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Trial registered on ANZCTR
Registration number
ACTRN12622000571774
Ethics application status
Approved
Date submitted
31/03/2022
Date registered
14/04/2022
Date last updated
14/04/2022
Date data sharing statement initially provided
14/04/2022
Type of registration
Prospectively registered
Titles & IDs
Public title
Helping Children Say Long Words: the effect of a minimal pair approach on the ability of children with speech sound disorders to say long words accurately
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Scientific title
Helping Children Say Long Words: a trial of minimal pairs for weak syllable deletion
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Secondary ID [1]
306719
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Nil known
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Universal Trial Number (UTN)
U1111-1276-2628
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Trial acronym
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Linked study record
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Health condition
Health condition(s) or problem(s) studied:
Speech Sound Disorder
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Phonological Impairment
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Condition category
Condition code
Physical Medicine / Rehabilitation
323106
323106
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0
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Speech therapy
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Intervention/exposure
Study type
Interventional
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Description of intervention(s) / exposure
Children with speech sound disorders often have phonological processes, or patterns of sound errors, in their speech. One common pattern is deleting the weak or unstressed syllables in words. The aim of this study is to investigate a potential intervention for weak syllable deletion.
This study will investigate the use of minimal pair therapy, a well-established speech pathology intervention for treating phonological processes. This will involve asking children to practice saying pairs of words that only differ by the presence or absence of a weak syllable, e.g. ‘nana’ and ‘banana’. The study will consist of initial eligibility assessment, a 3-6 week baseline phase with data collection once per week, a six week intervention phase (2x 45 minute sessions per week), a post-intervention assessment and a follow up assessment one month later.
Intervention sessions will occur twice per week for 45 minutes either in a school or home setting. If this study is impacted by social distancing guidelines, these sessions may take place via telehealth. Intervention session one will consist of familiarising the participant with the first five target minimal pairs and auditory discrimination tasks using target minimal pairs, where the child is asked to listen and find the picture the speech pathologist names. Intervention sessions two to six will consist of 30 trials of auditory discrimination followed by 60-80 trials of production activities, both using target minimal pairs. One trial consists of the child identifying or naming both pictures in the minimal pair.
If the child does not produce the target word accurately, they will be given feedback that reinforces the idea that miscommunication has occurred and asked to revise their answer. If the child is unable to say the target words, facilitative cues and support will be offered.
Intervention Session 7 will introduce the second five minimal pairs, using the same familiarisation methodology, and intervention sessions eight to twelve will involve practice of all ten target minimal pairs. This procedure is based on the well-known and widely used minimal pairs approach.
At least two sessions per participant will be reviewed by a different member of the research team to assess the intervention for fidelity.
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Intervention code [1]
323210
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Treatment: Other
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Intervention code [2]
323226
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Behaviour
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Comparator / control treatment
Prior to intervention, children's speech will be monitored weekly for 3-6 weeks during a baseline phase. In this phase, no intervention will be provided. Each participant serves as their own control, with their baseline data being the no treatment condition.
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Control group
Active
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Outcomes
Primary outcome [1]
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Percentage occurrence of word initial weak syllable deletion in trained words. This will be measured by asking children to name the 10 pictures of target words with word initial weak syllables practiced during therapy sessions.
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Assessment method [1]
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Timepoint [1]
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This will be measured at weekly timepoints during both baseline (3-6 weeks) and intervention (6 weeks) phases.
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Secondary outcome [1]
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Percentage occurrence of word initial weak syllable deletion in untrained words. This will be measured by asking children to name 10 pictures of words with word initial weak syllables that the child has not practiced during therapy sessions.
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Assessment method [1]
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Timepoint [1]
407926
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This will be measured at weekly timepoints during both baseline (3-6 weeks) and intervention (6 weeks) phases.
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Secondary outcome [2]
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Percentage occurrence of word internal weak syllable deletion in untrained words. This will be measured by asking children to name 10 pictures of words with word internal weak syllables that the child has not practiced during therapy sessions.
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Assessment method [2]
407927
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Timepoint [2]
407927
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This will be measured at weekly timepoints during both baseline (3-6 weeks) and intervention (6 weeks) phases.
