AI Article Synopsis

  • The DCA study investigates how dietary factors influence chronic kidney disease progression and nephropathy, emphasizing enrollment and retention strategies.
  • Over 18 months, 712 participants were enrolled across 7 West African centers, with challenges including cultural understanding and the burdens of research participation.
  • Positive enrollment factors included convenient visits and strong communication, leading to protocol changes like home visits and fewer blood draws to enhance participant satisfaction.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Diet, chronic kidney disease (CKD), and Apolipoprotein L1 () (DCA) Study is examining the role of dietary factors in CKD progression and nephropathy. We describe enrollment and retention efforts and highlight facilitators and barriers to enrollment and operational challenges, as well as accommodations made in the study protocol.

Methods: The DCA study is enrolling participants in 7 centers in West Africa. Participants who consented were invited to complete dietary recalls and 24-hour urine collections in year 1. We conducted focus groups and semistructured interviews among study personnel to identify facilitators and barriers to enrollment as well as retention and operational challenges in the execution of the study protocol. We analyzed emerging themes using content analyses.

Results: A total of 712 participants were enrolled in 18 months with 1256 24-hour urine and 1260 dietary recalls. Barriers to enrollment were the following: (i) a lack of understanding of research, (ii) the burden of research visits, and (iii) incorporating cultural and traditional nuances when designing research protocols. Factors facilitating enrollment were the following: (i) designing convenient research visits, (ii) building rapport and increased communication between the research team and participants, and (iii) cultural sensitivity - adapting research protocols for the populations involved. Offering home visits, providing free dietary counseling, reducing the volume of study blood collection, and reducing the frequency of visits were some changes made in the study protocol that increased participant satisfaction.

Conclusion: Adopting a participant-centered approach with accommodations in the protocol for cultural adaptability and incorporating participant feedback is vital for carrying out research in low-income and middle-income regions.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10105057PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ekir.2023.01.019DOI Listing

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