Taking part in research is completely voluntary. STOP-ACEi participants can decline any research assessments or refuse to continue sharing their data for any reason, and at any point during trial follow-up. But wherever possible, we want to collect as much of the trial outcome data as we can so the patient’s participation can be used to improve future patient care.
There are different types of withdrawal for STOP-ACEi. So if a STOP-ACEi participant asks to withdraw from the trial, please clarify which aspects they want to withdraw from. Usually, patients that withdraw want to stop coming in for trial-specific visits, or want to opt out of specific research assessments (e.g. the walk test or the questionnaire), but are happy to continue sharing their data. It is essential to make a clear record of this discussion with the patient so it is clear what consent still stands, and what has been withdrawn.
Lots of the data we collect for STOP-ACEi are available from routine clinical monitoring (e.g. blood results, blood pressure, etc.), so if the patient wants to withdraw from full trial follow-up, but is happy to let us continue receiving these data, please continue with the patient’s data collection based on their medical records. At each follow-up time point, complete what you can of the CRF from the patient’s case notes.
To minimise queries, make it clear which data are missing in the notes section of the CRF. For example, ‘Patient withdrawn from full follow-up. Available data reported from clinical records, but the following data are missing: walk test, alkaline phosphatase, uPCR/ACR, weight’.
The use (or not) of ACEi/ARBs is at the treating clinician’s discretion for patients that have withdrawn from trial follow-up.