Conference Abstract

Matching trial design decisions to the needs of those you hope will use the results: the PRECIS-2 tool

Details

Citation

Loudon K, Zwarenstein M, Sullivan F, Donnan PT & Treweek S (2015) Matching trial design decisions to the needs of those you hope will use the results: the PRECIS-2 tool. 3rd International Clinical Trials Methodology Conference, Glasgow, 16/11/2015 - 17/11/2015. Trials, 16 (Supplement 2), p. P223. http://trialsjournal.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/1745-6215-16-S2-P223; https://doi.org/10.1186/1745-6215-16-S2-P223

Abstract
Randomised trials are hard work. Like much that is hard, this toil is only worth it because of the prospect of a substantial reward. Sadly, the reward to potential users such as patients, healthcare professionals and policy makers is often smaller than it should be because trial design decisions reduced the relevance of the trial to them.  PRECIS-2 is a tool designed to help trialists match their design decisions to the information needs of those they hope will use the trial results. It is an update of the 2009 PRECIS tool, which though highly cited had some well-known weaknesses. PRECIS-2 was developed in collaboration with over 80 international trialists, methodologists and others to produce a tool that addressed those weaknesses but also supports improved design insight for trialists.  PRECIS-2 retains the wheel format of the original tool. It has nine design domains including Eligibility, Recruitment, Setting and Primary outcome. A new domain - Organisation - is explicitly aimed at making trialists consider the resource requirements their intervention will place on health care systems if it were to be rolled out into routine care, the intention being to think about implementation at the design stage. The highly visual presentation makes inconsistent decision-making immediately obvious; it also highlights differences of opinion between trial team members.  We will present the tool, explain how to use it and show examples of how it has been used already. This work is part of the Trial Forge initiative to improve trial efficiency.

Notes
Output Type: Poster Abstract

Journal
Trials: Volume 16, Issue Supplement 2

StatusPublished
Publication date16/11/2015
Related URLshttp://www.methodologyhubs.mrc.ac.uk/…conference/2015/
PublisherBioMed Central
Publisher URLhttp://trialsjournal.biomedcentral.com/…-6215-16-S2-P223
eISSN1745-6215
Item discussed3rd International Clinical Trials Methodology Conference, Glasgow, 16/11/2015 - 17/11/2015
Conference3rd International Clinical Trials Methodology Conference
Conference locationGlasgow
Dates