The State of Infectious Diseases Clinical Trials: A Systematic Review of ClinicalTrials.gov

dc.contributor.author

Goswami, ND

dc.contributor.author

Pfeiffer, CD

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Horton, JR

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Chiswell, K

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Tasneem, A

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Tsalik, EL

dc.contributor.editor

Friede, Tim

dc.date.accessioned

2023-04-01T16:25:03Z

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2023-04-01T16:25:03Z

dc.date.issued

2013-10-16

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2023-04-01T16:25:02Z

dc.description.abstract

Background

There is a paucity of clinical trials informing specific questions faced by infectious diseases (ID) specialists. The ClinicalTrials.gov registry offers an opportunity to evaluate the ID clinical trials portfolio.

Methods

We examined 40,970 interventional trials registered with ClinicalTrials.gov from 2007–2010, focusing on study conditions and interventions to identify ID-related trials. Relevance to ID was manually confirmed for each programmatically identified trial, yielding 3570 ID trials and 37,400 non-ID trials for analysis.

Results

The number of ID trials was similar to the number of trials identified as belonging to cardiovascular medicine (n = 3437) or mental health (n = 3695) specialties. Slightly over half of ID trials were treatment-oriented trials (53%, vs. 77% for non-ID trials) followed by prevention (38%, vs. 8% in non-ID trials). ID trials tended to be larger than those of other specialties, with a median enrollment of 125 subjects (interquartile range [IQR], 45–400) vs. 60 (IQR, 30–160) for non-ID trials. Most ID studies are randomized (73%) but nonblinded (56%). Industry was the funding source in 51% of ID trials vs. 10% that were primarily NIH-funded. HIV-AIDS trials constitute the largest subset of ID trials (n = 815 [23%]), followed by influenza vaccine (n = 375 [11%]), and hepatitis C (n = 339 [9%]) trials. Relative to U.S. and global mortality rates, HIV-AIDS and hepatitis C virus trials are over-represented, whereas lower respiratory tract infection trials are under-represented in this large sample of ID clinical trials.

Conclusions

This work is the first to characterize ID clinical trials registered in ClinicalTrials.gov, providing a framework to discuss prioritization, methodology, and policy.

dc.identifier

PONE-D-12-39734

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1932-6203

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1932-6203

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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/26960

dc.language

eng

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Public Library of Science

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PLoS ONE

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10.1371/journal.pone.0077086

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Humans

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Communicable Diseases

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Registries

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Communicable Disease Control

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History, 21st Century

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United States

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Clinical Trials as Topic

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Global Health

dc.title

The State of Infectious Diseases Clinical Trials: A Systematic Review of ClinicalTrials.gov

dc.type

Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

Chiswell, K|0000-0002-0279-9093

duke.contributor.orcid

Tsalik, EL|0000-0002-6417-2042

pubs.begin-page

e77086

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10

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Duke

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School of Medicine

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Staff

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Clinical Science Departments

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Institutes and Centers

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Medicine

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Medicine, Infectious Diseases

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Duke Clinical Research Institute

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Duke Center for Applied Genomics and Precision Medicine

pubs.publication-status

Published

pubs.volume

8

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