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Feasibility of reporting results of large randomised controlled trials to participants: experience from the Fluoxetine Or Control Under Supervision (FOCUS) trial

Feasibility of reporting results of large randomised controlled trials to participants: experience from the Fluoxetine Or Control Under Supervision (FOCUS) trial
Feasibility of reporting results of large randomised controlled trials to participants: experience from the Fluoxetine Or Control Under Supervision (FOCUS) trial

Objectives: informing research participants of the results of studies in which they took part is viewed as an ethical imperative. However, there is little guidance in the literature about how to do this. The Fluoxetine Or Control Under Supervision trial randomised 3127 patients with a recent acute stroke to 6 months of fluoxetine or placebo and was published in the Lancet on 5 December 2018. The trial team decided to inform the participants of the results at exactly the same time as the Lancet publication, and also whether they had been allocated fluoxetine or placebo. In this report, we describe how we informed participants of the results.

Design: in the 6-month and 12-month follow-up questionnaires, we invited participants to provide an email address if they wished to be informed of the results of the trial. We re-opened our trial telephone helpline between 5 December 2018 and 31 March 2019.

Setting: UK stroke services.

Participants: 3127 participants were randomised. 2847 returned 6-month follow-up forms and 2703 returned 12-month follow-up forms; the remaining participants had died (380), withdrawn consent or did not respond.

Results: of those returning follow-up questionnaires, a total of 1845 email addresses were provided and a further 50 people requested results to be sent by post. Results were sent to all email and postal addresses provided; 309 emails were returned unrecognised. Seventeen people replied, of whom three called the helpline and the rest responded by email.

Conclusion: it is feasible to disseminate results of large trials to research participants, though only around 60% of those randomised wanted to receive the results. The system we developed was efficient and required very little resource, and could be replicated by trialists in the future.

2044-6055
Mead, Gillian
2a1e4081-e6b4-4d63-a77a-02f71427cb5b
Dennis, Martin
10ebd913-00fb-43f7-870d-70d8c50aa5c4
Marigold, Richard
23c9f4cc-a1da-41a0-84bd-8e1aee91ed78
FOCUS Trial Investigators
Mead, Gillian
2a1e4081-e6b4-4d63-a77a-02f71427cb5b
Dennis, Martin
10ebd913-00fb-43f7-870d-70d8c50aa5c4
Marigold, Richard
23c9f4cc-a1da-41a0-84bd-8e1aee91ed78

Mead, Gillian and Dennis, Martin , FOCUS Trial Investigators (2020) Feasibility of reporting results of large randomised controlled trials to participants: experience from the Fluoxetine Or Control Under Supervision (FOCUS) trial. BMJ Open, 10 (11). (doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2020-040492).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objectives: informing research participants of the results of studies in which they took part is viewed as an ethical imperative. However, there is little guidance in the literature about how to do this. The Fluoxetine Or Control Under Supervision trial randomised 3127 patients with a recent acute stroke to 6 months of fluoxetine or placebo and was published in the Lancet on 5 December 2018. The trial team decided to inform the participants of the results at exactly the same time as the Lancet publication, and also whether they had been allocated fluoxetine or placebo. In this report, we describe how we informed participants of the results.

Design: in the 6-month and 12-month follow-up questionnaires, we invited participants to provide an email address if they wished to be informed of the results of the trial. We re-opened our trial telephone helpline between 5 December 2018 and 31 March 2019.

Setting: UK stroke services.

Participants: 3127 participants were randomised. 2847 returned 6-month follow-up forms and 2703 returned 12-month follow-up forms; the remaining participants had died (380), withdrawn consent or did not respond.

Results: of those returning follow-up questionnaires, a total of 1845 email addresses were provided and a further 50 people requested results to be sent by post. Results were sent to all email and postal addresses provided; 309 emails were returned unrecognised. Seventeen people replied, of whom three called the helpline and the rest responded by email.

Conclusion: it is feasible to disseminate results of large trials to research participants, though only around 60% of those randomised wanted to receive the results. The system we developed was efficient and required very little resource, and could be replicated by trialists in the future.

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Published date: 30 November 2020

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 492006
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/492006
ISSN: 2044-6055
PURE UUID: 8ea735f1-4941-4e4d-a4aa-92144f395f85

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Date deposited: 11 Jul 2024 16:40
Last modified: 11 Jul 2024 16:42

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Contributors

Author: Gillian Mead
Author: Martin Dennis
Author: Richard Marigold
Corporate Author: FOCUS Trial Investigators

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