in period
  • Combinations of approaches

20
RECRUITMENT STRATEGIES IN CONTROLLED TRIALS
  • Chart Review
  • Media Efforts Registries
  • Direct Mail Blood Bank Donors
  • Mass Screening Occupational Screening
  • Laboratory Lists Medical Referrals

21
NEW STRATEGY
  • WEB-SITE SCREENING TOOL
  • LIMITED INFORMED CONSENT
  • ENDORSED BY IG OF USA
  • QUALIFIED SCREENEES TO GEOGRAPHICALLY CLOSEST
    CLINIC
  • CCC AGREED TO WORK OUT PROGRAMMING
  • RETAIN DATA WITHOUT IDENTIFIERS AT CCC

22
LESSONS LEARNED FROM MASS MAILING
  • Integrate into overall recruitment program
  • Targeted population-e.g. age, ethnicity
  • Post card prompt
  • Return
  • Phone
  • Telephone follow-up
  • Repeat mailing same list

23
RECRUITMENT OF MINORITIES
  • SELECT SITES WITH MINORITIES
  • MUST BE INVITED
  • MAY NEED HELP WITH APPLICATION
  • ADDITIONAL TRAINING MAY BE REQUIRED
  • NON- MINORITY SITES MINORITY STAFF
  • INVOLVEMENT LOCAL MINORITY PHYSICIANS
  • COMMUNITY APPROACHES DIFFERENT
  • CHURCHES, FAMILY EVENTS
  • INCENTIVES MAY BE DIFFERENT

24
CONDUCT
  • Successful implementation
  • Logging activities recruitment source
  • Respect participant privacy
  • Prescreening helps workload
  • Smooth clinic operation essential
  • Regular staff meetings
  • Record keeping crucial

25
CROSS-TRAINING STAFF
  • STAFF ALWAYS ABLE TO DO ALL THINGS
  • STAFFING LIMITATIONS-NOT ALL CAN
  • DURING RECRUITMENT-IT MUST CONTINUE
  • WE HAVENT DONE IT WELL ENOUGH
  • WE MUST DO BETTER
  • STAFF ABSENCES FOR ANY REASON

26
MONITORING
  • Establish long and short term goals
  • overall and by clinical center
  • Tables, graphs and charts
  • overall and by clinical center
  • Identify reasons if lagging
  • overall and by clinical center
  • Establish role models-use as a resource

27
RECRUITMENT CAREFUL PLANNING
  • BE CONSERVATIVE IN YOUR ESTIMATES
  • Establish interim goals
  • Have contingency plans
  • 3 TO 6 MONTH PERIOD TO SEE RESULTS

28
PROBLEMS
  • Expect them-they will occur
  • Inadequate funding for screening process
  • Unwillingness to refer or allow participation
  • Overestimation of prevalence
  • Overly rigorous entry criteria

29
SOLUTIONS
  • Accept a smaller sample size
  • Relax inclusion/exclusion criteria
  • Extend enrollment time
  • Change the design
  • Recycle previous ineligibles

30
AVOIDING SLUMPS PRACTICAL APPROACHES
  • WE MUST AVOID FUTURE SLUMPS
  • CROSS TRAINING
  • STAFF-VACATIONS NOT AT SAME TIME
  • HOLIDAYS-THANKSGIVING, CHRISTMAS/NEWYEARS
  • PRELOAD
  • POSTLOAD

31
REASONS FOR PARTICIPATION
  • Answer scientific question accurately
  • Benefit other patients-current and future
  • Benefit to themselves-quality of care
  • additional monitoring
  • second opinion of their condition
  • reassurance regarding diagnosis

32
OVERALL RECRUITMENT PROGRAM (1)
  • Start recruitment on target date
  • Choose physically accessible location
  • Use at least three recruitment strategies
  • Recruitment Coordinator-overall responsibility
  • Trial-wide recruitment coordinator network
  • Accurate tracking system
  • Match staff and screenees

33
OVERALL RECRUITMENT PROGRAM (2)
  • Provide staff back-up
  • Be aware and anticipate staff burnout
  • Inform medical and lay communities
  • Recruits-solicit in simple language
  • Medical associations and hospital staffs-
    contacted by the Principal Investigator

34
OVERALL RECRUITMENT PROGRAM (3)
  • Identify excellent staff
  • Calendar for ENTIRE recruitment period
  • Pretest your recruitment strategies
  • Regular review and evaluation of program
  • Develop contingency plans
  • Flexible clinic hours

