Electronic consent demonstrates potential to overcome 'key barrier' in stroke trial recruitment

NeuroNews highlights UC, University of Minnesota-led study

NeuroNews highlighted research led by the University of Cincinnati's Iris Davis and the University of Minnesota's Christopher Streib that revealed the potential advantages associated with electronic informed consent in acute ischemic stroke studies, including increased enrollment rates and improved adherence to consent documentation. The findings were recently published in the journal Stroke.

“EConsent […] was associated with higher individual site enrolment, higher remote consent rates, and improved consent documentation adherence, over paper consent,” the study authors wrote. “Our study outlines the potential advantages of eConsent adoption in future acute ischemic stroke clinical trials and stroke research networks.”

The study reviewed the use of eConsent in the Phase 3 MOST trial, finding 33.7% of the total trial cohort were enrolled using eConsent and 56.1% of trial sites used eConsent at least once. Sites that used eConsent enrolled a higher number of study participants compared to sites that did not.

“Today, electronic approaches commonly replace conventional methods of paper documentation in health care, and in clinical research, to better manage medical data maintenance and access," Davis, UC clinical research manager and NIH StrokeNet administrative codirector, told NeuroNews. "EConsent provides a contemporary solution to documenting informed consent in clinical trials for patients, researchers and health care systems...A shift towards using eConsent over paper consent could improve the efficiency of stroke trials by providing more patients the opportunity to participate, and by decreasing the regulatory reporting burden on research teams.”

Read the NeuroNews article.

Featured photo at top of illustration of brain with stroke symptoms. Photo/PeterSchreiber.media/iStock.

Related Stories

2

UC's art collection on display at the Contemporary Arts Center

January 5, 2026

University of Cincinnati leaders joined WVXU's Cincinnati Edition to talk about the university’s 200-year-old art collection, a new exhibition at the Contemporary Arts Center and the release of a companion book exploring the collection’s role in education and public engagement.

3

UC faculty and staff among Rising Star leadership honorees

January 5, 2026

Two UC faculty and staff members are among this year's Rising Star leadership program sponsored by YWCA Greater Cincinnati. Kelli Beecher, assistant professor in the UC College of Nursing, and Brittany Bibb, assistant director of programs and operations in the UC Division of Student Affairs, are among the emerging leaders of 2026. They were featured in the publication Movers & Makers.