Objective: To describe the factors that contributed to successful recruitment of more than 200 000 women to the UK Collaborative Trial of Ovarian Cancer Screening, one of the largest ever randomised controlled trials. Design: Descriptive study. Setting: 13 NHS trusts in England, Wales, and Northern Ireland. Participants: Postmenopausal women aged 50-74; exclusion criteria included ovarian malignancy, bilateral oophorectomy, increased risk of familial ovarian cancer, active non-ovarian malignancy, and participation in other ovarian cancer screening trials. Main outcome measures: Achievement of target recruitment, acceptance rates of invitation, and recruitment rates. Results: The trial was set up in 13 centres with 27 adjoinin...
SummaryBackgroundOvarian cancer has a poor prognosis, with just 40% of patients surviving 5 years. W...
BackgroundRecruitment to randomised controlled trials (RCTs) is a perennial problem. Calls have been...
Background: One of the most commonly reported problems of randomised trials is that recruitment is u...
Objective To describe the factors that contributed to successful recruitment of more than 200 000 wo...
OBJECTIVE: To describe the factors that contributed to successful recruitment of more than 200,000 w...
Objective: To describe the factors that contributed to successful recruitment of more than 200 000 w...
OBJECTIVE: To describe the factors that contributed to successful recruitment of more than 200,000 w...
Background: the UK leads the world in recruitment of patients to cancer clinical trials, with a six-...
OBJECTIVES: To identify factors associated with good and poor recruitment to multicentre trials. DAT...
Background: Recruiting participants to multicentre, community-based trials is a challenge. This case...
Successful recruitment of participants to any trial is central to its success. Trial results are rou...
BACKGROUND: A commonly reported problem with the conduct of multicentre randomised controlled trials...
BACKGROUND Results from clinical trials are often slowly implemented. We studied whether participati...
Acknowledgements We are grateful to the nurses who were involved in the recruitment and study partic...
BACKGROUND: Recruitment and retention of patients and healthcare providers in randomised controlled ...
SummaryBackgroundOvarian cancer has a poor prognosis, with just 40% of patients surviving 5 years. W...
BackgroundRecruitment to randomised controlled trials (RCTs) is a perennial problem. Calls have been...
Background: One of the most commonly reported problems of randomised trials is that recruitment is u...
Objective To describe the factors that contributed to successful recruitment of more than 200 000 wo...
OBJECTIVE: To describe the factors that contributed to successful recruitment of more than 200,000 w...
Objective: To describe the factors that contributed to successful recruitment of more than 200 000 w...
OBJECTIVE: To describe the factors that contributed to successful recruitment of more than 200,000 w...
Background: the UK leads the world in recruitment of patients to cancer clinical trials, with a six-...
OBJECTIVES: To identify factors associated with good and poor recruitment to multicentre trials. DAT...
Background: Recruiting participants to multicentre, community-based trials is a challenge. This case...
Successful recruitment of participants to any trial is central to its success. Trial results are rou...
BACKGROUND: A commonly reported problem with the conduct of multicentre randomised controlled trials...
BACKGROUND Results from clinical trials are often slowly implemented. We studied whether participati...
Acknowledgements We are grateful to the nurses who were involved in the recruitment and study partic...
BACKGROUND: Recruitment and retention of patients and healthcare providers in randomised controlled ...
SummaryBackgroundOvarian cancer has a poor prognosis, with just 40% of patients surviving 5 years. W...
BackgroundRecruitment to randomised controlled trials (RCTs) is a perennial problem. Calls have been...
Background: One of the most commonly reported problems of randomised trials is that recruitment is u...