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. 2015 Aug 24;33(27):3065–3073. doi: 10.1200/JCO.2014.60.6376

Table 3.

Proposed Components of Research Consortia by Their Longitudinal Experience and Research Resources

Level I II III IV
Longitudinal experience Young consortium Young-experienced consortium Experienced consortium Maximally experienced consortium
Research resources Lower resource setting Medium resource setting High resource setting Maximal resource setting
Clinical trial type Single-arm intervention study for common and highly curable disease (ALL, BL, WT) or target disease (OS, ES) Single-arm intervention studies for most childhood cancers
Biology studies for banking or focused etiologic research
Incorporation of randomized clinical trials
Few single- or multi-arm trials for relapse disease
Biologic studies for expanded etiologic research
Predominance of randomized clinical trials
Focus on relapsed disease, phase I/II clinical trials, and effectiveness trials
Biology studies for identification of new markers
No. of studies/trials Few (1-5) Several (> 5) Multiple (> 10) Multiple (> 20)
Research infrastructure Strong emphasis on building local capacity by:
Training data managers
Establishing processes for data collection, quality, safety, and analysis
Nurturing local researchers
Establishing ethics committees
Additional emphasis on:
Increasing data quality checks, research staff, and oversight proportional to higher volume
Support for development of secondary analysis and local projects
Clinicians have dedicated time to be site-specific principal investigators
Clinical research staff is more experienced and independent
Stable financial support has been achieved
Dedicated staff, time, and support has been secured
Full set of research staff is available (CRC, CRA, CRN)
Statistics core available
Research has close ties to drug development and pharmaceutical companies (bench to bedside)
Informed consent Relatively simple because studies likely reflect standard of care Relatively simple because studies likely reflect standard of care Increasing complexity Increased complexity
Health systems Intentional strengthening of health systems through:
Drug procurement
Access to care
Quality checks
Outcome assessment
Additional emphasis on:
Expanding the formulary (treatment and supportive)
Improving early referral
Building research teams
Culture of research, quality, and safety has been achieved
Clinical research is part of subspecialty training
Nursing research
Clinical research is embedded within health care systems
Consortium influences health care policies
Health care delivery Intentionally improving:
Standardization of care for specific diseases
Evaluation of barriers to implementation
Monitoring of compliance
Additional emphasis on:
Standardization of care
Processes and/or quality
Integration and/or incorporation of subspecialists
Increased access to expert care
Care teams are supported by research teams
Care is multidisciplinary and interdisciplinary
More supportive staff allows for more outpatient care
Cost-effective care
Maximizing outpatient care
Limiting impact on quality of life
Accountability is high

Abbreviations: ALL, acute lymphoblastic leukemia; BL, Burkitt lymphoma; CRA, clinical research assistant; CRC, clinical research coordinator; CRN, clinical research nurse; ES, Ewing sarcoma; OS, osteosarcoma; WT, Wilms tumor.