Abstract

BackgroundThe costs, complexity, legal requirements and number of amendments associated with clinical trials are rising constantly, which negatively affects the efficient conduct of trials. In Sub-Saharan Africa, this situation is exacerbated by capacity and funding limitations, which further increase the workload of clinical trialists. At the same time, trials are critically important for improving public health in these settings. The aim of this study was to identify the internal factors that slow down clinical trials in Sub-Saharan Africa. Here, factors are limited to those that exclusively relate to clinical trial teams and sponsors. These factors may be influenced independently of external conditions and may significantly increase trial efficiency if addressed by the respective teams.MethodsWe conducted sixty key informant interviews with clinical trial staff working in different positions in two clinical research centres in Kenya, Ghana, Burkina Faso and Senegal. The study covered English- and French-speaking, and Eastern and Western parts of Sub-Saharan Africa. We performed thematic analysis of the interview transcripts.ResultsWe found various internal factors associated with slowing down clinical trials; these were summarised into two broad themes, “planning” and “site organisation”. These themes were consistently mentioned across positions and countries. “Planning” factors related to budget feasibility, clear project ideas, realistic deadlines, understanding of trial processes, adaptation to the local context and involvement of site staff in planning. “Site organisation” factors covered staff turnover, employment conditions, career paths, workload, delegation and management.ConclusionsWe found that internal factors slowing down clinical trials are of high importance to trial staff. Our data suggest that adequate and coherent planning, careful assessment of the setting, clear task allocation and management capacity strengthening may help to overcome the identified internal factors and allow clinical trials to proceed more efficiently.

Highlights

  • Clinical trials are essential for medical advances as they provide the highest degree of evidence to support new interventions and decisions about disease management

  • We found various internal factors associated with slowing down clinical trials; these were summarised into two broad themes, “planning” and “site organisation”

  • We found that internal factors slowing down clinical trials are of high importance to trial staff

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Summary

Introduction

Clinical trials are essential for medical advances as they provide the highest degree of evidence to support new interventions and decisions about disease management. The costs, complexity, legal requirements and documentation associated with clinical trials globally has risen constantly [1,2,3,4,5], the added value of these changes in terms of increasing the quality of clinical trials remains unknown [6]. This trend stands in sharp contrast to current efforts to make health systems more productive. These factors may be influenced independently of external conditions and may significantly increase trial efficiency if addressed by the respective teams

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