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Challenges to Recruiting Men on Active Surveillance for Prostate Cancer in Clinical Chemoprevention Trials

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Patients and public participation in clinical trials is critical to discovering and testing the effectiveness and safety of new drugs to prevent or cure diseases, including cancer. Although it is estimated that >70% of Americans are inclined to participate in clinical trials, less...

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Autores principales: Kumar, Nagi B., Bahl, Saira, Dhillon, Jasreman, Poch, Michael, Manley, Brandon, Li, Roger, Schell, Michael, Powsang, Julio
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9954186/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36831597
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers15041257
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author Kumar, Nagi B.
Bahl, Saira
Dhillon, Jasreman
Poch, Michael
Manley, Brandon
Li, Roger
Schell, Michael
Powsang, Julio
author_facet Kumar, Nagi B.
Bahl, Saira
Dhillon, Jasreman
Poch, Michael
Manley, Brandon
Li, Roger
Schell, Michael
Powsang, Julio
author_sort Kumar, Nagi B.
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Patients and public participation in clinical trials is critical to discovering and testing the effectiveness and safety of new drugs to prevent or cure diseases, including cancer. Although it is estimated that >70% of Americans are inclined to participate in clinical trials, less than 5% of adult cancer patients participate in clinical trials. We and others have observed several challenges with recruitment and accrual in clinical trials. The goal of this manuscript is to review our experience in determining protocol and patient level challenges to recruiting prostate cancer patients in clinical cancer chemoprevention trials conducted in a Comprehensive Cancer Center. We report here, contemporary strategies that we have adopted to overcome these challenges to recruit subjects in clinical trials. These strategies can better enable research teams select, focus and invest in strategies that are the most productive and efficient for recruiting target populations to meet recruitment goals. ABSTRACT: Clinical trials play a critical role in evidence-based medicine, when rigorous scientific methodology is utilized to discover and test the effectiveness and safety of new drugs to prevent or cure diseases, including cancer. Participation in clinical trials thus becomes key to successful completion of these trials. Although it is estimated that >70% of Americans are inclined to participate in clinical trials, less than 5% of adult cancer patients participate in clinical trials. There is thus a large gap between those inclined to participate in clinical trials and actual participation in clinical trials. As with trials targeting men with prostate cancer (PCa) on active surveillance (AS), where the target population is mostly over 50 years of age, others have observed several challenges with recruitment and accrual in clinical trials. The participation rate is currently unavailable for men on primary and secondary chemoprevention trials. Additionally, with unanticipated environmental factors such as a pandemic or other natural emergencies that may severely impact the economy, personal property, travel and person-to person contact for study-related procedures, there is a need to continuously identify these challenges and determine solutions to recruitment barriers in chemoprevention trials to ensure timely completion of early phase trials. Recent studies regarding the impact of the pandemic on clinical trial recruitment have shown that cancer prevention trials were relatively more negatively impacted compared to cancer treatment trials. The goal of this manuscript is to review our experience in continuously evaluating the protocol and patient level challenges to recruiting subjects on AS for PCa in this cancer chemoprevention trial conducted at the Comprehensive Cancer Center (CCC) and report the contemporary strategies that we are utilizing to continue to recruit subjects in this trial. We provide data from our current trial as an example while discussing future strategies to improve overall clinical trial recruitment. These strategies can inform future design of contemporary cancer chemoprevention trials and, additionally, better select, focus and invest in strategies that are the most productive and efficient for recruiting target populations.
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spelling pubmed-99541862023-02-25 Challenges to Recruiting Men on Active Surveillance for Prostate Cancer in Clinical Chemoprevention Trials Kumar, Nagi B. Bahl, Saira Dhillon, Jasreman Poch, Michael Manley, Brandon Li, Roger Schell, Michael Powsang, Julio Cancers (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Patients and public participation in clinical trials is critical to discovering and testing the effectiveness and safety of new drugs to prevent or cure diseases, including cancer. Although it is estimated that >70% of Americans are inclined to participate in clinical trials, less than 5% of adult cancer patients participate in clinical trials. We and others have observed several challenges with recruitment and accrual in clinical trials. The goal of this manuscript is to review our experience in determining protocol and patient level challenges to recruiting prostate cancer patients in clinical cancer chemoprevention trials conducted in a Comprehensive Cancer Center. We report here, contemporary strategies that we have adopted to overcome these challenges to recruit subjects in clinical trials. These strategies can better enable research teams select, focus and invest in strategies that are the most productive and efficient for recruiting target populations to meet recruitment goals. ABSTRACT: Clinical trials play a critical role in evidence-based medicine, when rigorous scientific methodology is utilized to discover and test the effectiveness and safety of new drugs to prevent or cure diseases, including cancer. Participation in clinical trials thus becomes key to successful completion of these trials. Although it is estimated that >70% of Americans are inclined to participate in clinical trials, less than 5% of adult cancer patients participate in clinical trials. There is thus a large gap between those inclined to participate in clinical trials and actual participation in clinical trials. As with trials targeting men with prostate cancer (PCa) on active surveillance (AS), where the target population is mostly over 50 years of age, others have observed several challenges with recruitment and accrual in clinical trials. The participation rate is currently unavailable for men on primary and secondary chemoprevention trials. Additionally, with unanticipated environmental factors such as a pandemic or other natural emergencies that may severely impact the economy, personal property, travel and person-to person contact for study-related procedures, there is a need to continuously identify these challenges and determine solutions to recruitment barriers in chemoprevention trials to ensure timely completion of early phase trials. Recent studies regarding the impact of the pandemic on clinical trial recruitment have shown that cancer prevention trials were relatively more negatively impacted compared to cancer treatment trials. The goal of this manuscript is to review our experience in continuously evaluating the protocol and patient level challenges to recruiting subjects on AS for PCa in this cancer chemoprevention trial conducted at the Comprehensive Cancer Center (CCC) and report the contemporary strategies that we are utilizing to continue to recruit subjects in this trial. We provide data from our current trial as an example while discussing future strategies to improve overall clinical trial recruitment. These strategies can inform future design of contemporary cancer chemoprevention trials and, additionally, better select, focus and invest in strategies that are the most productive and efficient for recruiting target populations. MDPI 2023-02-16 /pmc/articles/PMC9954186/ /pubmed/36831597 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers15041257 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Kumar, Nagi B.
Bahl, Saira
Dhillon, Jasreman
Poch, Michael
Manley, Brandon
Li, Roger
Schell, Michael
Powsang, Julio
Challenges to Recruiting Men on Active Surveillance for Prostate Cancer in Clinical Chemoprevention Trials
title Challenges to Recruiting Men on Active Surveillance for Prostate Cancer in Clinical Chemoprevention Trials
title_full Challenges to Recruiting Men on Active Surveillance for Prostate Cancer in Clinical Chemoprevention Trials
title_fullStr Challenges to Recruiting Men on Active Surveillance for Prostate Cancer in Clinical Chemoprevention Trials
title_full_unstemmed Challenges to Recruiting Men on Active Surveillance for Prostate Cancer in Clinical Chemoprevention Trials
title_short Challenges to Recruiting Men on Active Surveillance for Prostate Cancer in Clinical Chemoprevention Trials
title_sort challenges to recruiting men on active surveillance for prostate cancer in clinical chemoprevention trials
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9954186/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36831597
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers15041257
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