Recruitment into randomised trials of arteriovenous grafts: a systematic review.
Author
Kingsmore, DavidWhite, Richard D
Mestres, Gaspar
Stephens, Mike
Calder, Francis
Papadakis, Georgios
Aitken, Emma
Jackson, Andrew
Inston, Nick
Jones, Rob G
Geddes, Colin
Stevenson, Karen
Szabo, Laszlo
Thomson, Peter
Stove, Callum
Kasthuri, Ram
Edgar, Ben
Tozzi, Matteo
Franchin, Marco
Sivaprakasam, Rajesh
Karydis, Nikolaos
Publication date
2023-03-11
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Although randomised controlled trials (RCT) are considered the optimal form of evidence, there are relatively few in surgery. Surgical RCT are particularly likely to be discontinued with poor recruitment cited as a leading reason. Surgical RCT present challenges over and above those seen in drug trials as the treatment under study may vary between procedures, between surgeons in one unit, and between units in multi-centred RCT. The most contentious and debated area of vascular access remains the role of arteriovenous grafts, and thus the quality of the data that is used to support opinions, guidelines and recommendations is critical. The aim of this review was to determine the extent of variation in the planning and recruitment in all RCT involving AVG. The findings of this are stark: there have been only 31 RCT performed in 31 years, the vast majority of which exhibited major limitations severe enough to undermine the results. This underlines the need for better quality RCT and data, and further inform the design of future studies. Perhaps most fundamental is the planning for a RCT that accounts for the intended population, the uptake of a RCT and the attrition for the significant co-morbidity in this population.Citation
Kingsmore D, White RD, Mestres G, Stephens M, Calder F, Papadakis G, Aitken E, Jackson A, Inston N, Jones RG, Geddes C, Stevenson K, Szabo L, Thomson P, Stove C, Kasthuri R, Edgar B, Tozzi M, Franchin M, Sivaprakasam R, Karydis N. Recruitment into randomised trials of arteriovenous grafts: A systematic review. J Vasc Access. 2023 Mar 11:11297298231158413. doi: 10.1177/11297298231158413. Epub ahead of printType
ArticleAdditional Links
https://journals.sagepub.com/home/jvaaPMID
36905207Journal
The Journal of Vascular AccessPublisher
SAGE Publicationsae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1177/11297298231158413