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The BRACELET Study: surveys of mortality in UK neonatal and paediatric intensive care trials

Abstract

Background

The subject of death and bereavement in the context of randomised controlled trials in neonatal or paediatric intensive care is under-researched. The objectives of this phase of the Bereavement and RAndomised ControlLEd Trials (BRACELET) Study were to determine trial activity in UK neonatal and paediatric intensive care (2002-06); numbers of deaths before hospital discharge; and variation in mortality across intensive care units and trials and to determine whether bereavement support policies were available within trials. These are essential prerequisites to considering the implications of future policies and practice subsequent to bereavement following a child's enrolment in a trial.

Methods

The units survey involved neonatal units providing level 2 or 3 care, and paediatric units providing level II care or above; the trials survey involved trials where allocation was randomized and interventions were delivered to intensive care patients, or to parents but designed to affect patient outcomes.

Results

Information was available from 191/220 (87%) neonatal units (149 level 2 or 3 care); and 28/32 (88%) paediatric units. 90/177 (51%) eligible responding units participated in one or more trial (76 neonatal, 14 paediatric) and 54 neonatal units and 6 paediatric units witnessed at least one death. 50 trials were identified (36 neonatal, 14 paediatric). 3,137 babies were enrolled in neonatal trials, 210 children in paediatric trials. Deaths ranged 0-278 (median [IQR interquartile range] 2 [1, 14.5]) per neonatal trial, 0-4 (median [IQR] 1 [0, 2.5]) per paediatric trial. 534 (16%) participants died post-enrolment: 522 (17%) in neonatal trials, 12 (6%) in paediatric trials. Trial participants ranged 1-236 (median [IQR] 21.5 [8, 39.8]) per neonatal unit, 1-53 (median [IQR] 11.5 [2.3, 33.8]) per paediatric unit. Deaths ranged 0-37 (median [IQR] 3.5 [0.3, 8.8]) per neonatal unit, 0-7 (median [IQR] 0.5 [0, 1.8]) per paediatric unit. Three trials had a formal policy for responding to bereavement.

Conclusions

A substantial number of deaths after trial enrolment were identified, distributed over many trials and units. Few trial teams had responses to bereavement in place. Those with the largest numbers of deaths might be best placed to collaborate in developing and assessing responses to bereavement.

Peer Review reports

Background

The current emphasis on the need for good evidence to guide care [1, 2], and the establishment of the UK Medicines for Children Research Network (MCRN) to encourage and facilitate paediatric research, suggest that increasing numbers of children will be enrolled into randomised controlled trials. This includes extremely sick children in neonatal and paediatric intensive care units, of whom a proportion will die before discharge home. The subject of death and bereavement in the context of trials is, however, under-researched.

It is not known how many participants are enrolled in this setting, or how many survive or die. The parents of those who go on to die subsequent to trial enrolment may have a range of information and support needs and preferences but these have not yet been adequately described and explored. We do not know whether bereaved parents might wish to have further contact with a trial, and what services, if any, they might wish to access; we do not know what approaches clinicians and trial teams might feel able to offer.

An essential prerequisite to considering bereavement and trials is to ascertain the magnitude and distribution of post-trial mortality. This study therefore aimed to determine:

  1. 1.

    trial activity in UK neonatal and paediatric units;

  2. 2.

    the number and proportion of deaths among babies and children participating in trials in intensive care;

  3. 3.

    variation in mortality across units, and across trials

  4. 4.

    whether any provision is made for bereavement within trials

Methods

Although new trials are increasingly being registered, especially those involving new medical products, there is no single repository of trials through which all trials conducted in the UK over specified time periods and particular specialties can be identified. The B ereavement and RA ndomised C ontrolLE d T rials (BRACELET) Study therefore required two linked surveys to achieve its objectives; the first survey involved neonatal and paediatric units to identify trials conducted in the UK in 2002-2006; the second survey involved trials to collate data on deaths across trials and across their collaborating neonatal and paediatric units (Figure 1).

Figure 1
figure 1

Structure of BRACELET Study Surveys.