35
FOR YOUR APPLICATION
  • RECRUITMENT MOST IMPORTANT CRITERIA
  • DOCUMENT RECRUITMENT CAREFULLY
  • DETAILS FROM EACH CLINICAL SITE
  • CONSIDER INCLUSION/EXCLUSION CRITERIA
  • NOT ON PAPER, IT DOESNT EXIST
  • SCREENEES 6 TO 8X PARTICIPANT GOAL
  • DESCRIBE TIME TABLE FOR RECRUITMENT
  • DESCRIBE POTENTIAL STRATEGIES
  • WHICH ONES, WHY

36
TERMINOLOGY ADHERENCE VS. COMPLIANCE
  • Adherence is preferred term
  • Adherence Active, choice, interactive
  • Compliance Passive, non-selective

NHLBI Workshop, Bethesda, MD 1987
37
ADHERENCE DEFINITION
Adherence is the extent to which a persons
behavior coincides with medical or health advice
in terms of taking medications, following diets,
using devices, or executing life-style changes.
38
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39
CLINICAL TRIALS OVERVIEW
  • FUNDAMENTAL POINT PARTICIPANT ADHERENCE
  • Many potential adherence problems can be
    prevented or minimized before participant
    enrollment. Once a participant is enrolled,
    taking measures to enhance and monitor
    participant adherence is essential.

40
SAMPLE SIZE ADJUSTMENT FOR REDUCED ADHERENCE
Key Point - Adherence correction term-sample size
formula, a squared function. 2N ?2(z? z?)2
? (?1 - ?2)2(1-p)2 p Reduction in
Adherence k Increase in Sample Size
p k .01 1.02 .05 1.11 .10 1.23 .20 1.56 .30
2.04 .50 4.00
41
OVERALL ADHERENCE PLAN (1)
  • Develop a bottom line - cannot be
    transgressed(Minimum amount of data which is
    essential)
  • Set goals depending on protocol
  • Acceptability trial
  • Alteration of natural history trial
  • Recruitment
  • Dont randomize all number eligibles
  • Do use run-in and test dosing procedures

42
OVERALL ADHERENCE PLAN (2)
  • Pay attention to signs and symptoms of potential
    poor adherence
  • Adherence team approach
  • Constant care taker model
  • Optimization of dosing regimen
  • Teach adherence techniques
  • Use behavioral counseling approach(Interviewing
    and counseling skills)
  • Have an intervention plan for poor adherers
  • Have a maintenance plan for everyone

43
BOTTOM LINEMINIMUM ACCEPTABLE ADHERENCE
  • Know primary outcome status on every randomized
    participant.
  • Human behavior will allow few to purposely harm a
    worthy scientific project.

44
EQUIPOSE AND THE ETHICS OF CLINICAL RESEARCH
Benjamin Freedman, PhD
EQUIPOISE
- a state of genuine uncertainty on the part of
the (all) clinical investigator(s) regarding the
comparative therapeutic merits of each arm in a
trial.
NEJM 1987 317141-145
45
ALTERATION OF NATURAL HISTORY TRIAL
  • Enrolled group must do the intervention
  • Looking for efficacy on clinical outcomes
  • e.g., Phase IV trials

46
PHYSICIANS ABILITY TO PREDICT ADHERENCE (1)
  • Dirks and Kinsman least accurate and
    reliable of the assessment procedures
  • Antacid regimen - 525 patients - 3-4 wks.
  • 27 physicians
  • Evaluation by private interview of physician
  • Estimate compliance
  • Estimate confidence in assessment
  • Results Distribution not symmetrical.
  • 22 of 27 physicians overestimated. Only 5
    underestimated.
  • Estimate 41-86 (med. 70) Measured 36-78
    (med. 46)
  • Caron and Roth JAMA, 1968

47
PHYSICIANS ABILITY TO PREDICT ADHERENCE (2)
  • ATR - 2 years 116 patients/3 physicians
  • Stated intake patients 89 Actual measured
    47
  • Those claiming 100 intake (range 2-130),
    mean59
  • Physicians estimates 50 higher than actual
  • Patients low intake median 13 Estimated 55
    (400)
  • Correlation physicians estimate and actual
    0.48
  • No improvement with familiarity
  • Demographic data - no help. Including race
    matched
  • Monthly intake could be mean 80 of daily intake
  • Roth and Caron 1978
  • Davis, JME 1966 Senior physicians no better than
    junior

