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Source:Cornell University
Date:September 22, 2007
How To Improve Patient Participation In Clinical Trials
Science Daily - Before a new treatment becomes available, researchers must
recruit hundreds or thousands of patients to participate in clinical
research trials. But finding these patients is often difficult.

Many potential candidates are unaware of the studies or unable to
participate due do logistical hurdles. As a result, patients miss out on
opportunities for novel treatment approaches -- and beneficial new therapies
take longer to reach the public.
In a new initiative, researchers at Weill Cornell Medical College (WCMC) and
Cornell's College of Agriculture and Life Sciences (CALS) have teamed up to
develop strategies to better understand and enhance patient participation in
clinical trials. The project, called Improving Methods for Patient Accrual
to Clinical Trials (IMPACT), is one of several recent efforts at WCMC to
foster clinical research programs across the medical spectrum.
"Low patient accrual in clinical trials poses a serious problem for the
advancement of medical science," said John Leonard, professor of medicine at
WCMC, attending physician at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell
Medical Center and co-leader of the study.
The time required to conduct clinical trials is widely recognized as a
limiting step in moving novel treatments forward, Leonard said. For example,
less than 2 percent of patients choose to participate in clinical trials for
cancer therapies across the United States. Even a modest increase of 2 to 3
percentage points would make a major impact, meaning the difference between
completing a study in two years instead of three years -- and potentially
resulting in thousands of lives saved if the standard of care is improved
more rapidly.
"Hundreds of studies have sought to identify and overcome barriers to
enrollment. This project is the first to assess the problem from a
socio-psychological perspective using the specialized methods of risk
communication," said Katherine McComas, principal leader of IMPACT and
assistant professor of communication at Cornell. "We will be using two
proven approaches -- the model of Risk Information Seeking and Processing,
and Theory of Planned Behavior. These will allow us to examine specific
factors that influence how patients inform themselves about a clinical trial
and decide whether to participate."
IMPACT investigators will collaborate with The Leukemia and Lymphoma
Society, which has helped finance the first phase of the project, including
a national survey on attitudes toward participation in clinical trials. The
funding will also support a doctoral student in the Department of
Communication.
"Our aim is to provide data-supported recommendations for strategies to
improve the accrual of patients in clinical trials," said Andrew Dannenberg,
also a co-leader of the IMPACT project, professor of medicine at WCMC and
attending physician at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical
Center.
Future phases of the study will develop specific tools to better educate
patients about clinical trials and break down common barriers to
participation, Dannenberg added, "so that new therapies for many disorders
can be more rapidly designed and evaluated in order to deliver their maximal
benefit."
Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by Cornell
University.

Rayilyn Brown
Board Member AZNPF
Arizona Chapter National Parkinson's Foundation
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