Unit survey

The unit survey aimed to identify all trials open to recruitment in the UK from 1 January 2002 to 31 December 2006. Data were requested from all neonatal units providing care designated as Level 2 (high dependency and some short-term intensive care) or Level 3 (whole range of medical care but not necessarily specialist services such as surgery) [3], and all paediatric units with a paediatric intensivist in post which provide at least Level II intensive care (1:1 nurse:child ratio providing care for those requiring continuous nursing supervision, usually intubated and ventilated, or unstable non-intubated or recently extubated) [4].

Two hundred and twenty neonatal unitsand 32 paediatric units were identified through a process of cross-checking multiple sources [3–9]. Units were contacted by post but questionnaires were also made available on the BRACELET website http://www.bracelet-study.org.uk. One hundred and forty nine neonatal units reported their designated level of care as Level 2 or 3 and were eligible to participate in the study. Representatives at these 149 neonatal units, and at the 32 Level III paediatric units [7, 9] were asked to complete a questionnaire in April 2007. This asked respondents to list all trials open to recruitment in their unit in 2002-2006. The clinical lead for each unit was asked to permit the trial coordinating team for each trial to which they had recruited to release that unit's recruitment and mortality data to the BRACELET Study. Two reminders were sent via email or mail. Nurse Practitioners from MCRN made additional follow up contact where appropriate. Opportunistic and direct contact between study members and units also served as reminders. Data collection was concluded in May 2008.

Trials survey

The unit survey generated a list of trials which was supplemented by searches of specialised websites [8–10]. Many of the trials were also identified through other sources such as the UK Dept Health National Research Register https://portal.nihr.ac.uk/Pages/NRRArchive.aspx, PubMed http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed, PICS website http://www.ukpics.org, and the European Society of Paediatric and Neonatal Intensive Care website http://www.espnic.de.

Trials were eligible for the survey if: allocation was randomised; enrolment took place during the five year study period; parental informed consent was required; and the intervention was delivered to babies or children within ICUs or delivered by, or under the auspices of, a neonatologist or paediatric intensivist leading to ICU admission for ongoing care, or the intervention was delivered to parents but designed to affect outcomes for babies or children.

For each eligible trial, the chief investigator, trial manager or other appropriate contact was asked to complete an emailed questionnaire. Questionnaires were also made available on the BRACELET website http://www.bracelet-study.org.uk/index.php?page=previous-research---phase-1 were followed up by telephone, direct contact and the assistance of MRCN, if necessary. The information received was supplemented by data from published papers, relevant websites and personal communication. Three types of data were generated, for the five year study period only: general data about trials (outcome measures, participating units, numbers enrolled); overall mortality data (UK mortality per trial before discharge from hospital) and unit-specific mortality data (deaths per unit per trial before discharge from hospital). Chief investigators, trial managers or other appropriate contacts were also asked to provide copies of the trial protocol and parent information leaflets for their trial.

Analysis

Descriptive data are presented as proportions and ranges, as appropriate. Analysis used the statistical package Stata 10 (StataCorp, College Station, Texas, USA). Variations in the denominators for some of the numbers reported in the results reflect different response rates for the unit survey and the trials survey, and incomplete release of mortality data by some units and some trials.

Ethics

Ethics committee approval was not required for this phase of the BRACELET Study.

Results

Response rates

Unit survey

Questionnaires were sent to 220 neonatal units; 191 (86.8%) responded, of which 149 were eligible units (82 providing Level 2 care and 67 Level 3). Questionnaires were also completed by 28 (87.5%) of the 32 Level II paediatric units surveyed.

Trials survey

The unit survey and associated searches identified 50 trials (36 neonatal and 14 paediatric trials). Some general data were obtained for 43 trials (32 neonatal, 11 paediatric). Overall UK mortality data were released for 37 trials (28 neonatal, 9 paediatric). Unit-specific mortality data were released for 33 trials (24 neonatal, 9 paediatric) for those ICUs which had permitted release of their data to the study in the unit survey.

Survey findings

The unit survey indicated that overall half of the ICUs enrolled one or more participants in one or more trials during the five year study period (76/149 neonatal units, 14/28 paediatric units) (Table 1).

