Cargando…
Site staff perspectives on communicating trial results to participants: Cost and feasibility results from the Show RESPECT cluster randomised, factorial, mixed-methods trial
BACKGROUND/AIMS: Sharing trial results with participants is an ethical imperative but often does not happen. Show RESPECT (ISRCTN96189403) tested ways of sharing results with participants in an ovarian cancer trial (ISRCTN10356387). Sharing results via a printed summary improved patient satisfaction...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , , , , |
---|---|
Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
SAGE Publications
2023
|
Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10638850/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37515519 http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/17407745231186088 |
_version_ | 1785146605963313152 |
---|---|
author | South, Annabelle Bailey, Julia Bierer, Barbara E Burnett, Eva Cragg, William J Diaz-Montana, Carlos Gillies, Katie Isaacs, Talia Joharatnam-Hogan, Nalinie Snowdon, Claire Sydes, Matthew R Copas, Andrew J |
author_facet | South, Annabelle Bailey, Julia Bierer, Barbara E Burnett, Eva Cragg, William J Diaz-Montana, Carlos Gillies, Katie Isaacs, Talia Joharatnam-Hogan, Nalinie Snowdon, Claire Sydes, Matthew R Copas, Andrew J |
author_sort | South, Annabelle |
collection | PubMed |
description | BACKGROUND/AIMS: Sharing trial results with participants is an ethical imperative but often does not happen. Show RESPECT (ISRCTN96189403) tested ways of sharing results with participants in an ovarian cancer trial (ISRCTN10356387). Sharing results via a printed summary improved patient satisfaction. Little is known about staff experience and the costs of communicating results with participants. We report the costs of communication approaches used in Show RESPECT and the views of site staff on these approaches. METHODS: We allocated 43 hospitals (sites) to share results with trial participants through one of eight intervention combinations (2 × 2 × 2 factorial; enhanced versus basic webpage, printed summary versus no printed summary, email list invitation versus no invitation). Questionnaires elicited data from staff involved in sharing results. Open- and closed-ended questions covered resources used to share results and site staff perspectives on the approaches used. Semi-structured interviews were conducted. Interview and free-text data were analysed thematically. The mean additional site costs per participant from each intervention were estimated jointly as main effects by linear regression. RESULTS: We received questionnaires from 68 staff from 41 sites and interviewed 11 site staff. Sites allocated to the printed summary had mean total site costs of sharing results £13.71/patient higher (95% confidence interval (CI): −3.19, 30.60; p = 0.108) than sites allocated no printed summary. Sites allocated to the enhanced webpage had mean total site costs £1.91/patient higher (95% CI: −14, 18.74; p = 0.819) than sites allocated to the basic webpage. Sites allocated to the email list had costs £2.87/patient lower (95% CI: −19.70, 13.95; p = 0.731) than sites allocated to no email list. Most of these costs were staff time for mailing information and handling patients’ queries. Most site staff reported no concerns about how they had shared results (88%) and no challenges (76%). Most (83%) found it easy to answer queries from patients about the results and thought the way they were allocated to share results with participants would be an acceptable standard approach (76%), with 79% saying they would follow the same approach for future trials. There were no significant effects of the randomised interventions on these outcomes. Site staff emphasised the importance of preparing patients to receive the results, including giving opt-in/opt-out options, and the need to offer further support, particularly if the results could confuse or distress some patients. CONCLUSIONS: Adding a printed summary to a webpage (which significantly improved participant satisfaction) may increase costs to sites by ~£14/patient, which is modest in relation to the cost of trials. The Show RESPECT communication interventions were feasible to implement. This information could help future trials ensure they have sufficient resources to share results with participants. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-10638850 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2023 |
publisher | SAGE Publications |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-106388502023-11-14 Site staff perspectives on communicating trial results to participants: Cost and feasibility results from the Show RESPECT cluster randomised, factorial, mixed-methods trial South, Annabelle Bailey, Julia Bierer, Barbara E Burnett, Eva Cragg, William J Diaz-Montana, Carlos Gillies, Katie Isaacs, Talia Joharatnam-Hogan, Nalinie Snowdon, Claire Sydes, Matthew R Copas, Andrew J Clin Trials Articles BACKGROUND/AIMS: Sharing trial results with participants is an ethical imperative but often does not happen. Show RESPECT (ISRCTN96189403) tested ways of sharing results with participants in an ovarian cancer trial (ISRCTN10356387). Sharing results via a printed summary improved patient satisfaction. Little is known about staff experience and the costs of communicating results with participants. We report the costs of communication approaches used in Show RESPECT and the views of site staff on these approaches. METHODS: We allocated 43 hospitals (sites) to share results with trial participants through one of eight intervention combinations (2 × 2 × 2 factorial; enhanced versus basic webpage, printed summary versus no printed summary, email list invitation versus no invitation). Questionnaires elicited data from staff involved in sharing results. Open- and closed-ended questions covered resources used to share results and site staff perspectives on the approaches used. Semi-structured interviews were conducted. Interview and free-text data were analysed thematically. The mean additional site costs per participant from each