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Abstract

Introduction: Excluding Care Home (CH) residents from clinical trials of medicines and vaccines has led to an evidence gap. Findings from younger adults may not be generalisable to CH residents with frailty and dementia. Therefore, it is essential to evaluate pharmacological treatments directly in CH residents to assess their safety and efficacy.

Methods: As part of the Widening Access to Trials in Care Homes project, we conducted a scoping review using Joanna Briggs Institute methodology to identify barriers and facilitators to recruiting CH residents into clinical trials of medicinal products. We searched EMBASE, MEDLINE, PsycINFO, CINAHL, and the Cochrane Library (1990 to January 2025). Quantitative data on screen failures and dropouts, and qualitative data on trial teams’ real-world experiences and stakeholder perspectives were extracted, synthesised into themes and presented as descriptive summaries.

Results: From 14,301 records, eight articles were included (2002 to 2021) from the USA (N = 4), UK (N = 3) and France (N = 1). Six were RCTs, and two were a qualitative sub-study and a questionnaire survey. Screen failure rates ranged from 18% to 96%. Identified themes of barriers and facilitators were study design, selection criteria, recruitment methods, data collection methods, participant retention, CH resident and family-related factors, CH facility and staff-related factors, healthcare professional involvement, logistical and operational factors, consent-related factors, ethical and regulatory considerations, insurance and trial costs, and generalisability of trial results.

Conclusions: Our review specifically identified key barriers and facilitators to recruiting CH residents into pharmacological trials. These findings can guide trial planning and support evidence-based care for this vulnerable population.

Keywords

care homes, nursing homes, randomised controlled trials, vaccine trials, barriers and facilitators, care home residents, older people

Document Type

Journal Article

Date of Publication

2026

Volume

55

Issue

4

Publication Title

Age and Ageing

Publisher

Oxford Academic

School

School of Medical and Health Sciences

Funders

The Widening Access to Trials in Care Homes (WATCH) project is funded by Moderna under its Vaccine Innovation Fund (Grant Reference Number: VIFC2024005).

Creative Commons License

Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Comments

Subbarayan, S., Smith-Dodd, I., Nicolson, G., Burton, J. K., Scott, J. T., Vasan, S. S., Soiza, R. L., & The WATCH Consortium. (2026). Barriers and facilitators to recruiting older adult care home residents into clinical trials of medicines and vaccines: A scoping review. Age and Ageing55(4), Article afag077. https://doi.org/10.1093/ageing/afag077

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Link to publisher version (DOI)

10.1093/ageing/afag077