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Secondary outcome [3]
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Percentage occurrence of weak syllable deletion during a conversation-level task. This will be measured by asking the child to retell a story that has many multisyllabic words in it and calculating how many occurrences of weak syllable deletion were observed compared to the total number of multisyllabic words the child attempted.
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Assessment method [3]
407928
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Timepoint [3]
407928
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This will be measured during initial assessment (pre-baseline phase), immediately post-intervention and at one month follow up assessment.
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Eligibility
Key inclusion criteria
Eligibility will be determined using routine speech pathology assessment tools that involve either listening to an adult say words and pointing to the picture or looking at pictures and naming them. Children will be between 4 years and 5 year 11 months and have English as their first language.
Additionally, children will need to have receptive vocabulary within 1.5 SD of the mean as measured by the Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test, 5th edition (PPVT-5; Dunn, 2019). In the PPVT-5, the adult says a word and asks the child to look at a large book and choose the corresponding picture from four options.
Participants must have a the most common type of speech sound disorder—phonological impairment (identified by the Diagnostic Evaluation of Articulation and Phonology; DEAP, Dodd et al., 2002). In the DEAP, the adult shows the child pictures and asks the child to name them. If the child doesn’t know the answer, they will first be given two options (e.g. “Is it a cat or a dog?”) and if still incorrect asked to copy the adult. Participants must also meet the following speech criteria:
• At least four occurrences of word initial weak syllable deletion as measured on the Preschool Polysyllable Test (POP; Baker, 2013), a test that involves asking the child to name pictures of objects or actions with long (polysyllabic) names, e.g. ‘medicine’ or ‘avocado’.
• Able to say words with a strong-weak-strong stress pattern
• A phonemic inventory that includes nasals, plosives, fricatives and glides
• No established pattern of initial consonant deletion, glottal or /h/ replacement
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Minimum age
4
Years
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Maximum age
6
Years
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Sex
Both males and females
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Can healthy volunteers participate?
No
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Key exclusion criteria
Children will be excluded from participation if they:
• produce five or more words inconsistently on the DEAP screener, as this is indicative of a different type of speech sound disorder warranting a different type of therapy approach.
• present with clinical features or diagnosis of Childhood Apraxia of Speech or dysarthria, hearing loss, cleft lip and/or palate, global developmental delay or autism spectrum disorder.
• have already had speech intervention directly targeting multisyllabic words or weak syllable deletion.
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Study design
Purpose of the study
Treatment
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Allocation to intervention
Non-randomised trial
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Procedure for enrolling a subject and allocating the treatment (allocation concealment procedures)
Not applicable
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Methods used to generate the sequence in which subjects will be randomised (sequence generation)
Not applicable
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Masking / blinding
Blinded (masking used)
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Who is / are masked / blinded?
The people assessing the outcomes
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Intervention assignment
Other
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Other design features
This is a single case experimental design using a multiple baseline across participants methodology. All participants will start with a baseline phase followed by an intervention phase (note that participants will be randomly allocated to different baseline lengths).
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Phase
Not Applicable
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Type of endpoint/s
Efficacy
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Statistical methods / analysis
Data will be analysed through a combination of visual analysis and Tau-U statistical analysis. Visual analysis will involve both within-condition and between-condition analysis. Individual conditions or phases (e.g., baseline or intervention phase) will be analysed for level (mean outcome measure within a phase), trend (the slope of the best-fitting line) and variability (range and standard deviation). In addition, data patterns across phases will be compared, looking at the immediacy of the effect (some outcome measures, especially untrained words, are predicted to show a delayed effect), overlap of data between phases, and the consistency of data with similar phases (e.g. comparing intervention phase data across participants) (Kratchowill et al., 2013)
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Recruitment
Recruitment status
Not yet recruiting
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Date of first participant enrolment
Anticipated
1/05/2022
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Actual
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Date of last participant enrolment
Anticipated
30/09/2022
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Actual
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Date of last data collection
Anticipated
31/10/2022
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Actual
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Sample size
Target
4
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Accrual to date
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Final
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Recruitment in Australia
Recruitment state(s)
SA
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Funding & Sponsors
Funding source category [1]
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University
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Name [1]
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The University of Sydney
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Address [1]
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Sydney School of Health Sciences
Faculty of Medicine and Health,
Susan Wakil Health Building,
D18 Western Avenue
The University of Sydney
Camperdown NSW, 2006
Australia
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Country [1]
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Australia
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Primary sponsor type
University
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Name
The University of Sydney
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Address
Sydney School of Health Sciences
