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How to Overcome Common Challenges to Patient Recruitment Projections

For nearly ten years, suboptimal trial enrollment has been cited as a primary cause of clinical trial discontinuation. The Tufts Center for the Study of Drug Development released an impact report in 2013, in which it noted that nearly 37% of clinical trials miss enrollment targets [1]. A paper published in JAMA the following year revealed that enrollment was the reason most cited for clinical trial discontinuity [2]. A 2021 paper reviewing all discontinued clinical trials since 2000, revealed that enrollment forecasting remains the foremost reason for trial discontinuity, and suggests that this has cost the biotech and pharmaceutical industries approximately $40 billion USD (estimated conservatively*) [3]. 

According to Cytel experts, more precise recruitment projections can be calculated through a model-based approach that accounts for nonlinearity and randomness in the patient enrollment process. Intuitively, clinical operations specialists know that there will be site-level fluctuations. The same number of patients do not enroll every week, nor is there a straightforward way to account for how many will enroll. Yet, many conventional approaches to recruitment forecasting make exactly these assumptions.

Sophisticated approaches might account for some nonlinearity - for example, it might be that as trials progress and recruitment efforts become more efficient, it is possible to scale the number of patients who enroll. Without statistical insight, though, it is very difficult to capture the idea of randomness. 

A model-based approach advocated by Cytel experts enables a somewhat different line of reasoning. Instead of asking how long will it take to enroll 1000 patients, we can instead ask what is the probability that 1000 patients will be enrolled in fifteen months, twenty months or thirty months. We can then tackle nonlinearity by creating a model like the one below (Figure 3 in the attached whitepaper): 

 

While this might appear to be a small adjustment in approach, consider that using site-level historical data, clinical operations teams can make such projections for each potential trial site. They can see, for example, that there is an 80% chance of hitting targets at one site and only 20% at another site, whether to focus recruitment initiatives in one place or another. It is then possible to build a cumulative enrollment curve that enables the prediction of conservative and risky targets for recruitment:

 

According to a Cytel whitepaper on enrollment and patient recruitment, this can then lead to a number of new trial acceleration strategies and insights about relationships between key events.  

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[1] Impact Report, Tufts Center for the Study of Drug Development,  2013

[2] Kasenda B., et al., Prevalence, characteristics and publication of discontinued randomized trials. JAMA 2014

[3] Vellinga, A., Lambe, K., O’Connor, P. et al. What discontinued trials teach us about trial registration?. BMC Res Notes 14, 47 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13104-020-05391-w

*This assumes 163 discontinued trials, approximately $675,000 USD per trial and 37% of trials stopping due to patient recruitment issues. 

About the Author of Blog: 

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Dr. Esha Senchaudhuri is a research and communications specialist, committed to helping scholars and scientists translate their research findings to public and private sector executives. At Cytel Esha leads content strategy and content production across the company's five business units. She received a doctorate from the London School of Economics in philosophy, and is a former early-career policy fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. She has taught medical ethics at the Harvard School of Public Health (TH Chan School), and sits on the Steering Committee of the Society for Women in Philosophy's Eastern Division, which is responsible for awarding the Distinguished Woman in Philosophy Award. 

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