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Published in: Pediatric Cardiology 3/2007

01-06-2007 | ORIGINAL ARTICLE

Parental Factors Impacting the Enrollment of Children in Cardiac Critical Care Clinical Trials

Authors: T.M. Hoffman, R. Taeed, J.P. Niles, M.A. McMillin, L.A. Perkins, T.F. Feltes

Published in: Pediatric Cardiology | Issue 3/2007

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Abstract

Clinical trials are abundant in adult cardiovascular medicine; however, they are rare in pediatric cardiology. Pediatric cardiac trial design may be impacted by the heterogeneous nature of the underlying cardiac defects, as well as by a strong emotional response from parents whose child will undergo a surgical intervention. The purpose of this study was to assess factors that may have an impact on parents considering enrollment of their child in a clinical trial at the time of surgical intervention. A voluntary, self-administered questionnaire (14 questions) was provided to parents of children 16 years of age or younger during the preadmission testing period. Demographic and procedure-related variables were collected for each patient. A total of 119 surveys were analyzed over a 1.5-year period. Only 8% of the parents had their child participate in a clinical trial in the past. Fifty-six percent of the parents preferred that their child’s cardiologist or surgeon explain clinical trial details, with 23% preferring the principal investigator and 3% preferring the research coordinator. Fifty percent of the parents were favorably disposed to participate in a clinical trial if the drug or device was currently used by their child’s doctor, and 19% were encouraged to participate if the drug or device was approved for use in adults. The majority of parents (64%) preferred to be asked about participating in a trial within 1 month prior to the planned procedure, and 40% preferred to discuss trial details at a remote time in an outpatient location. Sixty-three percent of parents believed that most of the medications currently used in children were already approved by the Food and Drug Administration. Most parents (91%) believed that clinical trials conducted in children will help improve pediatric health care; 74% believed that their child may receive potential benefit from enrolling in a trial. Finally, 43% believed that funding for trials should come from government and health care agencies, as opposed to pharmaceutical companies (24%). This survey reveals the importance of the attending physician and timing in educating parents regarding a cardiac critical care clinical trial. These data may impact the design and successful conduct of future trials.
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Metadata
Title
Parental Factors Impacting the Enrollment of Children in Cardiac Critical Care Clinical Trials
Authors
T.M. Hoffman
R. Taeed
J.P. Niles
M.A. McMillin
L.A. Perkins
T.F. Feltes
Publication date
01-06-2007
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Published in
Pediatric Cardiology / Issue 3/2007
Print ISSN: 0172-0643
Electronic ISSN: 1432-1971
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00246-006-0020-5

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