数据提取
医学
随机对照试验
临床试验
协议(科学)
梅德林
替代医学
家庭医学
系统回顾
流行病学
报告审判综合标准
荟萃分析
病理
政治学
法学
作者
A. Vanneste,Io Wens,Peter Sinnaeve,Claudia Louati,Isabelle Huys,John P. A. Ioannidis,Tom Adriaenssens
标识
DOI:10.1136/bmj-2024-082697
摘要
Abstract Objective To investigate the reporting and evolution of patient and public involvement (PPI) in randomised controlled trials published over time in major medical journals and in their trial protocols. Design Meta-epidemiological evaluation. Data source PubMed was searched for articles reporting randomised controlled trials published since 2015 in four major medical journals and their corresponding peer reviewed protocols. Eligibility criteria for selecting studies The first 10 randomised controlled trials published each year in each journal were included. Data extraction Data extraction focused on involved stakeholders, description and extent of PPI activities/processes, and recognition of PPI contributions. Published articles and protocols were assessed for consistency of the reported PPI in both. Results Of the 360 published articles reporting randomised controlled trials and 299 respective protocols, PPI was only reported in 64 (18%) articles and 56 (19%) protocols. When PPI was reported, patients and their representatives were mainly involved, with the most common PPI activity being participation in trial committees (44/64 PPI reporting articles; 39/56 protocols). PPI primarily occurred during the trial development phase, including feedback on study design, review of study materials, and assessment of feasibility. Protocols occasionally had more detailed information than the published articles, but in most cases the PPI contributions were often vague without detailed information on specific outcomes and the effect on decision making within the randomised controlled trial. Recognition of PPI contributions was more frequent in published articles (n=37; 58%) than in protocols (n=18; 32%), mainly in the acknowledgment section. Conclusion This study found limited PPI reported in randomised controlled trials published in major medical journals and in their respective protocols, underscoring the need for consistent, detailed, and transparent PPI reporting practices in clinical research. Study registration https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/4EQG2 .
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI