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Research to meet the needs of the NHS: a review of published NIHR HTA clinical trials

Background

The NIHR HTA programme was established in 1993 with the aim of being ‘needs-led’. This was achieved through commissioning trials to address questions specified by the programme rather than by applicants. At the time this was an unusual funding model and the programme has developed experience that is now globally significant.

There is dissatisfaction worldwide with the focus of much existing clinical research (the arrival in the USA of Comparative Effectiveness Research is one attempt to address this) and many trials focus on outcomes that are of little relevance to patients [1]. However, apart from early work reviewing the sources of topics suggested to the HTA programme [2], there has been no systematic attempt to review the programme’s success in being needs-led.

Objectives

The establishment of a database of metadata for HTA trials allowed us to examine the experience from a long series of published HTA trials. We therefore set out to review how far trials funded by the NIHR HTA programme were indeed needs-led by looking at:

  • The source of the original suggestion

  • The priority given by the programme to the research

  • The patient-relevance of the primary outcome

Methods

The study used a variety of methods to assess the extent to which HTA trials published up to March 2011 were needs-led (n=112). The sources of topic identification and the prioritisation methods were examined over a 10 year period. The type of primary outcome measure reported during the commissioning stage, research protocol and HTA monograph were assessed using Gandhi et al. (2008) [1] classification list.

Results

The source of the original suggestion: 77/112 trials (69%) addressed questions that came out of the widespread consultation, a mix of postal and online questionnaires of managers, clinicians and patient and professional groups. Majority of the remaining trials were from systematic reviews (22%, 25/112).

The priority given by the programme to the research: 58/84 had been recommended as ‘must commission’ priorities by the HTA programme, meaning that they would be advertised and if that failed to result in funding, further work would be done to ensure that they were taken forward.

The patient-relevance of the primary outcome: Three quarters of trials addressed patient relevant outcomes (75%, 84/112). This compares with 46% and 45% in previous studies [1], [3].

Table 1 Summary data

Conclusions

These analyses suggest that the first 112 published HTA trials can indeed claim to be meeting the information needs of the NHS. Further work is required to compare these results with elsewhere and to develop more robust measures for the future.

References

  1. Gandhi G, Murad H, Fujiyoshi A, Mullan R, Flynn D, Elamin M, Swiglo B, Isley W, Guyatt G, Montori V: Patient-important outcomes in registered diabetes trials. JAMA. 2008, 299 (21): 2543-2549. 10.1001/jama.299.21.2543.

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  2. Chase D, Milne R, Stein K, Stevens A: What are the relative merits of the sources used to identify potential research priorities for the NHS HTA programme?. International Journal of Technology Assessment in Health Care. 2000, 16 (3): 743-750. 10.1017/S0266462300102028.

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Acknowledgements

The authors would like to thank members of the advisory group for their valuable comments during the development of the metadata database.

We also wish to thank the National Institute for Health Research Health Technology Assessment programme for providing the funding for this project.

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Correspondence to Amanda Young.

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This article is published under license to BioMed Central Ltd. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

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Young, A., Milne, R., Raftery, J. et al. Research to meet the needs of the NHS: a review of published NIHR HTA clinical trials. Trials 12 (Suppl 1), A86 (2011). https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.1186/1745-6215-12-S1-A86

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  • DOI: https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.1186/1745-6215-12-S1-A86

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