Strategies used for the COVID-OUT decentralized trial of outpatient treatment of SARS-CoV-2

Author:

Avula NandiniORCID,Kakach Dustin,Tignanelli Christopher J.,Liebovitz David M.,Nicklas Jacinda M.ORCID,Cohen Kenneth,Puskarich Michael A.,Belani Hrishikesh K.,Buse John B.ORCID,Klatt Nichole R.,Anderson Blake,Karger Amy B.,Hartman Katrina M.,Patel Barkha,Fenno Sarah L.,Reddy Neha V.ORCID,Erickson Spencer M.,Boulware David R.ORCID,Murray Thomas A.,Bramante Carolyn T.,

Abstract

Abstract The COVID-19 pandemic accelerated the development of decentralized clinical trials (DCT). DCT’s are an important and pragmatic method for assessing health outcomes yet comprise only a minority of clinical trials, and few published methodologies exist. In this report, we detail the operational components of COVID-OUT, a decentralized, multicenter, quadruple-blinded, randomized trial that rapidly delivered study drugs nation-wide. The trial examined three medications (metformin, ivermectin, and fluvoxamine) as outpatient treatment of SARS-CoV-2 for their effectiveness in preventing severe or long COVID-19. Decentralized strategies included HIPAA-compliant electronic screening and consenting, prepacking investigational product to accelerate delivery after randomization, and remotely confirming participant-reported outcomes. Of the 1417 individuals with the intention-to-treat sample, the remote nature of the study caused an additional 94 participants to not take any doses of study drug. Therefore, 1323 participants were in the modified intention-to-treat sample, which was the a priori primary study sample. Only 1.4% of participants were lost to follow-up. Decentralized strategies facilitated the successful completion of the COVID-OUT trial without any in-person contact by expediting intervention delivery, expanding trial access geographically, limiting contagion exposure, and making it easy for participants to complete follow-up visits. Remotely completed consent and follow-up facilitated enrollment.

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Subject

General Medicine

Cited by 1 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Progress toward realizing the promise of decentralized clinical trials;Journal of Clinical and Translational Science;2024

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