Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6150791 | Contemporary Clinical Trials | 2016 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
The majority of parents described undertaking benefit-risk assessments that led to informed choices that offered psychological and potential disease benefits. Parents' high expectations influenced their decisions while also reflecting optimism. Clinicians felt challenged in balancing parents' expectations and likely outcomes. Prognosis-related pressures coupled with decision making prior to IC suggest an obligation to ensure educational materials are understandable and accurate, and to consider an expanded notion of IC timeframes. Anticipatory guidance about potential trial failure might facilitate parents' deliberations while aiding clinicians in moderating overly-optimistic motivations. Regulators and industry should appreciate special challenges in progressive disorders, where doing nothing was equated with doing harm.
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Authors
Holly L. Peay, Hadar Scharff, Aad Tibben, Benjamin Wilfond, Janice Bowie, Joanna Johnson, Kanneboyina Nagaraju, Diana Escolar, Jonathan Piacentino, Barbara B. Biesecker,