Faculty of Medicine and Health,
Susan Wakil Health Building,
D18 Western Avenue
The University of Sydney
Camperdown NSW, 2006
Australia
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Country
Australia
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Secondary sponsor category [1]
312449
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None
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Name [1]
312449
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Address [1]
312449
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Country [1]
312449
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Ethics approval
Ethics application status
Approved
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Ethics committee name [1]
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The University of Sydney Human Research Ethics Committee
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Ethics committee address [1]
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Susan Wakil Health Building, D18 Western Avenue The University of Sydney Camperdown NSW, 2006 Australia
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Ethics committee country [1]
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Australia
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Date submitted for ethics approval [1]
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22/11/2021
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Approval date [1]
310594
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18/02/2022
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Ethics approval number [1]
310594
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2021/941
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Summary
Brief summary
Speech sound disorders are one of the most common types of communication disorder in young children. Children with speech sound disorders often have consistent error patterns such as substituting one sound (e.g. ‘k’) for a different sound (e.g. ‘t’). One common error pattern is deleting the weak or unstressed syllable in a word (e.g. saying ‘mato’ instead of ‘tomato’). Children who persist with these types of errors in their speech have an increased risk of literacy difficulties during the school years, so it is important that these speech errors are addressed. Currently, there are no evidence-based interventions for speech sound errors where children delete syllables in words. In this small scale research study, we want to find out if a commonly used speech pathology therapy known as, ‘minimal pairs therapy’, can help children to say long words more easily. Currently, minimal pairs therapy involves asking children to listen to and say words that only differ by one sound (i.e., hear and say pairs of words with minimal differences between them, such as ‘tea’ and ‘key’). This therapy approach has been used for short words and to correct specific consonants in error, since 1981. For example, if a child never uses ‘k’ in words and substitutes all ‘k’’ sounds with ‘t’ sounds, a speech pathologist might show a child a picture of a ‘key’ and a cup of ‘tea’. The speech pathologist would ask the child to practice naming the pictures using child friendly games and activities, and help them by modelling the words or giving specific prompts describing how to say the target sound in the word. While there is evidence suggesting minimal pairs therapy technique works for short words, it is yet to be tested with long words. We have proposed four research questions: In children with phonological impairment (a common type of speech sound disorder), does minimal pairs therapy targeting weak syllable deletion result in a reduction in weak syllable deletion in: 1. trained words with word-initial weak syllables? 2. untrained words with word-initial weak syllables? 3. untrained words with word-internal weak syllables? 4. a five-minute story retell task?
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Trial website
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Trial related presentations / publications
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Public notes
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Contacts
Principal investigator
Name
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Prof Kirrie Ballard
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Address
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Sydney School of Health Sciences
The University of Sydney
Susan Wakil Health Building
D18 Western Avenue
The University of Sydney
Camperdown NSW 2006
Australia
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Country
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Australia
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Phone
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+61 431416936
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Fax
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Email
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[email protected]
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Contact person for public queries
Name
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Claire King Bamford
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Address
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Sydney School of Health Sciences
The University of Sydney
Susan Wakil Health Building
D18 Western Avenue
The University of Sydney
Camperdown NSW 2006
Australia
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Country
118203
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Australia
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Phone
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+61 431416936
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Fax
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Email
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[email protected]
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Contact person for scientific queries
Name
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Claire King Bamford
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Address
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Sydney School of Health Sciences
The University of Sydney
Susan Wakil Health Building
D18 Western Avenue
The University of Sydney
Camperdown NSW 2006
Australia
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Country
118204
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Australia
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Phone
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+61 431416936
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Fax
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Email
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[email protected]
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Data sharing statement
Will individual participant data (IPD) for this trial be available (including data dictionaries)?
No
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No/undecided IPD sharing reason/comment
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What supporting documents are/will be available?
No Supporting Document Provided
Results publications and other study-related documents
Documents added manually
No documents have been uploaded by study researchers.
Documents added automatically
No additional documents have been identified.
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