增加国家癌症研究所临床试验老年人应计数的试验设计考虑。

Jennifer Le-Rademacher, Supriya Mohile, Joseph Unger, Matthew F Hudson, Jared Foster, Stuart Lichtman, Jane Perlmutter, Efrat Dotan, Martine Extermann, Kevin Dodd, William Tew, Heidi Klepin, Tanya M Wildes, Mina S Sedrak, Aminah Jatoi, Richard F Little
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引用次数: 3

摘要

尽管65岁及以上的成年人占癌症患者的绝大多数,但他们在癌症临床试验中的代表性不足,导致缺乏具有代表性的数据来指导该患者群体的循证治疗决策。试验设计工作组,作为研讨会的一部分,召集老年人参与国家癌症研究所临床试验网络:挑战和机遇,推荐了研究设计和设计元素,可以提高老年人在国家癌症研究所资助的临床试验中的累积。这些试验包括专门设计入组老年人的试验,包括老年患者队列的试验(平行队列、分层队列或嵌入队列),以及具有实用设计元素以促进老年人入组的试验。这份手稿提供了推荐设计的简要描述,成功试验的例子,并考虑到这些设计的实施。与任何临床试验一样,科学问题和试验目标应该驱动研究设计、终点和干预措施的选择以及资格标准。当设计包括老年人的试验时,健康水平的异质性是一个重要的考虑因素,因为健康可以影响应计率和结果。适当地纳入老年评估有助于确定纳入的老年患者的最佳子集,并最大限度地减少选择偏差。结合实用的设计元素,以减少试验参与者的负担,并保留必要的元素,以确保试验的主要目标能够实现,可以在不损害试验完整性的情况下增加入组人数。
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Trial Design Considerations to Increase Older Adult Accrual to National Cancer Institute Clinical Trials.

Although adults aged 65 years or older make up a strong majority of cancer patients, their underrepresentation in cancer clinical trials leads to the lack of representative data to guide evidence-based therapeutic decisions in this patient population. The Trial Design Working Group, convened as part of the workshop titled, Engaging Older Adults in the National Cancer Institute Clinical Trials Network: Challenges and Opportunities, recommended study designs and design elements that could improve accrual of older adults in National Cancer Institute-funded clinical trials. These include trials that are specifically designed to enroll older adults, trials that include a cohort of older patients (parallel cohort, stratified cohort, or embedded cohort), and trials with pragmatic design elements to facilitate enrollment of older adults. This manuscript provides brief descriptions of the recommended designs, examples of successful trials, and considerations for implementation of these designs. As with any clinical trial, the scientific questions and trial objectives should drive the study design, the selection of endpoints and intervention, and eligibility criteria. When designing trials that include older adults, the heterogeneity of fitness levels is an important consideration as fitness can influence accrual rates and outcomes. Appropriately incorporating geriatric assessments can help identify the optimal subset of older patients for inclusion and minimize selection bias. Incorporating pragmatic design elements to reduce the burden on trial participants as well as on accruing sites and retaining essential elements to ensure that the main goal of the trial can be accomplished can enhance enrollment without compromising the integrity of trials.

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