Ethical Considerations in Human Subjects Research

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Ethical Considerations Ethical Considerations in Human Subjects in Human Subjects Research Research Stacey Berg, M.D. Texas Children’s Cancer Center

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Ethical Considerations in Human Subjects Research. Stacey Berg, M.D. Texas Children’s Cancer Center. Definitions IRB review Informed consent Confidentiality + HIPAA Human material Chart reviews. Definition of Research. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Ethical Considerations in Human Subjects Research

Page 1: Ethical Considerations in Human Subjects Research

Ethical Considerations Ethical Considerations in Human Subjects in Human Subjects

ResearchResearch

Stacey Berg, M.D.Texas Children’s Cancer

Center

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• Definitions

• IRB review

• Informed consent

• Confidentiality + HIPAA

• Human material

• Chart reviews

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Definition of ResearchDefinition of Research

• Research means a systematic investigation, including research development, testing and evaluation, designed to develop or contribute to generalizable knowledge

Publication plans irrelevant

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Definition of SubjectDefinition of Subject

• Human subject means a living individual about whom an investigator (whether professional or student) conducting research obtains:

(1) data through intervention or interaction with the individual

(2) identifiable private information

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Subjects involved?Subjects involved?

Interaction due to research?

Yes No

Identifiable info?

Subjects involved

No subjects

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Human Subjects Human Subjects ResearchResearch

• IRB approvalfull boardexpedited

• Informed consentfull written consentaltered or waived consent

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Research Exempt from Research Exempt from ApprovalApproval

• Educational testing

• Some surveys

• Some studies of existing data or specimens

• Study of public service programs

• Taste and food quality evaluationIRB, not investigator,

decides

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What does an IRB do?What does an IRB do?

• Review, approve, require modifications or disapprove research

• Review informed consent

• Conduct continuing review

• Have authority to observe consent process and research

45 CFR 46

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Criteria for approvalCriteria for approval• Risks to subjects are minimized• Risks to subjects are reasonable relative to benefits

• Selection of subjects is equitable• Provisions made for data, safety monitoring • Provisions made to protect confidentiality• Safeguards in place for vulnerable subjects• Informed consent will be sought, documented

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Risks minimizedRisks minimized

• Background/importance of problem

• Study design issuesGood endpointsJustifiable sample sizeAppropriate biologic correlates

Leverage clinical procedures

• Less risky way to get answer?

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Risk-benefit ratio Risk-benefit ratio favorablefavorable

• How much risk?To individualTo family?To society?

• How much benefit?To individual To society

• Adequate data analysis planProtocol endpointsSafety monitoring

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Informed consentInformed consent

• Tell people why you’re doing this and what’s going to happen to them!

• Risks (not underestimated)

• Benefits (not oversold)

• 7th grade language

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Informed consentInformed consent

• What the research is

• Procedures involved

• Risks, benefits

• Treatment/compensation for injury

• Alternatives

• Right to withdraw

• Confidentiality

• Contacts for questions

Basic elements

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Informed consentInformed consent

• Unforeseeable risks

• Circumstances for termination of participation

• Additional costs

• Procedures for withdrawal

• Notification of new findings that might affect willingness to participate

• Approximate number of subjects

Additional elements

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ConfidentialityConfidentiality• Consider subject privacy

Where you’ll talkHow intrusive?

• Safeguard confidentiality of dataLocked doorsPassword protected files

• Consider risks if confidentiality breachedGenetic info- parentage, insurancePsychological harmJob status

• Who gets access, what circumstances• What happens to samples

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HIPAAHIPAA

• Privacy rule

• “Limiting the ways that health plans, pharmacies, hospitals and other covered entities can use patients’ personal medical information.”

• Authorization to use PHI usually part of consent form

• Applies in some settings where research regs don’t

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Waiver of Consent?Waiver of Consent?

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Special types of Special types of researchresearch

• Tissue samples onlyTissue banks complex

• DatabasesDo not need IRB approval for operational use

DO need IRB approval for research on data

• Chart reviewsNeed IRB approval (HIPAA)

Consult with IRB

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Tissue BanksTissue Banks

• Critical research resourceGenomicsProteomicsFuturomics

• Samples held indefinitely

• Future uses unpredictable

• Sample used in other studies

• Clinical correlation valuable

Research specimen from subject

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Repository

CollectionLocal PISubjectLocal IRBConsent

Bank SOPsAdvisory Board

Bank IRBConsent Form

DistributionDistal PI

Usage agreementDistal IRB No consent

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Types of sampleTypes of sample

• AnonymousNo links exist anywhere

• CodedA link existsTissue recipient does not have key

Repository does

• IdentifiedTissue recipient can connect tissue to donor

Defined by link to donor

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Kinds of IRB reviewKinds of IRB review

• Anonymous samplesCan be exempt from IRB review

• Coded or identified samplesIRB review requiredExpedited review may apply if minimal risk

• Samples all from decedentsExempt from IRB review (not human subjects)

Still need HIPAA review

Determined by type of sample

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Consent considerationsConsent considerations

• Informed consent required• Special considerations

Subject contact:What PHI being collected?Duration of follow-upRecontact re: future studies?

Sample use:This study only?Any study related to condition?Unspecified future studies?

Prospective sample acquisition

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Waiver of consent?Waiver of consent?• Only if minimal risk

Confidentiality well protectedNo release of PHIRights of subject not compromisedAdequate plan to reveal important findings

• AND impracticable to get consent

Most applicable to previously banked specimens

Few good reasons if prospective collection

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Tissue Collection Tissue Collection Exempt?Exempt?

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Chart ReviewsChart Reviews

• IRB approvalusually expeditable

• Informed consent?- Not (usually) if retrospective review*Justify waiver of consent and authorization in IRB application

- Yes if prospective data collection

• “Dear colleague” letterpassive approval from other MDs

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DatabasesDatabases

• If for TPO (or education), no IRB or HIPAA issue

• If collecting PHI but not for research, need authorization (or waiver)

• If collecting PHI for research, need informed consent (or waiver)

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QI/QAQI/QA• Effectiveness of programs

• Improvements in health care delivery in particular settings

• Not usually research if intended for internal program evaluation without generalization

• Difficulty is in deciding when insight becomes “generalizable”

Lynn, Ann Intern Med. 2007;146:666-673

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http://brain-prod.bcm.tmc.edu/brainlogin.asp

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Helpful linksHelpful links

• 45 CFR 46 http://www.hhs.gov/ohrp/humansubjects/guidance/45cfr46.htm#46.111

• Belmont Report http://www.hhs.gov/ohrp/humansubjects/guidance/belmont.htm

• NIH guide on informed consent http://www4.od.nih.gov/oba/rac/ic/appendix_m_iii_b.html

• Data monitoring http://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/notice-files/not98-084.html

• IRB Manual https://intranet.bcm.tmc.edu/apps/research/oor/a_c/document/irb_manual.pdf