• JAMA cardiology · Nov 2019

    Review

    Trends in the Explanatory or Pragmatic Nature of Cardiovascular Clinical Trials Over 2 Decades.

    • Nariman Sepehrvand, Wendimagegn Alemayehu, Debraj Das, Arjun K Gupta, Pishoy Gouda, Anukul Ghimire, Amy X Du, Sanaz Hatami, Hazal E Babadagli, Sanam Verma, Zakariya Kashour, and Justin A Ezekowitz.
    • Canadian VIGOUR Centre, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.
    • JAMA Cardiol. 2019 Nov 1; 4 (11): 1122-1128.

    ImportancePragmatic trials test interventions using designs that produce results that may be more applicable to the population in which the intervention will be eventually applied.ObjectiveTo investigate how pragmatic or explanatory cardiovascular (CV) randomized clinical trials (RCT) are, and if this has changed over time.Data SourceSix major medical and CV journals, including New England Journal of Medicine, Lancet, JAMA, Circulation, European Heart Journal, and Journal of the American College of Cardiology.Study SelectionAll CV-related RCTs published during 2000, 2005, 2010, and 2015 were identified and included.Data Extraction And SynthesisIncluded RCTs were assessed by 2 independent adjudicators with expertise in RCT and CV medicine.Main Outcomes And MeasuresThe outcome measure was the level of pragmatism evaluated using the Pragmatic Explanatory Continuum Index Summary (PRECIS)-2 tool, which uses a 5-point ordinal scale (ranging from very pragmatic to very explanatory) across 9 domains of trial design, including eligibility, recruitment, setting, organization, intervention delivery, intervention adherence, follow-up, primary outcome, and analysis.ResultsOf 616 RCTs, the mean (SD) PRECIS-2 score was 3.26 (0.70). The level of pragmatism increased over time from a mean (SD) score of 3.07 (0.74) in 2000 to 3.46 (0.67) in 2015 (P < .001 for trend; Cohen d relative effect size, 0.56). The increase occurred mainly in the domains of eligibility, setting, intervention delivery, and primary end point. PRECIS-2 score was higher for neutral trials than those with positive results (P < .001) and in phase III/IV trials compared with phase I/II trials (P < .001) but similar between different sources of funding (public, industry, or both; P = .38). More pragmatic trials had more sites, larger sample sizes, longer follow-ups, and mortality as the primary end point.Conclusions And RelevanceThe level of pragmatism increased moderately over 2 decades of CV trials. Understanding the domains of current and future clinical trials will aid in the design and delivery of CV trials with broader application.

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