• Intensive care medicine · Dec 2013

    Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study

    Physicians declining patient enrollment in a critical care trial: a case study in thromboprophylaxis.

    • D Cook, Y Arabi, N Ferguson, D Heels-Ansdell, A Freitag, E McDonald, F Clarke, S Keenan, G Pagliarello, W Plaxton, M Herridge, T Karachi, S Vallance, J Cade, T Crozier, Alves da SilvaSS, R Costa Filho, N Brandao, I Watpool, T McArdle, G Hollinger, Y Mandourah, M Al-Hazmi, N Zytaruk, N K J Adhikari, PROTECT Research Coordinators, PROTECT Investigators, Canadian Critical Care Trials Group, and Australian and New Zealand Intensive Care Society Clinical Trials Group.
    • Intensive Care Med. 2013 Dec 1; 39 (12): 2115-25.

    PurposeTo analyze the frequency, rationale and determinants of attending physicians requesting that their eligible patients not be approached for participation in a thromboprophylaxis trial.MethodsResearch personnel in 67 centers prospectively documented eligible non-randomized patients due to physicians declining to allow their patients to be approached.ResultsIn 67 centers, 3,764 patients were enrolled, but 1,460 eligible patients had no consent encounter. For 218 (14.9 %) of these, attending physicians requested that their patients not be approached. The most common reasons included a high risk of bleeding (31.2 %) related to fear of heparin bioaccumulation in renal failure, the presence of an epidural catheter, peri-operative status or other factors; specific preferences for thromboprophylaxis (12.4 %); morbid obesity (9.6 %); uncertain prognosis (6.4 %); general discomfort with research (3.7 %) and unclear reasons (17.0 %). Physicians were more likely to decline when approached by less experienced research personnel; considering those with[10 years of experience as the reference category, the odds ratios (OR) for physician refusals to personnel without trial experience was 10.47 [95 % confidence interval (CI) 2.19-50.02] and those with less than 10 years experience was 1.72 (95 % CI 0.61-4.84). Physicians in open rather than closed units were more likely to decline (OR 4.26; 95 % CI 1.27-14.34). Refusals decreased each year of enrollment compared to the pilot phase.ConclusionsTracking, analyzing, interpreting and reporting the rates and reasons for physicians declining to allow their patients to be approached for enrollment provides insights into clinicians' concerns and attitudes to trials. This information can encourage physician communication and education, and potentially enhance efficient recruitment.

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