Recruitment of patients with de novo Parkinson disease: Successful strategies in a randomized exercise clinical trial

Deborah A. Hall*, Charity Moore, Cynthia Comella, B. Berman, C. L. Christiansen, B. Kluger, W. M. Kohrt, Ed Melanson, M. Schenkman, C. G. Moore, D. M. Corcos, C. Poon, A. Delitto, D. A. Josbeno, S. Jain

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

10 Scopus citations

Abstract

Introduction: Recruitment of sufficient patients with Parkinson disease into clinical trials is a barrier to successful, timely study completion. Non-pharmacologic studies have shown to be even more challenging for recruitment, despite some studies focusing on de novo Parkinson disease populations. This paper describes successful recruitment techniques from a randomized exercise clinical trial in Parkinson disease. Methods: Several recruitment strategies were used to enroll de novo patients with Parkinson disease into a year-long clinical trial. Strategies focused on infrastructure included fast-track clinic scheduling, weekly research meetings, an established clinical repository, real-time clinic recruitment, and outreach to the community. The nature of the study facilitated recruitment by offering a wait-listed control group, exercise at a local fitness center with a paid membership, and collection of data by shipping equipment foregoing some visits. An experienced nurse study coordinator involved in recruitment and training of the principal investigator in recruitment of minorities enhanced overall recruitment. Finally, the patient population chosen for this study, patients with de novo Parkinson disease, may be more likely to enroll in an exercise study than patients with later stage disease. Results: Seventy-six patients with de novo Parkinson disease were successfully enrolled into the exercise clinical trial from a single site. Conclusion: Targeted recruitment strategies were successful in this study. Additional modifications to the study protocol, such as eliminating treadmill stress tests before randomization, travel to an urban downtown location for study visits, and a relatively healthy Parkinson disease population, may also have impacted this study. These strategies could all be adopted for other studies in Parkinson disease, neurodegenerative diseases, or other chronic disorders. Trial registration: Clinicaltrials.gov, NCT01506479. Registered on 10 January 2012.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article number630
JournalTrials
Volume19
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 14 2018

Funding

We sincerely thank our patient participants and work of our research team: Alyce Negron and Lucia Blasucci. This work was supported by the following: NS082416 (DH), NS074343(MS, DC), and the National Parkinson Foundation. SPARX Study Group: B Berman, CL Christiansen, B Kluger, WM Kohrt, Ed Melanson, M Schenkman: University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus; CG Moore: Carolinas Healthcare System; DM Corcos, C Poon: Northwestern University; A Delitto, DA Josbeno, S Jain*: University of Pittsburgh; JA Robichaud: University of Illinois Chicago. *Deceased.

Keywords

  • Clinical trial
  • De novo
  • Parkinson disease
  • Recruitment
  • Treadmill training

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Medicine (miscellaneous)
  • Pharmacology (medical)

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