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Recruitment, retention, and adherence in a clinical trial: The Pediatric Heart Network's Marfan Trial experience.

Michelle S HamstraVictoria L PembertonNicholas DagincourtDanielle Hollenbeck-PringleFelicia L TrachtenbergJames F CnotaAndrew M AtzElizabeth CappellaSylvia De NobeleJosephine GrimaMartha KingRosalind KorsinLinda M LambertMeghan K MacNealLarry W MarkhamGretchen MacCarrickDonna M SylvesterPatricia WalterMingfen XuRonald V Lacronull null
Published in: Clinical trials (London, England) (2020)
Overall adherence was excellent for this trial conducted within a National Institutes of Health-funded clinical trial network. Strategies specifically targeted to young adults and African Americans may have been beneficial. Many strategies employed by higher adherence sites are ones that any site could easily use, such as greeting families at non-study hospital visits, asking for family feedback, providing calendars for tracking schedules, and recommending apps for medication reminders. Additional key learnings include adherence differences by age, race, and site, the value of collaborative learning, and the importance of partnerships with patient advocacy groups. These lessons could shape recruitment, retention, and adherence to improve the quality of future complex trials involving rare conditions.
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