Table 1 NICU and PICU participation in RCTs (based on respondents to unit surveys)

A minority of the responding Level 2 neonatal units (N = 27, 32.9%) and the majority of the responding Level 3 neonatal units contributed to a trial (N = 49 (73.1%). Nine (13.4%) of the Level 3 neonatal units ran their own single centre trials but none of the Level 2 neonatal units did so. Five of the 14 responding paediatric units (17.9%) ran single centre trials.

General data

Of the 76 neonatal units which enrolled to a trial, 72 provided details of the number of babies enrolled. A total of 3117 babies were enrolled by these neonatal units into the 29 neonatal trials for which some enrolment data for the five year study period were available. The number of babies enrolled per neonatal unit ranged 1-236 (median [IQR] 21.5 [8, 39.8]). An additional 20 babies were recruited into two multicentre neonatal trials by two paediatric units, bringing the total enrolled in neonatal trials to 3137 babies. Of these 480 (15.3%) were recruited into single centre trials and 2657 (84.7%) into multicentre trials (UK and international) (Table 2).

Table 2 Babies and children enrolled 2002-2006 by type of trial and by enrolling unit (neonatal or paediatric)

Of the 14 paediatric units that enrolled into a paediatric trial, 11 provided details of the number enrolled. A total of 210 children were enrolled by these paediatric units into 9 paediatric trials for which some enrolment data for the five year study period were available. The number of children enrolled per paediatric unit into paediatric trials ranged 1-53 (median [IQR] 7 [2], 34). Of these 94 (44.8%) were enrolled into single centre trials and 116 (55.2%) to multicentre trials (all of which were international) (Table 2).

Overall mortality data

Overall mortality data were available for 28 neonatal and 9 paediatric trials (Table 3). In total, 534/3288 (16.2%) children died following enrolment in these 37 trials.

Table 3 Hospital survivors and non-survivors overall by type of RCT - UK totals 2002-2006 (overall mortality data)

The 28 neonatal trials enrolled 3,088 babies, of whom 522 (16.9%) died. The number of deaths per neonatal trial ranged 0-278 (median [IQR] 2 [1, 14.5]) (Figure 2). Of the 28 neonatal trials, 24 had at least one death. The highest mortality rate amongst these trials was 29% (80 deaths). Most reported small numbers of deaths (only 8 trials reported >10). The majority of deaths, 429/522 (82.2%), occurred in four trials, three of which were multicentre (N = 278 + 80 + 43 and one single centre (N = 28). Single centre trials reported fewer deaths and a lower death rate (47/480 9.8%) than multicentre trials (475/2608 18.2%).

Figure 2
figure 2

Variation in numbers of deaths across neonatal trials.

In the nine paediatric trials for which mortality data were available, 12 (6.0%) out of 200 children died following enrolment into a trial. Six of the 9 trials had a least one death with the number of deaths ranging 0-4. Very few deaths occurred in single centre paediatric trials (2/94 2.1%) compared to those in the neonatal single centre trials (47/480 9.8%) and the paediatric multicentre trials 10/106 (9.4%).

Unit-specific mortality data

Data on 434 deaths were released by 24 neonatal trials for 72 neonatal units with the permission of the neonatal units in question. The number of deaths per neonatal unit ranged 0-37 (median [IQR] 3.5 [0.3, 8.8]) (Figure 3). Whilst 54 neonatal units saw at least one death, more than half (42/72 58.3%) saw fewer than five deaths over this five year period (Table 4). Five Level 3 neonatal units had larger numbers (N = 37, 29, 26, 22 and 20) and 30.9% of all deaths recorded by the units occurred in these five neonatal units. In around half of the units, the proportion of children who died following trial enrolment was 20% or more (Table 5).

Figure 3
figure 3

Variation in numbers of deaths across neonatal units.

Table 4 Numbers of deaths in NICUs and PICUs following enrolment into a trial 2002-2006 (unit-specific mortality data)
Table 5 Proportion of deaths in NICUs and PICUs following enrolment into a trial 2002-2006 (unit-specific mortality data)

Nine paediatric trials released unit specific mortality data for 14 paediatric units. The number of deaths per paediatric unit ranged 0-7(median [IQR] 0.5 [0, 1.8]), with 6 paediatric units witnessing at least one death (Table 4). In all these units, the proportion of children who died following trial enrolment was under 20% (Table 5).

