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Enrollment with and without exception from informed consent in a pilot trial of tranexamic acid in children with hemorrhagic injuries.

Authors :
Linakis, Seth W.
Kuppermann, Nathan
Stanley, Rachel M.
Hewes, Hilary
Myers, Sage
VanBuren, John M.
Casper, T. Charles
Bobinski, Matthew
Ghetti, Simona
Schalick, Walton O.
Nishijima, Daniel K.
Barnhard, Sarah E
Holmes, James F
Tran, Nam K
Tzimenatos, Leah S
Zwienenberg, Marike
Galante, Joseph
Fenton, Stephen
Brockmeyer, Doug
Pysher, Theodore
Source :
Academic Emergency Medicine; Dec2021, Vol. 28 Issue 12, p1421-1429, 9p
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Background: Federal exception from informed consent (EFIC) procedures allow studies to enroll patients with time‐sensitive, life‐threatening conditions when written consent is not feasible. Our objective was to compare enrollment rates with and without EFIC in a trial of tranexamic acid (TXA) for children with hemorrhagic injuries. Methods: We conducted a four‐center randomized controlled pilot and feasibility trial evaluating TXA in children with severe hemorrhagic brain and/or torso injuries. We initiated the trial enrolling patients without EFIC. After 3 months of enrollment, we met our a priori futility threshold and paused the trial to incorporate EFIC procedures and obtain regulatory approval. We then restarted the trial allowing EFIC if the guardian was unable to provide timely written consent. We used descriptive statistics to compare characteristics of eligible patients approached with and without EFIC procedures. We also calculated the time delay to restart the trial using EFIC. Results: We enrolled one of 15 (6.7%) eligible patients (0.17 per site per month) prior to using EFIC procedures. Of the 14 missed eligible patients, seven (50%) were not enrolled because guardians were not present or were injured and unable to provide written consent. After obtaining approval for EFIC, we enrolled 30 of 48 (62.5%) eligible patients (1.34 per site per month). Of these 30 patients, 22 (73.3%) were enrolled with EFIC. Of the 22, no guardians refused written consent after randomization. There were no significant differences in the eligibility rate and patient characteristics enrolled with and without EFIC procedures. Across all sites, the mean delay to restart the trial using EFIC procedures was 12 months. Conclusions: In a multicenter trial of severely injured children, the use of EFIC procedures greatly increased the enrollment rate and was well accepted by guardians. Initiating the trial without EFIC procedures led to a significant delay in enrollment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10696563
Volume :
28
Issue :
12
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Academic Emergency Medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
154315367
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/acem.14343