Clinical Trial: An Insider’s View
There are big companies like Quintiles that run clinical trials around the world. There are local clinics that specialize in clinical trials and make a lot of money at it. There are, of course, pharmaceutical companies and device manufacturers who depend upon the results to gain marketing approval for new products. People in all those groups know a lot about trials.
But the perspective that counts is the view from you and me – patients. Most of us do not enroll in clinical trials. We don’t want to get too up close and personal with anything “experimental.” And often our doctors never tell us about available trials anyway since it can be a lot of paperwork for them. Given that most people don’t enroll in trials and new science is delayed because of it and also because most people in trials are not journalists, I thought I’d put hunt and peck to the computer keyboard and speak out about trials. I am especially motivated because I have participated twice. The first one, a leukemia trial in 2000, I believe, saved my life. And I enrolled in a second one, studying a new drug for clots in the legs (deep vein thrombosis or DVT) just a week and a half ago.
I enrolled in the DVT trial because 1) the first one worked for me and 2) I crow all the time about how patients should always consider being in a trial as a treatment option. I had to put up or shut up. So I signed on the dotted line.
This particular trial, called Hokusai, has started out to be a bit of pain. That’s because it is studying a drug to balance the thinness of your blood – a fairly tricky endeavor. The hope is the new drug could be more reliable, and “steadier” in thinning your blood to prevent bad things from happening from clots you already have in your extremities. The gold standard for 40 years has been Warfarin or Coumadin. It requires a lot of monitoring and trips to the clinic for finger sticks. Unfortunately, getting going in the new trial requires the same thing. So I have been getting to know the sixth floor of the James Medical Tower in Seattle really well – almost daily. And I am learning all about how the clinical coordinator’s five-year-old is learning to ride a bike. It has been taking a 90 minute hole out of many days. But it is all for science and maybe something better for me too. I say “maybe” because it’s a “double blind” trial which means neither me nor the medical team will know if I am getting the study medicine. I could be on the old standby and in what they call the “control group.” In the leukemia trial I knew I was getting ‘the good stuff” and I ended up receiving it a full 10 years before it was given final FDA approval for my illness. But in a non-cancer trial it usually doesn’t work that way.
I am not down on trials now. And I understand this particular trial is cumbersome because its studying DVT’s and blood thinning. You don’t want to get the balance in the blood wrong! So I drive back and forth and remain a patient patient knowing things will smooth out, that perhaps a new drug will get its day in the sun, the developers will make billions, and a lot of us may receive safer, more effective treatment. And there may be dollars saved with fewer office visits.
So it’s back to the clinic tomorrow. I need to ask the receptionists their names, how many kids they have and if any of them are learning to ride a bike. You see, while you’re in a trial you get to be good friends with the medical people. Maybe that’s not such a bad thing if your health and that of many others who follow is improved because of it.
I welcome your comments and stories of participating in a clinical trial.
Wishing you and your family the best of health!
Andrew

Thanks for writing this, Andrew.
There’s too little in the public domain that’s clear, from the patient’s point of view, neither angry nor PR, about what it’s like to be in a clinical trial.
I’ve participated in a number of survey studies & 1 actual clinicial trial. It was a Phase II trial for a thyrotropin releasing hormone (a precursor to thyroid hormone) in a study of cancer-related fatigue in breast cancer & prostate cancer patients. It took some hoofing, about a 2-hr drive to a neighboring state, but I did it & it helped. I was the final subject that they needed to begin to move on to a Phase III trial, in which they could do an actual double-blind trial of an oral version of TRH. Best thing about it was that I made lifelong connections with the 2 researching docs, who provided me & my primary care doc with concrete help & treatment advice for my own fatigue. And their advice worked. They were incredibly appreciative & I stay in touch with them. I have done research myself, did a study in grad school to get my masters in physical therapy. So I understand how it works & how needed it is. Made me feel good that maybe someday it might help someone else with CRF.
FYI There is a BBC radio pogram about drug trials TODAY Sunday 07 August.
It is on BBC 5 at 8.00 pm local time. 20.00 local or 19.00 GMT
BBC radio 5 is availible on the internet.
There are two programs, one tonight and one on I think August 21st at the same time.
BBC radio 5 has a website that will give you all required information.
BBC also has iplayer for listening to programs that are repeated online for listening at a time more suitable for you.
Kind regards and good luck on your DVT trial
Dick