Trials survey - Practices in relation to bereavement care

Of the 50 RCTs, investigators for just over half (n = 27) provided a copy of the full trial protocol. None of the protocols documented a policy relating to the care of parents bereaved following enrolment of their child into the RCT.

Parent information leaflets were provided for 29 of the 50 trials. Two NIC trials (one multicentre and one UK-led international trial) provided a leaflet specifically for bereaved parents, expressing condolences, thanking them for their contribution and offering information about the trial. Details of support organisations were also given in the leaflets.

In one single-centre NIC trial the investigator reported a different approach. Three deaths occurred following enrolment into this trial and the investigator sent a personalised letter to each set of parents to thank them for allowing their child to participate and to offer contact should they wish to discuss the trial or the continued use for their child's data in the trial.

Discussion

The BRACELET Study is the first to investigate randomised controlled trial activity in UK neonatal units and paediatric units, to report the numbers of babies and children enrolled into trials, and to determine the extent and distribution of mortality involved. An important strength of this study is the high response rates achieved. Several evidence-based strategies were used to maximise responses [11]. We are confident that all units were identified, and the comprehensive process of searching relevant research databases and websites as well as surveying these units is likely to have identified most of the trials recruiting in the UK. The establishment of mandatory trial registration will facilitate this process for future studies. There are, however, clear limitations to the study which relate to its narrow focus on mortality figures; in this regard the data raise rather than answer questions about bereavement in this context.

The study shows that in a five year period, over 3000 babies and children were enrolled into paediatric and neonatal intensive care trials and 16% died, predominantly in the neonatal context. With over 500 deaths reported we suggest that a substantial number of bereaved parents, clinicians and trialists have encountered deaths among trial participants. We would also suggest that this is an underestimate as the BRACELET study focused only on deaths up to discharge from hospital; post-discharge deaths were not included. Other adverse outcomes for parents and families, such as disability and loss of quality of life in surviving babies are also important but were beyond the remit of the study.

As further trials are initiated and accrue more participants, the population of parents bereaved after agreeing to enroll their child in a trial will accumulate; it is already sufficiently sizeable to warrant attention, but whether and how to respond to this population are complex questions. Provision for bereavement is often made within clinical centres but this body of parents, with potentially diverse experiences and needs, is largely scattered across a number of recruiting clinical centres; most deaths occurred as relatively isolated cases and the majority of centres witnessed small numbers of deaths per year. In the paediatric context where few deaths occurred, only one ICU reported more than one death. This is likely to make it difficult for many of the clinical centres to develop, assess and sustain specialised responses to post-trial bereavement themselves.

The patterns of mortality revealed by the BRACELET Study also suggest, however, that there were pockets of neonatal units and neonatal trials with substantial numbers of deaths. Five particularly research active Level 3 neonatal units saw 20 or more deaths each in the study period, and together they saw over a quarter of all reported deaths. In general, large ICUs draw upon well developed bereavement services [12], and research-active centres such as these may be appropriate candidates to develop and assess dedicated trial-related bereavement practices.

The vast majority of deaths represented in the BRACELET Study, also occurred in only four trials. In trials where a substantial number of deaths is anticipated, it may be possible to develop and assess trial-related bereavement practices.

What form those practices might take is unclear. They may range from development of formal practices and supporting literature to a more simple policy of offering parents the opportunity to discuss a trial if they so wish.

Parents have not yet been asked about any support and information needs that they might have. Their preferences are likely to be varied and may include the wish for no further contact. It is however possible that some options that parents might appreciate, for instance access to specialised forms of support, may be beyond the capacity and expertise of current routine bereavement services, even in the larger centres, and may be difficult for trial teams to implement.

The BRACELET Study showed that three trials had already developed a response to bereavement such as preparing a bereavement leaflet for use in clinical centres or sending condolence letters directly to parents (for an example leaflet see http://www.npeu.ox.ac.uk/downloads/nest/NEST-Bereavement-Leaflet.pdf). Personal communications have revealed that some trials offer bereaved parents the option of receiving trial newsletters and results; some make a considered choice not to contact bereaved parents at all subsequent to a death.

