Benefits of Participation in Clinical Trials: An Umbrella Review
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Bouzalmate Hajjaj, Amira; Massó Guijarro, Paloma; Saeed Khan, Khalid; Bueno Cavanillas, Aurora; Cano Ibáñez, NaomiEditorial
MDPI
Materia
Participation Non-participants Systematic reviews Umbrella review Health changes Randomised controlled trial
Date
2022-11-21Referencia bibliográfica
Bouzalmate-Hajjaj, A... [et al.]. Benefits of Participation in Clinical Trials: An Umbrella Review. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 15368. [https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph192215368]
Sponsorship
Ministry of Science and Innovation, Instituto de Salud Carlos III; FEDER co-funding from European Union PI20/01532; Centro de Investigacion Biomedica en Red-Epidemiologia y Salud Publica CIBERESP/CB06/02/1014Abstract
Participation in randomised clinical trials (RCTs) entails taking part in the discovery of
effects of health care interventions. The question of whether participants’ outcomes are different
to those of non-participants remains controversial. This umbrella review was aimed at assessing
whether there are health benefits of participation in RCTs, compared to non-participation. After
prospective registration (PROSPERO CRD42021287812), we searched the Medline, Scopus,Web of
Science and Cochrane Library databases from inception to June 2022 to identify relevant systematic
reviews with or without meta-analyses. Data extraction and study quality assessment (AMSTAR-2)
were performed by two independent reviewers. Of 914 records, six systematic reviews summarising
380 comparisons of RCT participants with non-participants met the inclusion criteria. In two reviews,
the majority of comparisons were in favour of participation in RCTs. Of the total of comparisons,
69 (18.7%) were in favour of participation, reporting statistically significant better outcomes for
patients treated within RCTs, 264 (71.7%) comparisons were not statistically significant, and 35 (9.5%)
comparisons were in favour of non-participation. None of the reviews found a harmful effect of
participation in RCTs. Our findings suggest that taking part in RCTs may be beneficial compared
to non-participation.