Polly Scutt
Consent procedures and relationship with outcome in the Rapid Intervention with Glyceryl trinitrate in Hypertensive stroke Trial-2 (RIGHT-2)
Scutt, Polly; Dixon, Mark; Appleton, Jason P.; Howard, Harriet; Havard, Diane; Woodhouse, Lisa J.; Bath, Philip M.
Authors
Mark Dixon
Jason P. Appleton
Harriet Howard
Diane Havard
Dr LISA WOODHOUSE L.Woodhouse@nottingham.ac.uk
RESEARCH FELLOW
Professor PHILIP BATH philip.bath@nottingham.ac.uk
STROKE ASSOCIATION PROFESSOR OF STROKE MEDICINE
Abstract
Background: Obtaining consent in emergency situations is challenging. Proxy consent allows patients to be recruited when they lack capacity, a common scenario in stroke patients. The rapid intervention with glyceryl trinitrate in hypertensive stroke trial-2 (RIGHT-2) recruits patients in the pre-hospital setting within 4 hours of stroke onset.
Methods: In RIGHT-2, informed or proxy consent is taken in the ambulance. A brief assessment of capacity is performed by the paramedic. Patients with capacity provide consent and in patients without capacity, proxy consent is obtained from a relative, carer or friend, or by the paramedic, witnessed by a crew member.
Results: Of 879 participants enrolled into RIGHT-2 as of 15th December 2017, 468 (53.2%) participants gave their own consent; proxy consent was given by a relative/carer/friend for 325 (37%) and by a paramedic for 85 (9.7%). Participants who consented themselves were younger, had less dependency and had less severe strokes than those with proxy consent. Participants who gave their own consent had a lower rate of intracerebral haemorrhage (9% vs 16%) and a higher rate of non-stroke (20% vs 13%) as their final diagnosis than those who gave proxy consent. Consenting patients had better scores for dependency, cognition, disability and quality of life at day 90 than those recruited via proxy consent.
Conclusion: Proxy consent can ensure participants are enrolled rapidly into emergency clinical trials where they may otherwise be excluded due to lack of capacity. These patients have more severe strokes and therefore poorer clinical outcomes.
Citation
Scutt, P., Dixon, M., Appleton, J. P., Howard, H., Havard, D., Woodhouse, L. J., & Bath, P. M. (2018, May). Consent procedures and relationship with outcome in the Rapid Intervention with Glyceryl trinitrate in Hypertensive stroke Trial-2 (RIGHT-2). Presented at 4th European Stroke Organisation Conference (ESOC 2018)
Conference Name | 4th European Stroke Organisation Conference (ESOC 2018) |
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Start Date | May 16, 2018 |
End Date | May 18, 2018 |
Acceptance Date | Feb 22, 2018 |
Publication Date | May 16, 2018 |
Deposit Date | Mar 23, 2018 |
Publicly Available Date | May 16, 2018 |
Peer Reviewed | Peer Reviewed |
Public URL | https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/913013 |
Contract Date | Mar 23, 2018 |
Files
ESOC 2018 RIGHT-2 outcomes by consent type abstract 20180122 submitted1.pdf
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