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NIH Collaboratory
Living Textbook of
Pragmatic Clinical Trials

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Rethinking Clinical Trials

A Living Textbook of Pragmatic Clinical Trials

  • Design
    • What is a Pragmatic Clinical Trial?
    • Decentralized Pragmatic Clinical Trials
    • Developing a Compelling Grant Application
    • Experimental Designs and Randomization Schemes
    • Endpoints and Outcomes
    • Analysis Plan
    • Using Electronic Health Record Data
    • Building Partnerships and Teams to Ensure a Successful Trial
    • Intervention Delivery and Complexity
    • Patient Engagement
  • Data, Tools & Conduct
    • Assessing Feasibility
    • Acquiring Real-World Data
    • Assessing Fitness-for-Use of Real-World Data
    • Study Startup
    • Participant Recruitment
    • Monitoring Intervention Fidelity and Adaptations
    • Patient-Reported Outcomes
    • Clinical Decision Support
    • Mobile Health
    • Electronic Health Records–Based Phenotyping
    • Navigating the Unknown
  • Dissemination & Implementation
    • Data Sharing and Embedded Research
    • Dissemination Approaches for Different Audiences
    • Implementation
    • End-of-Trial Decision-Making
  • Ethics & Regulatory
    • Privacy Considerations
    • Identifying Those Engaged in Research
    • Collateral Findings
    • Consent, Disclosure, and Non-Disclosure
    • Data and Safety Monitoring
    • Ethical Considerations of Data Sharing in Pragmatic Clinical Trials
    • Ethics for AI and ML
    • IRB Responsibilities and Procedures

What Decentralized Elements Are Used in Pragmatic Trials?

CHAPTER SECTIONS

Decentralized Pragmatic Clinical Trials


Section 2

What Decentralized Elements Are Used in Pragmatic Trials?

Expand Contributors

Adrian Hernandez, MD, MHS

Keith Marsolo, PhD

Contributing Editor

Karen Staman

With a decentralized trial, certain elements of the trial can be delivered remotely (Figure). NIH Collaboratory Trials employ many decentralized elements, including electronic consent, telehealth interventions, connected sensors, retail pharmacies, local providers, and remote collection of patient-reported outcome measures and other outcomes. Decentralized trials can also use at-home shipments of investigational products, local labs, and mobile research sites.

Figure. Decentralized Elements of PCTs

Case Examples

eConsent

The HiLo trial planned to compare the effects of liberalizing the serum phosphate target versus maintaining aggressive phosphate control for patients receiving maintenance hemodialysis (Edmonston et al 2021). The trial planned to approach 4400 patients with end-stage renal disease receiving maintenance hemodialysis at 80-120 sites. Patients interested in participating were given an iPad to provide electronic consent while in the dialysis unit.

Oral Consent and Telehealth

The BeatPain Utah trial is comparing the effectiveness of nonpharmacologic intervention strategies for patients with back pain seeking care in 13 federally qualified health centers (FQHCs) throughout Utah (Fritz et al 2022). The strategies being evaluated are designed to overcome barriers specific to rural and low-income communities served by FQHCs through the innovative use of an electronic referral (through the EHR) and telehealth resources. The intervention consists of counseling, physical therapy, and brief consultation sessions delivered via telehealth. After a remote/virtual connection is made between a referred patient and a pain teleconsultant, an explanation of the study is provided to the patient. If the patient is eligible and interested, oral consent is obtained and documented. A written version of the consent document is provided to the participant.

Text Messages

The Nudge study used text messaging as the intervention, and Chat 4 Heart Health uses an artificially intelligent chatbot to text with participants. The goal was to improve adherence to heart medications or to heart-healthy habits such as eating better, being more active, quitting tobacco, and managing blood pressure (Ho et al 2024).

Connected Sensors

FM-TIPS aims to test the feasibility and effectiveness of adding transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulator (TENS) to the treatment of patients with fibromyalgia (Post et al 2022). For the trial, a TENS unit will be worn by the patient during physical activity at home, to determine if TENS use improves the symptoms of fibromyalgia, increases adherence to physical therapy, increases the likelihood of meeting therapeutic goals, and reduces medication use. Data are collected by uploading data from the TENS unit and through remotely collected patient-reported outcome measures.

Previous Section Next Section

SECTIONS

CHAPTER SECTIONS

sections

  1. What Is a Decentralized Trial?
  2. What Decentralized Elements Are Used in Pragmatic Trials?
  3. Community Health Considerations for Decentralized Approaches
  4. Quality Assurance

Resources

Good Clinical Practice: Considerations for Trials with Pragmatic or Decentralized Features
A two-day workshop from the Reagan-Udall Foundation (recordings, slides, and transcripts available)

REFERENCES

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Edmonston DL, Isakova T, Dember LM, et al. 2021. Design and rationale of HiLo: a pragmatic, randomized trial of phosphate management for patients receiving maintenance hemodialysis. Am J Kidney Dis. 77(6):920-930.e1. doi:10.1053/j.ajkd.2020.10.008. PMID: 33279558.

Fritz JM, Del Fiol G, Gibson B, et al. 2022. BeatPain Utah: study protocol for a pragmatic randomised trial examining telehealth strategies to provide non-pharmacologic pain care for persons with chronic low back pain receiving care in federally qualified health centers. BMJ Open. 12:e067732. doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2022-067732. PMID: 36351735.

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Ho PM, Glorioso TJ, Allen LA, et al. 2024. Personalized patient data and behavioral nudges to improve adherence to chronic cardiovascular medications: A randomized pragmatic trial. JAMA. doi:10.1001/jama.2024.21739. PMID: 39621340.

Post AA, Dailey DL, Bayman EO, et al. 2022. The Fibromyalgia Transcutaneous Electrical Nerve Stimulation in Physical Therapy Study protocol: A multisite embedded pragmatic trial. 102:pzac116. doi: 10.1093/ptj/pzac116. PMID: 36036838.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

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The Ethics and Regulatory Core Working Group of the NIH Collaboratory contributed to this work through discussions and edits to the text. Key contributors include Pearl O'Rourke, Joseph Ali, and Jeremy Sugarman.


Version History

Published October 6, 2025

current section :

What Decentralized Elements Are Used in Pragmatic Trials?

  1. What Is a Decentralized Trial?
  2. What Decentralized Elements Are Used in Pragmatic Trials?
  3. Community Health Considerations for Decentralized Approaches
  4. Quality Assurance

Citation:

Hernandez A, Marsolo K. Decentralized Pragmatic Clinical Trials: What Decentralized Elements Are Used in Pragmatic Trials?. In: Rethinking Clinical Trials: A Living Textbook of Pragmatic Clinical Trials. Bethesda, MD: NIH Pragmatic Trials Collaboratory. Available at: https://rethinkingclinicaltrials.org/chapters/design/decentralized-pragmatic-clinical-trials/what-decentralized-elements-are-used-in-pragmatic-trials/. Updated November 11, 2025. DOI: 10.28929/287.

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