Opportunities to enter patients into more than one clinical trial are not routinely considered in cancer research and experiences with co-enrolment are rarely reported. Potential benefits of allowing appropriate co-enrolment have been identified in other settings but there is a lack of evidence base or guidance to inform these decisions in oncology. Here, we discuss the benefits and challenges associated with co-enrolment based on experiences in the Add-Aspirin trial – a large, multicentre trial recruiting across a number of tumour types, where opportunities to co-enrol patients have been proactively explored and managed. The potential benefits of co-enrolment include: improving recruitment feasibility; increased opportunities for patients ...
OBJECTIVES: Phase III cancer clinical trials are expensive and time-consuming phases in drug develop...
Patient recruitments are a crucial part of clinical research, especially in the medical oncology fie...
Background: There are many barriers to patient participation in randomised controlled trials of canc...
Researchers and institutional review boards often consider it inappropriate for patients to be asked...
The Australian and New Zealand Intensive Care Society Clinical Trials Group and other investigator-l...
Introduction: Appreciation of the barriers and drivers affecting enrolment in randomised clinical tr...
Background—In settings where multiple HIV prevention trials are conducted in close proximity, trial ...
Introduction: Research on co-enrollment practices and their impact are limited in the ICU setting. T...
Background: Clinical trials are necessary for the advancement of cancer treatment and care, however ...
Clinical trials are studies conducted as a part of research to evaluate the safety and efficacy of a...
OBJECTIVES: The trials within cohorts (TwiCs) design aims to improve recruitment efficiency. We cond...
Plain english summary Breast cancer is a diverse and varied disease. Recent research has shown that ...
Enrolling children into several trials could increase recruitment and lead to quicker delivery of op...
Background: Preclinical, epidemiological, and randomised data indicate that aspirin might prevent ...
BackgroundPreclinical, epidemiological, and randomised data indicate that aspirin might prevent tumo...
OBJECTIVES: Phase III cancer clinical trials are expensive and time-consuming phases in drug develop...
Patient recruitments are a crucial part of clinical research, especially in the medical oncology fie...
Background: There are many barriers to patient participation in randomised controlled trials of canc...
Researchers and institutional review boards often consider it inappropriate for patients to be asked...
The Australian and New Zealand Intensive Care Society Clinical Trials Group and other investigator-l...
Introduction: Appreciation of the barriers and drivers affecting enrolment in randomised clinical tr...
Background—In settings where multiple HIV prevention trials are conducted in close proximity, trial ...
Introduction: Research on co-enrollment practices and their impact are limited in the ICU setting. T...
Background: Clinical trials are necessary for the advancement of cancer treatment and care, however ...
Clinical trials are studies conducted as a part of research to evaluate the safety and efficacy of a...
OBJECTIVES: The trials within cohorts (TwiCs) design aims to improve recruitment efficiency. We cond...
Plain english summary Breast cancer is a diverse and varied disease. Recent research has shown that ...
Enrolling children into several trials could increase recruitment and lead to quicker delivery of op...
Background: Preclinical, epidemiological, and randomised data indicate that aspirin might prevent ...
BackgroundPreclinical, epidemiological, and randomised data indicate that aspirin might prevent tumo...
OBJECTIVES: Phase III cancer clinical trials are expensive and time-consuming phases in drug develop...
Patient recruitments are a crucial part of clinical research, especially in the medical oncology fie...
Background: There are many barriers to patient participation in randomised controlled trials of canc...