Marie - Interview 25  

Marie - Interview 25

Age at Interview: 69
Sex: Female
Background: Marie is a housewife, married, with two grown-up children.

Brief outline:Marie was diagnosed with chronic lymphocytic leukaemia in 1992. She was recently invited to take part in a clinical trial of a new monoclonal antibody. At first she thought she would take part but after reading all the details decided against it.

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Marie did not realise at first the doctor talking to her about the trial worked for a drug company and that the drug company was running the trial, not the hospital.
 
The information leaflet was complicated and reading it made Marie angry. She was worried about side effects, the fact that the drug might be withdrawn, and that a drug company was involved.
 
It’s vital to understand all the trial information, but that’s difficult for ordinary people. Marie advises people to go through it with someone, preferably someone with medical experience.
 
She didn’t like the idea that the trial could be stopped whenever they had enough data. She would have felt like a guinea pig.
 
She feels you have to be desperate to go on a trial. She wants to live, so she can look after her sick daughter, but she was not desperate enough to try a treatment which has not been proved to work.
 
Marie’s GP spent time discussing her concerns about the trial and her consultant contacted the trial on her behalf to say she was not happy to take part.
 
She had heard bad things about commercial trials. She thought a trial in an NHS hospital would be run by the NHS and was worried to discover it was run by a drug company.
Clinical trials
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