To our knowledge, none of these policies have been subject to empirical evaluation, although descriptive accounts such as Strohm's report of a trial-related web-based message board for all parents of babies recruited to a trial, including those who are bereaved [13], are helpful additions to the literature. Further reflection would be of value to future trials where deaths are likely.

The BRACELET Study has demonstrated that bereavement occurs in relation to trials of any size and type and with a range of clinical foci. The four trials which reported the majority of deaths in the five year period assessed very different interventions, from routine care practices to potentially life-saving technologies. They involved very different populations and were conducted in single centre, multicentre and international contexts. This suggests that bereavement in a trial context may be an issue of broad relevance in specialties such as intensive care, and that it could be particularly appropriate for large trials, or trials focusing on high risk situations, to plan for and assess their approach to bereavement with substantial research populations.

Trials are complex, highly collaborative endeavors between recruiting clinical centres and trial teams, groups which may feel a shared interest in and responsibility for parents bereaved in trials. Their collaboration might be exploited to good effect if experts within these fields take collective responsibility for the potential needs of the population identified here. If those trials and clinical centres with the greatest experience of post-trial bereavement develop effective approaches to care for and support bereaved parents, other smaller trials and centres may draw upon their recommendations and follow their lead. Even in the paediatric context where deaths occurred infrequently, individual trials may still involve severely compromised populations and so find that post-trial bereavement care is a salient issue.

It is, however, important that recommendations in this novel area should from an early stage be based on sound empirical evidence which draws upon views of all relevant parties with their potentially different perspectives and insights. Clinical teams often recruit to a number of trials concurrently and see bereaved parents in a variety of circumstances; they may be best placed to consider the broad range of bereavement-related issues that might occur in clinical contexts. Trial teams by comparison consider parents in the relatively more uniform circumstances set by the eligibility criteria for their particular trial; they may be best placed to consider bereavement practices which are tailored to fit the population and circumstances of a given trial. Research in this area is sensitive but it is essential that bereaved parents should also be consulted. Studies have demonstrated that bereavement-related research is feasible [14–20], and suggest that bereaved parents might be willing and helpful participants on this challenging and sensitive subject.

The task ahead is for those with relevant insight and expertise, to collaborate to find a range of approaches which are sensitive to the variety of parents seen by clinicians and applicable and adaptable to the specific circumstances addressed in individual trials. As a first step in this process the BRACELET Study includes a second qualitative component which aims to explore death, dying and bereavement in the context of neonatal RCTs from the perspectives of trial team members, clinicians and bereaved parents.

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Acknowledgements

The BRACELET Study was funded by the National Institute of Health Research Health Technology Assessment Programme (NHIR-HTA) (project number 05/516/06). The views and opinions expressed herein are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of the Department of Health. The study sponsor is the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. Neither funder nor sponsor was involved in the design and conduct of the BRACELET Study or preparation of this report.

We are grateful to the trial teams, and unit staff who provided the data for this research. Sara Lewis and Maggie Redshaw at the National Perinatal Epidemiology Unit, and Roger Parslow at Paediatric Intensive Care Audit Network PICANET provided advice and helpful information. MCRN staff and MCRN Local Research Networks gave crucial assistance with data collection. The BRACELET Study Advisory Group (Ursula Bowler, Dr Gillian Colville, Professor Richard Cooke, Professor Bobbie Farsides, Merryl Harvey, Dr Andy Leslie, Fiona Lockett) commented on research methods throughout the research process.

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Correspondence to Diana Elbourne.

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The authors declare that they have no competing interests.

Authors' contributions

The BRACELET Study was devised and designed by CS, DE, PB, RT and MWP. Data were mainly collected by SH and CS. All authors had access to the data in the study and can take responsibility for the integrity of the data and the accuracy of the data analysis. An initial draft of the paper was prepared by SH and CS and revised by all authors. EA undertook supplementary analyses. CS and DE prepared the final version of the paper. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.

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Snowdon, C., Harvey, S.E., Brocklehurst, P. et al. The BRACELET Study: surveys of mortality in UK neonatal and paediatric intensive care trials. Trials 11, 65 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1186/1745-6215-11-65

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