Audio-digital recordings for surveillance in clinical trials of major depressive disorder

Abstract Ratings surveillance is used in clinical trials to assure ratings reliability of site-based scores. One surveillance method employs audio-digital recordings of site-based clinician interviews to obtain remote, site-independent scores for assessment of paired scoring concordance and intervie...

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Veröffentlicht in:Contemporary clinical trials communications 2019-06, Vol.14, p.100317-100317, Article 100317
Hauptverfasser: Targum, Steven D, Catania, Christopher J
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abstract Ratings surveillance is used in clinical trials to assure ratings reliability of site-based scores. One surveillance method employs audio-digital recordings of site-based clinician interviews to obtain remote, site-independent scores for assessment of paired scoring concordance and interview quality. We examined the utility of this surveillance strategy using paired site-independent scores derived from recorded site-based Montgomery-Asberg depression rating scale (MADRS) interviews obtained from patients with major depressive disorder (MDD) participating in 5 clinical trials. High correlations were noted between the 3736 paired site-based and site-independent scores across all visits. Some rater “outliers” were identified whose ratings performance improved following remediation. In 3 studies with available outcome data, the blinded remote ratings yielded a high predictive value (91.2%) for replicating treatment response rates. The magnitude of the total MADRS scores affected the directionality of paired scoring deviations in each of the 5 studies. Across all visits, site-based raters scored the more severe MADRS scores (≥30) higher than site-independent raters and the less severe MADRS scores (
ISSN:2451-8654
2451-8654
DOI:10.1016/j.conctc.2019.100317