Patient and Public Involvement and Engagement in the Development of a Platform Clinical Trial for Parkinson's Disease: An Evaluation Protocol.

Evaluation study Parkinson’s disease clinical trial protocol patient and public involvement

Journal

Journal of Parkinson's disease
ISSN: 1877-718X
Titre abrégé: J Parkinsons Dis
Pays: Netherlands
ID NLM: 101567362

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
27 Apr 2024
Historique:
medline: 3 5 2024
pubmed: 3 5 2024
entrez: 3 5 2024
Statut: aheadofprint

Résumé

Patient and public involvement and engagement (PPIE) in the design of trials is important, as participant experience critically impacts delivery. The Edmond J Safra Accelerating Clinical Trials in PD (EJS ACT-PD) initiative is a UK consortium designing a platform trial for disease modifying therapies in PD. The integration of PPIE in all aspects of trial design and its evaluation throughout the project. PwP and care partners were recruited to a PPIE working group (WG) via UK Parkinson's charities, investigator patient groups and participants of a Delphi study on trial design. They are supported by charity representatives, trial delivery experts, researchers and core project team members. PPIE is fully embedded within the consortium's five other WGs and steering group. The group's terms of reference, processes for effective working and PPIE evaluation were co-developed with PPIE contributors. 11 PwP and 4 care partners have supported the PPIE WG and contributed to the development of processes for effective working. A mixed methods research-in-action study is ongoing to evaluate PPIE within the consortium. This includes the Patient Engagement in Research Scale -a quantitative PPIE quality measure; semi-structured interviews -identifying areas for improvement and overall impressions of involvement; process fidelity- recording adherence; project documentation review - identifying impact of PPIE on project outputs. We provide a practical example of PPIE in complex projects. Evaluating feasibility, experiences and impact of PPIE involvement in EJS ACT-PD will inform similar programs on effective strategies. This will help enable future patient-centered research.

Sections du résumé

Background UNASSIGNED
Patient and public involvement and engagement (PPIE) in the design of trials is important, as participant experience critically impacts delivery. The Edmond J Safra Accelerating Clinical Trials in PD (EJS ACT-PD) initiative is a UK consortium designing a platform trial for disease modifying therapies in PD.
Objective UNASSIGNED
The integration of PPIE in all aspects of trial design and its evaluation throughout the project.
Methods UNASSIGNED
PwP and care partners were recruited to a PPIE working group (WG) via UK Parkinson's charities, investigator patient groups and participants of a Delphi study on trial design. They are supported by charity representatives, trial delivery experts, researchers and core project team members. PPIE is fully embedded within the consortium's five other WGs and steering group. The group's terms of reference, processes for effective working and PPIE evaluation were co-developed with PPIE contributors.
Results UNASSIGNED
11 PwP and 4 care partners have supported the PPIE WG and contributed to the development of processes for effective working. A mixed methods research-in-action study is ongoing to evaluate PPIE within the consortium. This includes the Patient Engagement in Research Scale -a quantitative PPIE quality measure; semi-structured interviews -identifying areas for improvement and overall impressions of involvement; process fidelity- recording adherence; project documentation review - identifying impact of PPIE on project outputs.
Conclusions UNASSIGNED
We provide a practical example of PPIE in complex projects. Evaluating feasibility, experiences and impact of PPIE involvement in EJS ACT-PD will inform similar programs on effective strategies. This will help enable future patient-centered research.

Identifiants

pubmed: 38701161
pii: JPD230444
doi: 10.3233/JPD-230444
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Auteurs

Marie-Louise Zeissler (ML)

University of Plymouth, Plymouth, UK.

Nikul Bakshi (N)

Parkinson's UK, London, UK.

Michèle Bartlett (M)

Expert through Experience, UK.

Amit Batla (A)

University College London, London, UK.

David Byrom (D)

Expert through Experience, UK.

Rebecca Chapman (R)

University of Plymouth, Plymouth, UK.

Sally Collins (S)

University of Plymouth, Plymouth, UK.

Elaine Cowd (E)

Expert through Experience, UK.

Eric Deeson (E)

Expert through Experience, UK.

Romy Ellis-Doyle (R)

University College London, London, UK.

Jodie Forbes (J)

Expert through Experience, UK.

Cristina Gonzalez-Robles (C)

University College London, London, UK.

Anna Jewell (A)

Expert through Experience, UK.

Emma L Lane (EL)

Cardiff University, Cardiff, UK.

Nancy R LaPelle (NR)

Westborough, MA, USA.

Keith Martin (K)

Expert through Experience, UK.

Helen Matthews (H)

Cure Parkinson's, London, UK.

Laurel Miller (L)

Expert through Experience, UK.

Georgia Mills (G)

University College London, London, UK.

Antony Morgan (A)

Expert through Experience, UK.

Miriam Parry (M)

Kings College Hospital Foundation Trust, London, UK.

Kuhan Pushparatnam (K)

Expert through Experience, UK.

Natasha Ratcliffe (N)

Independent Advisor, Manchester, UK.

Dorothy Salathiel (D)

Expert through Experience, UK.

Paula Scurfield (P)

Expert through Experience, UK.

Carroll Siu (C)

Expert through Experience, UK.

Sue Whipps (S)

Expert through Experience, UK.

Sheila Wonnacott (S)

Expert through Experience, UK.

Thomas Foltynie (T)

University College London, London, UK.

Camille B Carroll (CB)

University of Plymouth, Plymouth, UK.
Newcastle University, Newcastle, UK.

Kevin McFarthing (K)

Expert through Experience, UK.

Classifications MeSH