Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

Background: In critical care randomized controlled trials (RCTs), obtaining informed consent from patients or proxies can be challenging and may delay randomization, potentially affecting intervention efficacy. Research without prior consent (RWPC) procedures are increasingly used to facilitate timely inclusion but their impact on trial outcomes remains uncertain. We aimed to assess whether RWPC procedures are associated with differences in intervention effects on mortality in critical care RCTs.

Methods: We searched PubMed and the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews from inception to August 1, 2024. We included meta-analyses of RCTs evaluating therapeutic interventions in critically ill adults, reporting mortality as a primary or secondary outcome. We conducted a meta-epidemiological study using a two-step approach. First, we calculated the ratio of odds ratios (ROR) within each meta-analysis to compare the effect of interventions on mortality between RCTs using RWPC and those using standard consent. Second, we pooled these RORs across meta-analyses using a random-effects model. Secondary outcomes included the delay from eligibility to randomization and the recruitment rate.

Results: We included 42 meta-analyses comprising 323 RCTs and 103,011 patients, of which 59 RCTs (18%) used a RWPC procedure. Trials using RWPC were more recent (median year: 2015 [2008-2019] vs. 2012 [2007-2017]; p < 0.01), larger (sample size: 203 [101-605] vs. 72 [40-162]; p < 0.01), more frequently multicenter (80% vs. 43%; p < 0.01), and had lower overall risk of bias. There was no significant difference in intervention effect on mortality between trials with and without RWPC (pooled ROR, 1.05 [95% CI 0.83-1.34]; I²=71.7%). RWPC was associated with shorter time to randomization (3 [1-9] vs. 11 [4-23] hours; p < 0.01) and higher recruitment rates (9.6 [4.7-18.7] vs. 4.5 [1.9-8.6] patients/month; p = 0.01).

Conclusions: In critical care RCTs, RWPC procedures were not associated with differences in intervention effect on mortality but were linked to shorter time to randomization and higher recruitment rates.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12291516PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13054-025-05480-xDOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

critical care
12
prior consent
8
mortality critical
8
meta-epidemiological study
8
randomized controlled
8
controlled trials
8
rwpc procedures
8
included meta-analyses
8
rcts
5
rwpc
5

Similar Publications

Background: The COVID-19 pandemic forced the world to quarantine to slow the rate of transmission, causing communities to transition into virtual spaces. Asian American and Pacific Islander communities faced the additional challenge of discrimination that stemmed from racist and xenophobic rhetoric in the media. Limited data exist on technology use among Asian American and Pacific Islander adults during the height of the COVID-19 shelter-in-place period and its effect on their physical and mental health.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) remain a leading cause of death, particularly in developing countries, where their incidence continues to rise. Traditional CVD diagnostic methods are often time-consuming and inconvenient, necessitating more efficient alternatives. Rapid and accurate measurement of cardiac biomarkers released into body fluids is critical for early detection, timely intervention, and improved patient outcomes.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Importance: Research in behavioral economics has demonstrated that people have irrational biases, which make them susceptible to decisional shortcuts, or heuristics. The extent to which physicians consciously might use nudges to exploit these heuristics and thereby influence their patients' decision-making is unclear. In addition, ethical questions about the conscious use of nudges in medicine persist, yet little is known about how physicians experience and perceive their use.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Race, Ethnicity, Insurance Payer, and Pediatric Cardiac Arrest Survival.

JAMA Netw Open

September 2025

Division of Critical Care Medicine, Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care, The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Importance: Lower survival rates among Black adults relative to White adults after in-hospital cardiac arrest are well-described, but these findings have not been consistently replicated in pediatric studies.

Objective: To use a large, national, population-based inpatient database to evaluate the associations between in-hospital mortality in children receiving cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) and patient race or ethnicity, patient insurance status, and the treating hospital's proportion of Black and publicly insured patients.

Design, Setting, And Participants: This retrospective population-based cohort study used the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project Kids' Inpatient Database (1997-2019 triennial versions).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Importance: Survivors of critical illness often have ongoing issues that affect functioning, including driving ability.

Objective: To examine whether intensive care unit (ICU) delirium is independently associated with long-term changes in driving behaviors.

Design, Setting, And Participants: This multicenter, longitudinal cohort study included 151 survivors of critical illness residing within 200 miles of Nashville, Tennessee.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF