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Medication adherence during the run-in phase of clinical trials: A systematic review of methodological and reporting rigour

  • University of Liege
  • University of Sydney

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

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Abstract

Aims
Trial run-in phases are sometimes used to select adherent participants as a strategy to enrich trials, but the methods employed lack clear regulatory guidance and there are concerns about the transparency of reporting. This review aims to characterize the methods used for adherence measurement and public reporting of run-in studies.

Methods
The protocol is published on the Open Science Framework. Clinicaltrials.gov was searched using the terms “run*in”, “lead*in”, “enrichment” or “single-blind placebo”. The Risk of Bias tool for Observational Adherence Studies (RoBOAS) and the ESPACOMP Medication Adherence Reporting Guideline (EMERGE) were used to assess methodological and reporting quality. A narrative synthesis of the evidence was undertaken.

Results
In total, 249 studies were identified, 34 were included for the analysis, of which 8 specified adherence to be a main purpose of the run-in. Most (20/34) used pill counts and of those using an explicit threshold for adherence, 13/31 used an 80% cut-off. The reporting of the adherence measurement method, summary metric and method of data aggregation was complete in 23/34 run-ins, but none publicly reported the adherence phase considered or presented any adherence data. All run-ins were judged to be of poor methodological quality, and at critical risk of bias.

Conclusions
The methodological and public reporting quality of medication adherence in run-in phases of drug trials may compromise their intended purpose of improving the quality of the main trial. These findings have regulatory implications and support the need for guidelines on the measurement, analysis and reporting of adherence during the run-in phase.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)3353-3365
Number of pages13
JournalBritish Journal of Clinical Pharmacology
Volume91
Issue number12
Early online date26 Jul 2025
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 26 Nov 2025

Keywords

  • Bias
  • Clinical Trials as Topic/methods
  • Humans
  • Medication Adherence
  • Research Design/standards

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