Recruitment failure and futility were the most common reasons for discontinuation of clinical drug trials. Results of a nationwide inception cohort study in the Netherlands

Publication date

2017-08

Authors

van den Bogert, Cornelis AISNI 0000000419564615
Souverein, PatrickORCID 0000-0002-7452-0477ISNI 0000000392263686
Brekelmans, Cecile T M
Janssen, Susan W J
Koëter, Gerard H
Leufkens, BertISNI 0000000392454327
Bouter, Lex M.

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

taverne

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: The objective of the study was to identify the reasons for discontinuation of clinical drug trials and to evaluate whether efficacy-related discontinuations were adequately planned in the trial protocol. STUDY DESIGN AND SETTING: All clinical drug trials in the Netherlands, reviewed by institutional review boards in 2007, were followed until December 2015. Data were obtained through the database of the Dutch competent authority (Central Committee on Research Involving Human Subjects [CCMO]) and a questionnaire to the principal investigators. Reasons for trial discontinuation were the primary outcome of the study. Three reasons for discontinuation were analyzed separately: all cause, recruitment failure, and efficacy related (when an interim analysis had demonstrated futility or superiority). Among the efficacy-related discontinuations, we examined whether the data monitoring committee, the stopping rule, and the moment of the interim analysis in the trial progress were specified in the trial protocol. RESULTS: Of the 574 trials, 102 (17.8%) were discontinued. The most common reasons were recruitment failure (33 of 574; 5.7%) and solely efficacy related (30 of 574; 5.2%). Of the efficacy-related discontinuations, 10 of 30 (33.3%) of the trial protocols reported all three aspects in the trial protocol, and 20 of 30 (66.7%) reported at least one aspect in the trial protocol. CONCLUSION: One out of five clinical drug trials is discontinued before the planned trial end, with recruitment failure and futility as the most common reasons. The target sample size of trials should be feasible, and interim analyses should be adequately described in trial protocols.

Keywords

Clinical Trials Data Monitoring Committees, Clinical Trials as Topic, Cohort Studies, Early Termination of Clinical Trials, Humans, Netherlands, Patient Selection, Pharmaceutical Preparations, Sample Size, Journal Article, Taverne

Citation

van den Bogert, C A, Souverein, P C, Brekelmans, C T M, Janssen, S W J, Koëter, G H, Leufkens, H G M & Bouter, L M 2017, 'Recruitment failure and futility were the most common reasons for discontinuation of clinical drug trials. Results of a nationwide inception cohort study in the Netherlands', Journal of Clinical Epidemiology, vol. 88, pp. 140-147. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jclinepi.2017.05.001