Non-enrolment of ovarian cancer patients in clinical Trials: reasons and background

Standard

Non-enrolment of ovarian cancer patients in clinical Trials: reasons and background. / Harter, P; du Bois, A; Schade-Brittinger, C; Burges, A; Wollschlaeger, K; Gropp, M; Schmalfeldt, B; Huober, J; Staehle, A; Pfisterer, J.

in: ANN ONCOL, Jahrgang 16, Nr. 11, 11.2005, S. 1801-5.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

Harvard

Harter, P, du Bois, A, Schade-Brittinger, C, Burges, A, Wollschlaeger, K, Gropp, M, Schmalfeldt, B, Huober, J, Staehle, A & Pfisterer, J 2005, 'Non-enrolment of ovarian cancer patients in clinical Trials: reasons and background', ANN ONCOL, Jg. 16, Nr. 11, S. 1801-5. https://doi.org/10.1093/annonc/mdi367

APA

Harter, P., du Bois, A., Schade-Brittinger, C., Burges, A., Wollschlaeger, K., Gropp, M., Schmalfeldt, B., Huober, J., Staehle, A., & Pfisterer, J. (2005). Non-enrolment of ovarian cancer patients in clinical Trials: reasons and background. ANN ONCOL, 16(11), 1801-5. https://doi.org/10.1093/annonc/mdi367

Vancouver

Harter P, du Bois A, Schade-Brittinger C, Burges A, Wollschlaeger K, Gropp M et al. Non-enrolment of ovarian cancer patients in clinical Trials: reasons and background. ANN ONCOL. 2005 Nov;16(11):1801-5. https://doi.org/10.1093/annonc/mdi367

Bibtex

@article{5ce53496d02a41a28e9ebed0c6596c2e,
title = "Non-enrolment of ovarian cancer patients in clinical Trials: reasons and background",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: Some retrospective analyses have suggested that participation in clinical trials is associated with better outcome. However, it is not clear to what extent selection bias contributes to this observation.PATIENTS AND METHODS: We evaluated the reasons for non-enrolment of ovarian cancer patients in clinical trials. All patients with ovarian cancer not enrolled in clinical studies and treated in 2001 in the participating centres were documented retrospectively and compared with patients enrolled in clinical trials at the same institutions during the same time period.RESULTS: Two hundred and seventy-four patients with advanced ovarian cancer (FIGO stage IIB-IV) were included, of whom 139 (51%) and 135 (49%) patients were enrolled in this study and in prospective clinical trials, respectively. Ninety-four of 274 patients (34%) did not meet the inclusion criteria for clinical trials. Of 180 eligible patients, 28 (16%) refused participation and a further 17 patients (9%) were not recruited although they met the inclusion criteria. The non-study patients were older (66.7 versus 57.2 years; P <0.0001), underwent less radical surgery (hysterectomy, oophorectomy and omentectomy performed: 61.2% versus 80.7%; P = 0.001; rate of lymphadenectomy 30.9% versus 45.2%; P = 0.015) and more frequently had bulky residual disease (residual disease >2 cm: 36.2% versus 20%; P = 0.016). However, 62% of the non-study patients were treated with the same chemotherapy as in the standard arm of the respective clinical studies.CONCLUSIONS: Study patients differ substantially from non-study patients, thus hampering generalisation of study results. Our results suggest that at least some inclusion criteria for clinical trials should be modified to increase study participation without compromising safety.",
keywords = "Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols, Carboplatin, Clinical Trials as Topic, Female, Humans, Middle Aged, Neoplasm Invasiveness, Neoplasm Staging, Neoplasms, Glandular and Epithelial, Neoplasms, Second Primary, Ovarian Neoplasms, Paclitaxel, Patient Participation, Patient Selection, Prospective Studies, Retrospective Studies, Topotecan",
author = "P Harter and {du Bois}, A and C Schade-Brittinger and A Burges and K Wollschlaeger and M Gropp and B Schmalfeldt and J Huober and A Staehle and J Pfisterer",
year = "2005",
month = nov,
doi = "10.1093/annonc/mdi367",
language = "English",
volume = "16",
pages = "1801--5",
journal = "ANN ONCOL",
issn = "0923-7534",
publisher = "Oxford University Press",
number = "11",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Non-enrolment of ovarian cancer patients in clinical Trials: reasons and background