48
DROPOUTS () AT FIRST AND LAST VISIT
POSTRANDOMIZATION IN LONG-TERM STUDIES
TRIAL DROPOUTS TIME OF VISITS BHAT 3.5, 15 1
mo, 36 mos AMIS 3, 6 1 mo, 36 mos UKP 18, 30 6
mos, 77 mos CAPS 4, 9 3 mos, 12 mos LRC-CPPT 1,
1.8, 6.1 2 wks, 4 wks, 86 mos B-MC 2, 4, 0.6 2
wks, 4 wks, 86 mos
49
EQUIPOSE AND THE ETHICS OF CLINICAL RESEARCH
Benjamin Freedman, PhD
EQUIPOISE
- a state of genuine uncertainty on the part of
the (all) clinical investigator(s) regarding the
comparative therapeutic merits of each arm in a
trial.
NEJM 1987 317141-145
50
LRC ANALYSIS FOR PREDICTORS OF ADHERENCE
  • Adherence after first month associated with
    plt0.01
  • Adherence in first month most powerful predictor
  • Smoking status
  • Age
  • Extent of Psychological Distress
  • Multiple regression analysis adherence in first
    month is best predictor of subsequent (r.59 or
    r².34)
  • r².36 with smoking and other factors added.
  • No statistical association with adherence in
    first year of
  • Exercise -Overall risk status
  • Weight -Motivational level
  • Vitamin consumption

51
RUN-IN PERIOD
  • Pre-randomization procedure
  • Single blind
  • Placebo used
  • Test for "pill-taking behavior

52
ACCORD RUN-IN
  • Main Issue - Delta in Glycemic Control
  • Focus - The overall regimen
  • Demonstration of willingness to monitor
  • Multiple visits not likely to help
  • Already doing multiple medications
  • Recycle

53
TEST-DOSING PERIOD
  • Pre-randomization procedure
  • Single blind
  • Active drug used
  • Identify those with severe adverse effects

54
ADHERENCE PERFORMANCE TEST-DOSING AND RUN-IN
(NUMBERS EXCLUDED)
55
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56
CONCLUSIONS ABOUT PLACEBO RUN-IN PERIOD
What does it do
  • Identifies a group of individuals who dont
    adhere well during designated run-in
  • Successful repeat run-in performers (6.9) adhere
    less well during trial
  • Those identified representative of those enrolled

What doesnt it do
  • Identify all who will adhere poorly to
    intervention

Uncertainties
  • If those who fail would all be poor adherers
  • Cost/Benefit-advantageous

57
GENERALIZIBILITY
58
MECHANISMS INVOLVED IN DEVELOPMENT OF PARTICIPANT
NON-ADHERENCE
  • Lack motivation
  • Lack of knowledge (disease, intervention)
  • Rejects medical diagnosis
  • Denies significance of disease process
  • Self-debate over intervention regimen
  • Rejects intervention regimen

59
MEDICAL THERAPEUTICS TEAM
60
WORST CASE ANALYSIS HYPERTENSION IN
ELDERLYSTROKE PREVENTION 5,000 PARTICIPANTS, 5
YRS FOLLOW-UP
61
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62
PRINCIPLES AND GOALS PARTICIPANT COUNSELING IN
DROPOUT RECOVERY
63
COMPARISON OF DURATION DROPOUT STATUS AND
RECOVERY FROM DROPOUT STATUS 6 MONTHS AND 55
MONTHS
64
DISTRIBUTION OF ADHERENCE PROBLEMS IN A CADRE OF
DROPOUTS AND OTHERS IN AN RCT
65
RESULTS OF PROGRAM FOR RECOVERY OF DROPOUTS AT
BAYLOR-METHODIST CLINIC OF CPPT
  • 94 were recovered for some regular visit with
    clinic personnel (90 within 6 months )
  • Remaining participant was contacted regularly by
    telephone
  • 3 recidivism
  • 70 reinstituted study medication
  • Average adherence study medication 35

66
FACTORS AFFECTING ADHERENCE TO INTERVENTIONS
67
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68
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS POTENTIAL NON-ADHERENCE
RED FLAGS (1)
  • 1. Missed visits
  • 2. Difficulty in reaching by phone or failure to
    return calls
  • 3. Rescheduling appointment twice (change in
    behavior)
  • 4. Complaints about office visits
  • 5. Impatience during clinic visit
  • 6. Length of time (mandatory) at each visit
  • 7. Distance during interview
  • 8. Length of time since participation in study
    was discussed between physician and participant
  • 9. Humor dealing with negative aspects of trial
    medication

69
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS POTENTIAL NON-ADHERENCE
RED FLAGS (2)
  • 10. Sarcasm about trial or study medication
  • 11. Any expression by participant that he/she may
    discontinue study medication
  • 12. Unusual or unexplained change in adherence to
    study medication
  • 13. Unconcern by participant about adherence rate
  • 14. Reassignment to new primary-care manager
  • 15. Reassignment to other new clinic personnel
  • 16. Illness with increased attention to trial
    related disease
  • 17. Hospitalization for any reason
  • 18. Any major change in life style which is
    imminent