intervention were estimated jointly as main effects by linear regression. RESULTS: We received questionnaires from 68 staff from 41 sites and interviewed 11 site staff. Sites allocated to the printed summary had mean total site costs of sharing results £13.71/patient higher (95% confidence interval (CI): −3.19, 30.60; p = 0.108) than sites allocated no printed summary. Sites allocated to the enhanced webpage had mean total site costs £1.91/patient higher (95% CI: −14, 18.74; p = 0.819) than sites allocated to the basic webpage. Sites allocated to the email list had costs £2.87/patient lower (95% CI: −19.70, 13.95; p = 0.731) than sites allocated to no email list. Most of these costs were staff time for mailing information and handling patients’ queries. Most site staff reported no concerns about how they had shared results (88%) and no challenges (76%). Most (83%) found it easy to answer queries from patients about the results and thought the way they were allocated to share results with participants would be an acceptable standard approach (76%), with 79% saying they would follow the same approach for future trials. There were no significant effects of the randomised interventions on these outcomes. Site staff emphasised the importance of preparing patients to receive the results, including giving opt-in/opt-out options, and the need to offer further support, particularly if the results could confuse or distress some patients. CONCLUSIONS: Adding a printed summary to a webpage (which significantly improved participant satisfaction) may increase costs to sites by ~£14/patient, which is modest in relation to the cost of trials. The Show RESPECT communication interventions were feasible to implement. This information could help future trials ensure they have sufficient resources to share results with participants. SAGE Publications 2023-07-29 2023-12 /pmc/articles/PMC10638850/ /pubmed/37515519 http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/17407745231186088 Text en © The Author(s) 2023 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) which permits any use, reproduction and distribution of the work without further permission provided the original work is attributed as specified on the SAGE and Open Access page (https://us.sagepub.com/en-us/nam/open-access-at-sage). |
spellingShingle | Articles South, Annabelle Bailey, Julia Bierer, Barbara E Burnett, Eva Cragg, William J Diaz-Montana, Carlos Gillies, Katie Isaacs, Talia Joharatnam-Hogan, Nalinie Snowdon, Claire Sydes, Matthew R Copas, Andrew J Site staff perspectives on communicating trial results to participants: Cost and feasibility results from the Show RESPECT cluster randomised, factorial, mixed-methods trial |
title | Site staff perspectives on communicating trial results to participants: Cost and feasibility results from the Show RESPECT cluster randomised, factorial, mixed-methods trial |
title_full | Site staff perspectives on communicating trial results to participants: Cost and feasibility results from the Show RESPECT cluster randomised, factorial, mixed-methods trial |
title_fullStr | Site staff perspectives on communicating trial results to participants: Cost and feasibility results from the Show RESPECT cluster randomised, factorial, mixed-methods trial |
title_full_unstemmed | Site staff perspectives on communicating trial results to participants: Cost and feasibility results from the Show RESPECT cluster randomised, factorial, mixed-methods trial |
title_short | Site staff perspectives on communicating trial results to participants: Cost and feasibility results from the Show RESPECT cluster randomised, factorial, mixed-methods trial |
title_sort | site staff perspectives on communicating trial results to participants: cost and feasibility results from the show respect cluster randomised, factorial, mixed-methods trial |
topic | Articles |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10638850/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37515519 http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/17407745231186088 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT southannabelle sitestaffperspectivesoncommunicatingtrialresultstoparticipantscostandfeasibilityresultsfromtheshowrespectclusterrandomisedfactorialmixedmethodstrial AT baileyjulia sitestaffperspectivesoncommunicatingtrialresultstoparticipantscostandfeasibilityresultsfromtheshowrespectclusterrandomisedfactorialmixedmethodstrial AT biererbarbarae sitestaffperspectivesoncommunicatingtrialresultstoparticipantscostandfeasibilityresultsfromtheshowrespectclusterrandomisedfactorialmixedmethodstrial AT burnetteva sitestaffperspectivesoncommunicatingtrialresultstoparticipantscostandfeasibilityresultsfromtheshowrespectclusterrandomisedfactorialmixedmethodstrial AT craggwilliamj sitestaffperspectivesoncommunicatingtrialresultstoparticipantscostandfeasibilityresultsfromtheshowrespectclusterrandomisedfactorialmixedmethodstrial AT diazmontanacarlos sitestaffperspectivesoncommunicatingtrialresultstoparticipantscostandfeasibilityresultsfromtheshowrespectclusterrandomisedfactorialmixedmethodstrial AT gillieskatie sitestaffperspectivesoncommunicatingtrialresultstoparticipantscostandfeasibilityresultsfromtheshowrespectclusterrandomisedfactorialmixedmethodstrial AT isaacstalia sitestaffperspectivesoncommunicatingtrialresultstoparticipantscostandfeasibilityresultsfromtheshowrespectclusterrandomisedfactorialmixedmethodstrial AT joharatnamhogannalinie sitestaffperspectivesoncommunicatingtrialresultstoparticipantscostandfeasibilityresultsfromtheshowrespectclusterrandomisedfactorialmixedmethodstrial AT snowdonclaire sitestaffperspectivesoncommunicatingtrialresultstoparticipantscostandfeasibilityresultsfromtheshowrespectclusterrandomisedfactorialmixedmethodstrial AT sydesmatthewr sitestaffperspectivesoncommunicatingtrialresultstoparticipantscostandfeasibilityresultsfromtheshowrespectclusterrandomisedfactorialmixedmethodstrial AT copasandrewj sitestaffperspectivesoncommunicatingtrialresultstoparticipantscostandfeasibilityresultsfromtheshowrespectclusterrandomisedfactorialmixedmethodstrial |