AU - Harter, P

AU - du Bois, A

AU - Schade-Brittinger, C

AU - Burges, A

AU - Wollschlaeger, K

AU - Gropp, M

AU - Schmalfeldt, B

AU - Huober, J

AU - Staehle, A

AU - Pfisterer, J

PY - 2005/11

Y1 - 2005/11

N2 - BACKGROUND: Some retrospective analyses have suggested that participation in clinical trials is associated with better outcome. However, it is not clear to what extent selection bias contributes to this observation.PATIENTS AND METHODS: We evaluated the reasons for non-enrolment of ovarian cancer patients in clinical trials. All patients with ovarian cancer not enrolled in clinical studies and treated in 2001 in the participating centres were documented retrospectively and compared with patients enrolled in clinical trials at the same institutions during the same time period.RESULTS: Two hundred and seventy-four patients with advanced ovarian cancer (FIGO stage IIB-IV) were included, of whom 139 (51%) and 135 (49%) patients were enrolled in this study and in prospective clinical trials, respectively. Ninety-four of 274 patients (34%) did not meet the inclusion criteria for clinical trials. Of 180 eligible patients, 28 (16%) refused participation and a further 17 patients (9%) were not recruited although they met the inclusion criteria. The non-study patients were older (66.7 versus 57.2 years; P <0.0001), underwent less radical surgery (hysterectomy, oophorectomy and omentectomy performed: 61.2% versus 80.7%; P = 0.001; rate of lymphadenectomy 30.9% versus 45.2%; P = 0.015) and more frequently had bulky residual disease (residual disease >2 cm: 36.2% versus 20%; P = 0.016). However, 62% of the non-study patients were treated with the same chemotherapy as in the standard arm of the respective clinical studies.CONCLUSIONS: Study patients differ substantially from non-study patients, thus hampering generalisation of study results. Our results suggest that at least some inclusion criteria for clinical trials should be modified to increase study participation without compromising safety.

AB - BACKGROUND: Some retrospective analyses have suggested that participation in clinical trials is associated with better outcome. However, it is not clear to what extent selection bias contributes to this observation.PATIENTS AND METHODS: We evaluated the reasons for non-enrolment of ovarian cancer patients in clinical trials. All patients with ovarian cancer not enrolled in clinical studies and treated in 2001 in the participating centres were documented retrospectively and compared with patients enrolled in clinical trials at the same institutions during the same time period.RESULTS: Two hundred and seventy-four patients with advanced ovarian cancer (FIGO stage IIB-IV) were included, of whom 139 (51%) and 135 (49%) patients were enrolled in this study and in prospective clinical trials, respectively. Ninety-four of 274 patients (34%) did not meet the inclusion criteria for clinical trials. Of 180 eligible patients, 28 (16%) refused participation and a further 17 patients (9%) were not recruited although they met the inclusion criteria. The non-study patients were older (66.7 versus 57.2 years; P <0.0001), underwent less radical surgery (hysterectomy, oophorectomy and omentectomy performed: 61.2% versus 80.7%; P = 0.001; rate of lymphadenectomy 30.9% versus 45.2%; P = 0.015) and more frequently had bulky residual disease (residual disease >2 cm: 36.2% versus 20%; P = 0.016). However, 62% of the non-study patients were treated with the same chemotherapy as in the standard arm of the respective clinical studies.CONCLUSIONS: Study patients differ substantially from non-study patients, thus hampering generalisation of study results. Our results suggest that at least some inclusion criteria for clinical trials should be modified to increase study participation without compromising safety.

KW - Adult

KW - Aged

KW - Aged, 80 and over

KW - Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols

KW - Carboplatin

KW - Clinical Trials as Topic

KW - Female

KW - Humans

KW - Middle Aged

KW - Neoplasm Invasiveness

KW - Neoplasm Staging

KW - Neoplasms, Glandular and Epithelial

KW - Neoplasms, Second Primary

KW - Ovarian Neoplasms

KW - Paclitaxel

KW - Patient Participation

KW - Patient Selection

KW - Prospective Studies

KW - Retrospective Studies

KW - Topotecan

U2 - 10.1093/annonc/mdi367

DO - 10.1093/annonc/mdi367

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 16091427

VL - 16

SP - 1801

EP - 1805

JO - ANN ONCOL

JF - ANN ONCOL

SN - 0923-7534

IS - 11

ER -