70
ADHERENCE CHECK SHEET FOR RED FLAGS
  • Participant behavioral changes from
  • previously consistent behavior - 5
  • Participant behavioral signs - 7
  • Medical Signs - 2
  • Clinic environmental changes - 4

71
HEALTH BEHAVIOR COUNSELING AND ADHERENCE
MANAGEMENT
  • Systematic - Approach to problem identification
  • Targeted - Identify and resolve problems
  • Data Based - Collect information on behaviors
  • Adaptable - Approaches and solutions, tailored
  • Generic - Useful for clinical trials and practice

Russell et al, AJM 198578277-282
72
NEGOTIATION!!!!
  • IN BUSINESS AS IN LIFE--
  • YOU DONT GET WHAT YOU DESERVE--
  • YOU GET WHAT YOU NEGOTIATE!
  • CHESTER KARRASS-IN-FLIGHT ADD

73
INFORMAL CONTRACTSTHE ART OF THE DEAL
  • Implied circumstance between two people.
  • Trust level is critical.
  • Professional (staff)Person(participant)
  • Trust equation is not equal.
  • Will be seen as binding on you by participant.
  • Cant just discuss contract-must ask permission.
  • Refusal to discuss means identification of old.
  • Frequency of contract discussion- an issue.

74
NEGOTIATED ADHERENCE REGIMENS (Informal
Contracts)
  • Reduced Dose
  • Drug Holiday
  • Follow-up only
  • Final assessment at trial end

75
MOTIVATION
  • Waning motivation is a common element for trial
    participants with adherence difficulties, e.g.
    clinical trial fatigue.
  • Strong resolve is critical, if one is to cope
    with problems of life and continue trial
    participation.

76
PARTICIPANT MOTIVATIONHow staff can contribute
to it
  • Must describe continuing importance of the trial.
  • Information from other studies.
  • Be proactive-dont wait for them to ask/tell you.
  • Remind them that the DSMB meets regularly.
  • Considers potential benefit and harm.
  • Last meeting ended-vote for continuation.
  • Reassure participant of your position.

77
RECHALLANGE RESTARTING STUDY MEDICATION
  • INFORMAL CONTRACT -BE CAUTIOUS.
  • What was the reason for stopping?
  • Has that reason gone away?
  • Can you make small steps to your goal?
  • Part of a Win, Win is participant success

78
WITHDRAWAL OF CONSENTHOW TO DEAL WITH IT
  • Use your Pause Button immediately.
  • Few will want to harm what is worthwhile.
  • You get what you negotiate.
  • Seek first to understand, then be understood.
  • Know EXACTLY what your participant means.
  • Make it clear you understand their position.
  • Make clear your goal of minimum adherence.
  • Is there a way both can achieve goals?

79
DROPOUTSHOW TO DEAL WITH THEM
  • Sense it coming-use the red flags
  • A lesson in using your Pause Button
  • Seek first to understand, then be understood.
  • Issues frequently complex.
  • May not be solvable at the first interaction.
  • You are playing for- Win, Win!
  • Forcing resolution-may lead to No.
  • Get agreement to talk again.
  • Maintaining contact is your first principle.

80
INTENTION TO TREAT, ONCE IN, ALWAYS COUNTED
(1)
  • Issue Avoid bias
  • Fundamental Point
  • Excluding randomize subjects from analysis and
  • sub-grouping on the basis of the outcome or
  • response variables and lead to biased results.
  • This bias can be of unknown magnitude and
    direction.

81
INTENTION TO TREAT, ONCE IN, ALWAYS COUNTED
(2)
  • Preserves the benefits of randomization by
    including
  • all randomized patients based on their original
  • allocation.
  • Safeguards against
  • Erroneous claims of efficacy by exclusion of
    those
  • who do not adhere to the protocol

82
WHAT IS A PI?
  • Principal Investigator
  • orPractically Invisible
  • Clinical sites most successful where the PI is
    engaged and actively involved.
  • Coordinators-- be proactive and identify
    activities where PI can help you!

83
PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR DUTIES
  • Select appropriate staff
  • Give Coordinators authority
  • Develop recruitment plan (with RC)
  • Selection of R and A strategies (with C)
  • Utilize appropriate monitoring system
  • Be flexible and receptive to change in plans
  • Inform medical and lay community

84
BOTTOM LINEMINIMUM ACCEPTABLE ADHERENCE
  • Know primary outcome status on every randomized
    participant.
  • Human behavior will allow few to purposely harm a
    worthy scientific project.
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