Introduction Low recruitment in clinical trials is a common and costly problem which undermines
medical research. This study aimed to investigate the challenges faced in recruiting
children and adolescents with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) and autism spectrum
disorder (ASD) for a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial and
to analyze reasons for non-participation. The trial was part of the EU FP7 project
TACTICS (Translational Adolescent and Childhood Therapeutic Interventions in Compulsive
Syndromes (www.tactics-project.eu, FP7/2007-2013, grant agreement number 278948, EudraCT Number: 2014-003080-38).
Methods Demographic data on pre-screening patients were collected systematically, including
documented reasons for non-participation. Findings were grouped according to content,
and descriptive statistical analyses of the data were performed.
Results In total, n = 173 patients were pre-screened for potential participation in the clinical
trial. Of these, only five (2.9%) were eventually enrolled. The main reasons for non-inclusion
were: failure to meet all inclusion criteria/meeting one or more of the exclusion
criteria (n = 73; 42.2% of pre-screened patients); no interest in the trial or trials
in general (n = 40; 23.1%); not wanting changes to current therapy/medication (n = 14;
8.1%).
Conclusion The findings from this study add valuable information to the existing knowledge on
reasons for low clinical trial recruitment rates in pediatric psychiatric populations.
Low enrollment and high exclusion rates raise the question of whether such selective
study populations are representative of clinical patient cohorts. Consequently, the
generalizability of the results of such trials may be limited. The present findings
will be useful in the development of improved recruitment strategies and may guide
future research in establishing the measurement of representativeness to ensure enhanced
external validity in psychopharmacological clinical trials in pediatric populations.
Furthermore, researchers are encouraged to collect and publish detailed findings on
recruitment difficulties and reasons for non-participation in clinical trials, in
order to develop respective new tools and concepts based on sound data.