Journal of Cardiovascular Development and Disease (Jan 2022)

Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Non-COVID-19 Clinical Trials

  • Katia Audisio,
  • Hillary Lia,
  • Newell Bryce Robinson,
  • Mohamed Rahouma,
  • Giovanni Soletti,
  • Gianmarco Cancelli,
  • Roberto Perezgrovas Olaria,
  • David Chadow,
  • Derrick Y. Tam,
  • Dominique Vervoort,
  • Michael E. Farkouh,
  • Deepak L. Bhatt,
  • Stephen E. Fremes,
  • Mario Gaudino

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcdd9010019
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 1
p. 19

Abstract

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Randomized controlled trials (RCT) were impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic, but no systematic analysis has evaluated the overall impact of COVID-19 on non-COVID-19-related RCTs. The ClinicalTrials.gov database was queried in February 2020. Eligible studies included all randomized trials with a start date after 1 January 2010 and were active during the period from 1 January 2015 to 31 December 2020. The effect of the pandemic period on non-COVID-19 trials was determined by piece-wise regression models using 11 March 2020 as the start of the pandemic and by time series analysis (models fitted using 2015–2018 data and forecasted for 2019–2020). The study endpoints were early trial stoppage, normal trial completion, and trial activation. There were 161,377 non-COVID-19 trials analyzed. The number of active trials increased annually through 2019 but decreased in 2020. According to the piece-wise regression models, trial completion was not affected by the pandemic (p = 0.56) whereas trial stoppage increased (p = 0.001). There was a pronounced decrease in trial activation early during the pandemic (p p = 0.22; trial stoppage p p = 0.01). During the pandemic, there was an increase in non-COVID-19 RCTs stoppage without changes in RCT completion. There was a sharp decline in new RCTs at the beginning of the pandemic, which later recovered.

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