TY - JOUR
T1 - How to make cardiology clinical trials more inclusive
AU - Zannad, Faiez
AU - Berwanger, Otavio
AU - Corda, Stefano
AU - Cowie, Martin R.
AU - Gamra, Habib
AU - Gibson, C. Michael
AU - Goncalves, Alexandra
AU - Hucko, Thomas
AU - Khunti, Kamlesh
AU - Kostrubiec, Maciej
AU - Kraus, Bettina Johanna
AU - Linde, Cecilia
AU - Lüscher, Thomas F.
AU - Mafham, Marion
AU - Mindham, Richard
AU - Ortega, Rebecca F.
AU - Prescott, Eva
AU - Thabane, Lehana
AU - Yancy, Clyde
AU - Ziegler, André
AU - Van Spall, Harriette G.C.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© Springer Nature America, Inc. 2024.
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - Cardiovascular clinical trials continue to under-represent children, older adults, females and people from ethnic minority groups relative to population disease distribution. Here we describe strategies to foster trial representativeness, with proposed actions at the levels of trial funding, design, conduct and dissemination. In particular, trial representativeness may be increased through broad recruitment strategies and site selection criteria that reflect the diversity of patients in the catchment area, as well as limiting unjustified exclusion criteria and using pragmatic designs that minimize research burden on patients (including embedded and decentralized trials). Trial communications ought to be culturally appropriate; engaging diverse people with lived experience in the co-design of some trial elements may foster this. The demographics of trialists themselves are associated with participant demographics; therefore, trial leadership must be actively diversified. Funding bodies and journals increasingly require the reporting of sociodemographic characteristics of trial participants, and regulatory bodies now provide guidance on increasing trial diversity; these steps may increase the momentum towards change. Although this Perspective focuses on the cardiovascular trial context, many of these strategies could be applied to other fields.
AB - Cardiovascular clinical trials continue to under-represent children, older adults, females and people from ethnic minority groups relative to population disease distribution. Here we describe strategies to foster trial representativeness, with proposed actions at the levels of trial funding, design, conduct and dissemination. In particular, trial representativeness may be increased through broad recruitment strategies and site selection criteria that reflect the diversity of patients in the catchment area, as well as limiting unjustified exclusion criteria and using pragmatic designs that minimize research burden on patients (including embedded and decentralized trials). Trial communications ought to be culturally appropriate; engaging diverse people with lived experience in the co-design of some trial elements may foster this. The demographics of trialists themselves are associated with participant demographics; therefore, trial leadership must be actively diversified. Funding bodies and journals increasingly require the reporting of sociodemographic characteristics of trial participants, and regulatory bodies now provide guidance on increasing trial diversity; these steps may increase the momentum towards change. Although this Perspective focuses on the cardiovascular trial context, many of these strategies could be applied to other fields.
U2 - 10.1038/s41591-024-03273-3
DO - 10.1038/s41591-024-03273-3
M3 - Journal article
C2 - 39402268
AN - SCOPUS:85206669287
SN - 1078-8956
VL - 30
SP - 2745
EP - 2755
JO - Nature Medicine
JF - Nature Medicine
IS - 10
ER -