Cargando…

Participant characteristics associated with withdrawal from a large randomized trial of spermicide effectiveness

BACKGROUND: In most recent large efficacy trials of barrier contraceptive methods, a high proportion of participants withdrew before the intended end of follow-up. The objective of this analysis was to explore characteristics of participants who failed to complete seven months of planned participati...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Raymond, Elizabeth G, Chen, Pai Lien, Pierre-Louis, Bosny, Luoto, Joanne, Barnhart, Kurt T, Bradley, Lynn, Creinin, Mitchell D, Poindexter, Alfred, Wan, Livia, Martens, Mark, Schenken, Robert, Nicholas, Cate F, Blackwell, Richard
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2004
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC524176/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15458571
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2288-4-23
_version_ 1782121885703602176
author Raymond, Elizabeth G
Chen, Pai Lien
Pierre-Louis, Bosny
Luoto, Joanne
Barnhart, Kurt T
Bradley, Lynn
Creinin, Mitchell D
Poindexter, Alfred
Wan, Livia
Martens, Mark
Schenken, Robert
Nicholas, Cate F
Blackwell, Richard
author_facet Raymond, Elizabeth G
Chen, Pai Lien
Pierre-Louis, Bosny
Luoto, Joanne
Barnhart, Kurt T
Bradley, Lynn
Creinin, Mitchell D
Poindexter, Alfred
Wan, Livia
Martens, Mark
Schenken, Robert
Nicholas, Cate F
Blackwell, Richard
author_sort Raymond, Elizabeth G
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: In most recent large efficacy trials of barrier contraceptive methods, a high proportion of participants withdrew before the intended end of follow-up. The objective of this analysis was to explore characteristics of participants who failed to complete seven months of planned participation in a trial of spermicide efficacy. METHODS: Trial participants were expected to use the assigned spermicide for contraception for 7 months or until pregnancy occurred. In bivariable and multivariable analyses, we assessed the associations between failure to complete the trial and 17 pre-specified baseline characteristics. In addition, among women who participated for at least 6 weeks, we evaluated the relationships between failure to complete, various features of their first 6 weeks of experience with the spermicide, and characteristics of the study centers and population. RESULTS: Of the 1514 participants in this analysis, 635 (42%) failed to complete the study for reasons other than pregnancy. Women were significantly less likely to complete if they were younger or unmarried, had intercourse at least 8 times per month, or were enrolled at a university center or at a center that enrolled fewer than 4 participants per month. Noncompliance with study procedures in the first 6 weeks was also associated with subsequent early withdrawal, but dissatisfaction with the spermicide was not. However, many participants without these risk factors withdrew early. CONCLUSIONS: Failure to complete is a major problem in barrier method trials that seriously compromises the interpretation of results. Targeting retention efforts at women at high risk for early withdrawal is not likely to address the problem sufficiently.
format Text
id pubmed-524176
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2004
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-5241762004-10-24 Participant characteristics associated with withdrawal from a large randomized trial of spermicide effectiveness Raymond, Elizabeth G Chen, Pai Lien Pierre-Louis, Bosny Luoto, Joanne Barnhart, Kurt T Bradley, Lynn Creinin, Mitchell D Poindexter, Alfred Wan, Livia Martens, Mark Schenken, Robert Nicholas, Cate F Blackwell, Richard BMC Med Res Methodol Research Article BACKGROUND: In most recent large efficacy trials of barrier contraceptive methods, a high proportion of participants withdrew before the intended end of follow-up. The objective of this analysis was to explore characteristics of participants who failed to complete seven months of planned participation in a trial of spermicide efficacy. METHODS: Trial participants were expected to use the assigned spermicide for contraception for 7 months or until pregnancy occurred. In bivariable and multivariable analyses, we assessed the associations between failure to complete the trial and 17 pre-specified baseline characteristics. In addition, among women who participated for at least 6 weeks, we evaluated the relationships between failure to complete, various features of their first 6 weeks of experience with the spermicide, and characteristics of the study centers and population. RESULTS: Of the 1514 participants in this analysis, 635 (42%) failed to complete the study for reasons other than pregnancy. Women were significantly less likely to complete if they were younger or unmarried, had intercourse at least 8 times per month, or were enrolled at a university center or at a center that enrolled fewer than 4 participants per month. Noncompliance with study procedures in the first 6 weeks was also associated with subsequent early withdrawal, but dissatisfaction with the spermicide was not. However, many participants without these risk factors withdrew early. CONCLUSIONS: Failure to complete is a major problem in barrier method trials that seriously compromises the interpretation of results. Targeting retention efforts at women at high risk for early withdrawal is not likely to address the problem sufficiently. BioMed Central 2004-10-01 /pmc/articles/PMC524176/ /pubmed/15458571 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2288-4-23 Text en Copyright © 2004 Raymond et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Raymond, Elizabeth G
Chen, Pai Lien
Pierre-Louis, Bosny
Luoto, Joanne
Barnhart, Kurt T
Bradley, Lynn
Creinin, Mitchell D
Poindexter, Alfred
Wan, Livia
Martens, Mark
Schenken, Robert
Nicholas, Cate F
Blackwell, Richard
Participant characteristics associated with withdrawal from a large randomized trial of spermicide effectiveness
title Participant characteristics associated with withdrawal from a large randomized trial of spermicide effectiveness
title_full Participant characteristics associated with withdrawal from a large randomized trial of spermicide effectiveness
title_fullStr Participant characteristics associated with withdrawal from a large randomized trial of spermicide effectiveness
title_full_unstemmed Participant characteristics associated with withdrawal from a large randomized trial of spermicide effectiveness
title_short Participant characteristics associated with withdrawal from a large randomized trial of spermicide effectiveness
title_sort participant characteristics associated with withdrawal from a large randomized trial of spermicide effectiveness
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC524176/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15458571
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2288-4-23
work_keys_str_mv AT raymondelizabethg participantcharacteristicsassociatedwithwithdrawalfromalargerandomizedtrialofspermicideeffectiveness
AT chenpailien participantcharacteristicsassociatedwithwithdrawalfromalargerandomizedtrialofspermicideeffectiveness
AT pierrelouisbosny participantcharacteristicsassociatedwithwithdrawalfromalargerandomizedtrialofspermicideeffectiveness
AT luotojoanne participantcharacteristicsassociatedwithwithdrawalfromalargerandomizedtrialofspermicideeffectiveness
AT barnhartkurtt participantcharacteristicsassociatedwithwithdrawalfromalargerandomizedtrialofspermicideeffectiveness
AT bradleylynn participantcharacteristicsassociatedwithwithdrawalfromalargerandomizedtrialofspermicideeffectiveness
AT creininmitchelld participantcharacteristicsassociatedwithwithdrawalfromalargerandomizedtrialofspermicideeffectiveness
AT poindexteralfred participantcharacteristicsassociatedwithwithdrawalfromalargerandomizedtrialofspermicideeffectiveness
AT wanlivia participantcharacteristicsassociatedwithwithdrawalfromalargerandomizedtrialofspermicideeffectiveness
AT martensmark participantcharacteristicsassociatedwithwithdrawalfromalargerandomizedtrialofspermicideeffectiveness
AT schenkenrobert participantcharacteristicsassociatedwithwithdrawalfromalargerandomizedtrialofspermicideeffectiveness
AT nicholascatef participantcharacteristicsassociatedwithwithdrawalfromalargerandomizedtrialofspermicideeffectiveness
AT blackwellrichard participantcharacteristicsassociatedwithwithdrawalfromalargerandomizedtrialofspermicideeffectiveness