A randomised controlled trial to assess the effectiveness of a nurse-led palliative care intervention for HIV positive patients on antiretroviral therapy: Recruitment, refusal, randomisation and missing data

被引:6
|
作者
Lowther K. [1 ]
Higginson I.J. [1 ]
Simms V. [2 ]
Gikaara N. [3 ]
Ahmed A. [4 ]
Ali Z. [3 ]
Afuande G. [4 ]
Kariuki H. [5 ]
Sherr L. [6 ]
Jenkins R. [7 ]
Selman L. [1 ]
Harding R. [1 ]
机构
[1] Department of Palliative Care and Rehabilitation, Cicely Saunders Institute, King's College London, Bessemer Road, London
[2] London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London
[3] Kenyan Hospice Palliative Care Association, Nairobi
[4] Bomu Hospital, Mombasa
[5] Department of Medical Physiology, University of Nairobi, Nairobi
[6] Health Psychology Unit, University College London, London
[7] Institute of Psychiatry, Kings College London, London
基金
英国医学研究理事会;
关键词
Antiretroviral therapy; HIV/AIDS; Palliative care; RCT;
D O I
10.1186/1756-0500-7-600
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Background: Despite the life threatening nature of an HIV diagnosis and the multidimensional problems experienced by this patient population during antiretroviral therapy, the effectiveness of a palliative care approach for HIV positive patients on ART is as yet unknown. Findings: A randomised controlled trial (RCT) was conducted in a sample of 120 HIV positive patients on ART in an urban clinic in Mombasa, Kenya. The intervention was a minimum of seven sessions of multidimensional, personcentred care, given by HIV nurses trained in the palliative care approach over a period of 5 months. Rates of recruitment and refusal, the effectiveness of the randomisation procedure, trial follow-up and attrition and extent of missing data are reported. 120 patients (60 randomised to control arm, 60 randomised to intervention arm) were recruited over 5.5 months, with a refusal rate of 55.7%. During the study period, three participants died from cancer, three withdrew (two moved away and one withdrew due to time constraints). All of these patients were in the intervention arm: details are reported. There were five additional missing monthly interviews in both the control and intervention study arm, bringing the total of missing data to 26 data points (4.3%). Discussion: The quality and implications of these data are discussed extensively and openly, including the effect of full and ethical consent procedures, respondent burden, HIV stigma, accurate randomisation, patient safety and the impact of the intervention. Data on recruitment randomisation, attrition and missing data in clinical trials should be routinely reported, in conjunction with the now established practice of publishing study protocols to enhance research integrity, transparency and quality. Transparency is especially important in cross cultural settings, in which the sources of funding and trial design are often not based in the country of data collection. Findings reported can be used to inform future RCTs in this area. Trial registration: Clinicaltrials.gov NCT01608802. © 2014 Lowther et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Cost-effectiveness of a nurse-led telemonitoring intervention based on peak expiratory flow measurements in asthmatics: Results of a randomised controlled trial
    Willems D.C.M.
    Joore M.A.
    Hendriks J.J.E.
    Wouters E.F.M.
    Severens J.L.
    Cost Effectiveness and Resource Allocation, 5 (1)
  • [22] Effect of an Oncology Nurse-Led Primary Palliative Care Intervention on Patients With Advanced Cancer The CONNECT Cluster Randomized Clinical Trial
    Schenker, Yael
    Althouse, Andrew D.
    Rosenzweig, Margaret
    White, Douglas B.
    Chu, Edward
    Smith, Kenneth J.
    Resick, Judith M.
    Belin, Shane
    Park, Seo Young
    Smith, Thomas J.
    Bakitas, Marie A.
    Arnold, Robert M.
    JAMA INTERNAL MEDICINE, 2021, 181 (11) : 1451 - 1460
  • [23] Nurse-led psychological intervention for type 2 diabetes: a cluster randomised controlled trial (Diabetes-6 study) in primary care
    Ismail, Khalida
    Winkley, Kirsty
    de Zoysa, Nicole
    Patel, Anita
    Heslin, Margaret
    Graves, Helen
    Thomas, Stephen
    Stringer, Dominic
    Stahl, Daniel
    Amiel, Stephanie A.
    BRITISH JOURNAL OF GENERAL PRACTICE, 2018, 68 (673): : E531 - E540
  • [24] Nurse-led sequential multiple assignment randomized trial of nudging intervention for early antiretroviral therapy initiation among patients with HIV/AIDS: Implementation study protocol
    Zhou, Yaqin
    Meng, Jingjing
    Zhang, Xiangjun
    Ma, Jun
    Fan, Sisi
    Zuo, Hong
    Shi, Jingzheng
    Wang, Wenru
    Wang, Honghong
    JOURNAL OF ADVANCED NURSING, 2024,
  • [25] PROSPECTIV-a pilot trial of a nurse-led psychoeducational intervention delivered in primary care to prostate cancer survivors: study protocol for a randomised controlled trial
    Watson, Eila
    Rose, Peter
    Frith, Emma
    Hamdy, Freddie
    Neal, David
    Kastner, Christof
    Russell, Simon
    Walter, Fiona M.
    Faithfull, Sara
    Wolstenholme, Jane
    Perera, Rafael
    Weller, David
    Campbell, Christine
    Wilkinson, Clare
    Neal, Richard
    Sooriakumaran, Prasanna
    Butcher, Hugh
    Matthews, Mike
    BMJ OPEN, 2014, 4 (05):
  • [26] The effectiveness of a nurse-led intervention with the distress thermometer for patients treated with curative intent for breast cancer: design of a randomized controlled trial
    Floortje K. Ploos van Amstel
    Judith B. Prins
    Winette T. A. van der Graaf
    Marlies E. W. J. Peters
    Petronella B. Ottevanger
    BMC Cancer, 16
  • [27] The effectiveness of a nurse-led intervention with the distress thermometer for patients treated with curative intent for breast cancer: design of a randomized controlled trial
    van Amstel, Floortje K. Ploos
    Prins, Judith B.
    van der Graaf, Winette T. A.
    Peters, Marlies E. W. J.
    Ottevanger, Petronella B.
    BMC CANCER, 2016, 16
  • [28] Effect of Nurse-Led Individualised Self-Care Model on Myocardial Infarction Patients with Diabetes: A Randomised Controlled Pilot Trial
    Zhang, Jia
    Zhou, Xue-Mei
    Qian, Ke-Ke
    Yu, Jian-Dong
    He, Hong-Wei
    Zhao, Li-Hua
    Yang, Wen-Wen
    Geng, Gui-Ling
    Shen, Hong-Wu
    REVIEWS IN CARDIOVASCULAR MEDICINE, 2023, 24 (01) : 13 - 13
  • [29] The effectiveness of a nurse-led intervention to support family caregivers in end-of-life care: Study protocol for a cluster randomized controlled trial
    Becque, Yvonne N.
    Rietjens, Judith A. C.
    van der Heide, Agnes
    Witkamp, Erica
    JOURNAL OF ADVANCED NURSING, 2020, 76 (05) : 1266 - 1272
  • [30] Effectiveness of a nurse-led decision counselling programme on hepatocellular carcinoma screening uptake among patients with hepatitis B: A randomised controlled trial
    Li, Caixia
    Lu, Xiling
    Xu, Juan
    Gao, Fei
    Lee, Eunice
    Chan, Carmen W. H.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF NURSING STUDIES, 2023, 148