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Assessment of Potential Barriers to Inclusion in Randomized Clinical Trials Published in Top General and Internal Medical Journals (CROSBI ID 729705)

Prilog sa skupa u zborniku | sažetak izlaganja sa skupa | međunarodna recenzija

Pranić, Shelly ; Baždarić, Ksenija ; Pérez-Neri, Ivan ; Estevão, Dulce ; Mishra, Vinayak ; McGriff, Joanne Assessment of Potential Barriers to Inclusion in Randomized Clinical Trials Published in Top General and Internal Medical Journals // The Ninth International Congress on Peer Review and Scientific Publication. Chicago (IL): American Medical Association, 2022

Podaci o odgovornosti

Pranić, Shelly ; Baždarić, Ksenija ; Pérez-Neri, Ivan ; Estevão, Dulce ; Mishra, Vinayak ; McGriff, Joanne

engleski

Assessment of Potential Barriers to Inclusion in Randomized Clinical Trials Published in Top General and Internal Medical Journals

Objective Racial and ethnic minority groups are underrepresented in clinical research. Racially diverse individuals that speak languages other than English or have limited proficiency may be hindered from participation in randomized clinical trials (RCTs) through eligibility criteria.1, 2 This study sought to assess English language requirements for enrollment in registered and published RCTs. Design In a cross-sectional design, PubMed, Scopus, Epistemonikos, EBSCO Host, COVID-evidence, Web of Science Core Collection, and the World Health Organization COVID-19 databases were searched for RCTs in the top 10 first-quartile general and internal medicine journals in 2017 on May 4, 2022, with at least 1 US site comparing heart disease, stroke, cancer, asthma, influenza and pneumonia, diabetes, HIV/AIDS, and COVID-19 drug interventions with standard or usual care or placebo with ClinicalTrials.gov registration and protocols. Phrases collected from a previous assessment were searched for in the eligibility criteria in protocols and ClinicalTrials.gov records that indicated that English language was a requirement for trial enrollment. Good agreement was achieved by independent selection by 2 reviewers for inclusion (κ = 0.85 ; 95% CI, 0.75- 0.95) and data extraction and identification of language requirements in RCTs (κ = 0.98 ; 95% CI, 0.87- 1.00) from a sample of 50 RCTs. The primary outcome was the frequency of RCTs with English language requirements in eligibility criteria in protocols and ClinicalTrials.gov records by disease and funder type (industry funders had at least 1 industry funder, while nonindustry funders had no industry funding). Secondary outcomes were readability of eligibility criteria in ClinicalTrials.gov records and reporting of race as a demographic variable. Readability was assessed with Flesch-Kincaid grade (FKG) level (ranges from grades 0 to 18 [college graduate]) and Gunning-Fog (GF) (ranges from grades 0 to 20 [college graduate]), where lower grades correspond to easier readability. Mann-Whitney and Kruskall- Wallis tests compared readability between funder and disease with a 2-tailed P value set at less than .05. Results A total of 39 of 2663 RCTs from Annals of Internal Medicine (n = 1), JAMA (n = 14), JAMA Internal Medicine (n = 3), Lancet (n = 12), PLoS Medicine (n = 1), and New England Journal of Medicine (n = 8) were found. The eligibility criteria made no explicit statements about English or any other language required for enrollment (Table) for American Indian participants (median [range], 7 [1-110]), Asian participants (median [range], Black participants (median [range], 54 [4-2534]), Latinx participants (median [range], 83 [2-492]), 18 [1-836]), and White participants (median [range], 264 [3-8715]). The median (IQR) FKG and GF levels by disease were 13.20 (11.80- 13.90 ; P = .16) and 13.80 (12.10- 15.00 ; P = .13), respectively. By non-industry funder, the median (IQR) FKG and GF were 13.30 (12.40-15.10) and 14.20 (13.70-15.00, while by industry funder, the median (IQR) FKG and GF were 13.00 (11.33-13.88) and 13.30 (12.18-14.80) ; P = .79 and P = .53, respectively. Conclusions Racial and ethnic minority groups were underrepresented in RCTs ; there was low explicit reporting of required languages in RCT eligibility criteria, and readability levels of protocols were high. Trialists and researchers should be aware of the importance of the inclusion of underrepresented individuals, the explicit reporting of languages for participants, and the readability of trial information.

Drug Intervention ; Eligibility Criteria ; Informed Consent Documents, Diversity, Clinical Trials, Participants, Readability, Recruitment ; Underrepresentation

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Podaci o prilogu

PRC22-0735

2022.

objavljeno

Podaci o matičnoj publikaciji

The Ninth International Congress on Peer Review and Scientific Publication

Chicago (IL): American Medical Association

0000-000X

Podaci o skupu

The Ninth International Congress on Peer Review and Scientific Publication

poster

08.09.2022-10.09.2022

Chicago (IL), Sjedinjene Američke Države

Povezanost rada

Biotehnologija u biomedicini (prirodno područje, biomedicina i zdravstvo, biotehničko područje), Integrativna bioetika (prirodne, tehničke, biomedicina i zdravstvo, biotehničke, društvene, humanističke znanosti), Javno zdravstvo i zdravstvena zaštita