Title: Ethics in Clinical Trials
1Ethics in Clinical Trials
- Ethical concerns in general
- Ethical concerns in trials
- Interesting examples
2Ethical Concerns in all Research
- RQ should be important and answerable
- Benefit should outweigh risk
- Participants should give consent
- Privacy should be protected
- Research report should be fair and honest
3Ethical Perspectives
- Idealism
- human beings are special
- can never be a means only
- Utilitarianism
- greatest good for the greatest number
4Roles
- Physician - Investigator
- Patient - Participant
- Treatment - Research
5HISTORY
- Nuremberg Code (1947)
- Declaration of Helsinki, WMO (1964 - 97)
- NIH Ethical Review Policies (1966)
- National Commission for the Protection of Human
Subjects (Belmont Report, 1979) - DHHS Regulations, 45 CFR 46 (1981-91)
6Nazi Experiments
- THE NUREMBERG PHYSICIANS TRIAL
- Participants were placed in freezing water and
time to death was measured - Participants drank sea water and adverse
effects were measured
7The Nuremberg Code (1947)
- Voluntary participation
- legal capacity to give consent
- free of force, fraud, deceit, duress
- free to withdraw at any time
- Fruitful results for society
- unprocurable by other means
- conducted by qualified persons
- Avoid unnecessary risk to subjects
- risk not greater than importance of RQ
8Post WWII Trials
- US Atomic Energy Commission tests of the adverse
effects of radiation exposure - Clinical trials in federal and state prisoners
9Tuskegee Syphilis Study (1932-72)
- Prospective cohort funded by USPHS
- 600 poor, illiterate, black men
- 399 with syphilis 201 without syphilis
- followed for 40 years for tertiary syphilis
- Never informed of condition
- Never treated
10Ethical Principles
- Beneficence
- Respect for autonomy
- Truth-telling
- Justice
- Promise-keeping
- Privacy
11World Medical AssociationDeclaration of Helsinki
(1964)
- Voluntary participation with consent in writing
- Design described in written protocol
- Review by an independent committee
- Responsible scientific publication
- Protection of vulnerable populations
12Institutional Review Boards
- NIH required ethical review of internal studies
in1953 and funded studies in 1966 - led to establishment of local IRBs
- Oversight by NIH Office of Human Research
Protections based on Federal regulations - risks to subjects minimized and reasonable
- informed consent in writing
- provisions for privacy
- safeguards for vulnerable populations
- selection of subjects equitable
13Federal and Local Regulations
- UCSF - Committee on Human Research
- you can volunteer to serve!
- NIH - Office for Human Research Protection
- http//ohrp.osophs.dhhs.gov/polasur.html
- Code of Federal Regulations Title 45, Part 46
- http//ohrp.osophs.dhhs.gov/
- humansubjects/guidance/45cfr46.htm.
14Whats Special about RCTs?
- Randomization - equipoise
- Intervention - relatively safe
- Placebo - acceptable clinical option
- Measurements - safe and tolerable
- Interim monitoring - careful and timely
15Equipoise
- Question important and not answered
- Evidence of benefit, not conclusive
- trial of new drug treatment for advanced breast
cancer - trial of treatment for common cold
16Intervention and Control
- Maximize benefit, minimize harm
- intervention (minimal effective dose)
- control (placebo acceptable?)
- Qualified staff and protections for known
potential harms - manage known adverse effects
- pay costs of known adverse effects
- Identify associated harm
17Measurements Safe and Tolerable
- Trial of estrogen for fracture prevention
- substitute TVUS for endometrial biopsy
- Trial of accuracy of spiral CT for PE
- all get spiral CT and pulmonary angiogram
- Trial of effect of estrogen treatment on coronary
atherosclerosis (ERA) - randomized to estrogen or placebo
- coronary atherosclerosis on angiograms
18Fecal Occult Blood TestingKronborg, et al., 1996
- Randomized, controlled trial
- 60,000 persons in Denmark
- identified via central records
- FOBT biannually or usual care
- request for FOBT mailed by PMD
- Outcome colon cancer
- based on national registry
19Informed Consent
- Purpose of trial
- Why asked to participate
- Visits, procedures, time and costs
- Discomforts or risks
- Benefits to subject and society
- Alternatives
- Confidentiality
- Contact for questions, problems
20Active Compression-Decompression for CPR, Schwab
et al., 1994
- Randomized, controlled trial
- 860 persons with cardiac arrest
- ACD CPR or standard CPR
- Outcome discharged alive
- No informed consent
- Trial halted by FDA
21SPECIAL POPULATIONS
- Children
- Fetus
- Mentally disabled persons
- Institutionalized persons
- Prisoners
- Unconscious or severely ill persons
22Alternatives to Informed Consent
- Waiver of consent
- life threatening situation
- consent not possible
- Permission from parent or guardian
- Deferred informed consent
- enter study without consent
- later consent or participation terminated
- Prospective consent
23Cumulative Meta-analysis
Effect of beta-blockers on mortality after MI
24Antibiotics for AbortionSawaya, et al, 1996
- Cumulative meta-analysis 12 RCTs
- after 5 trials (1985), summary RR 0.5, plt.05
- 7 additional trials performed
- findings of 5 trials non-significant
- trials continued up to 1993
25Zalospirone for DepressionRickels, et al, 1996
- Randomized trial
- 287 people with major depression
- Placebo or 3 doses of drug
- Outcome - change in severity of depression
- High dose effective two lower doses not
26Prevention of AIDS in Africa
- Standard care for HIV pregnant women in US
- zidovudine orally before delivery
- IV during labor, then orally for newborns
- RR .33 for infection in newborn
- Pregnant HIV African women
- randomized to oral AZT or placebo
- most funded by US agencies
27Cardiac Arrhythmia SuppressionEcht, et al., 1991
- Randomized trial
- 1498 patients post-MI with PVCs
- Encainide, flecainide, or placebo
- Outcome death
- Trial stopped after 1 year due to increased
deaths in treated group p .004
28MORE TrialGrady, et al., 2003?
- Randomized, placebo-controlledtrial
- 7704 women with osteoporosis
- raloxifene or placebo
- Outcome morphologic spine fx
- Increased risk of VTE (RR2.5)
- first year RR6
- second year RR 5
- no increased risk thereafter
29Conflict of Interest
- Professional judgement unduly influenced by other
interests - reputation
- promotion
- financial interests
- ownership, stock, gifts, consulting fees, travel
and entertainment, research support
30Ethics in Randomized Trials
- Informed consent isnt enough
- Important ethical issues in all stages of the
design, conduct and presentation of findings of
RCTs - Easy to get sucked into thinking that your
research is more important than participant safety