Multicenter research trial. A clinical trial conducted at more than one medical center or clinic. Most large clinical trials, particularly Phase III trials, are conducted at several clinical research centers. The benefits of multicenter trials include a larger number of participants, different geographic locations, the possibility of inclusion of a wider range of population groups, and the ability to compare results among centers, all of which increase the generalizability of the study. In many cases, efficacy will vary significantly between population groups with different genetic, environmental, and ethnic or cultural backgrounds ("demographic" factors); normally only geographically dispersed trials can properly evaluate this.
Enrolment should be competitive. If the subject recruitment rate is lower than expected at one centre and higher than expected at another, planned allocation numbers should be transferred from the centre with low subject recruitment to a centre with high recruitment where subject inclusion is expected to be completed earlier than planned. This will be done to help ensure that subject enrolment is completed as planned.
Number of sites for the study depends on estimated recruitment rates.
Although, without outside assistance, the typical site may recruit as few as one-fifth of the patients it promised to deliver originally. Some may recruit none, taking their setup money and contributing nothing more, or recruit only one patient so that there is no offsetting control.
Role of ICH GCP and Recruitment Strategies Training of Clinical Sites Staff in Successful Patient Recruitment Rates By Marithea Goberville, Ph.D.IBPA Publications 2005
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