Title: INFORMED CONSENT
1INFORMED CONSENT
- Jocelyne Benatar
- Cardiovascular Research Unit
2Contents
- Historical perspective
- What is informed consent
- Informed consent in the acute setting
- Informed consent some solutions
- Vigorous debate and intelligent interjections
throughout talk from audience would be preferable
to
3Historical perspective
4- 1939 -1945
- Nazi Experiments WWII
- 1946
- Nuremberg Doctors Trial
- 1947
- Nuremberg Code
The Nuremberg Military Tribunal's decision in the
case of the United States v Karl Brandt et al.
includes what is now called the Nuremberg Code, a
ten point statement delimiting permissible
medical experimentation on human subjects.
According to this statement, humane
experimentation is justified only if its results
benefit society and it is carried out in accord
with basic principles that "satisfy moral,
ethical, and legal concepts."
5Historical Perspective
- 1932-1972 Tuskegee Syphilis Study
- 1972 Tuskegee Study Exposed
- 1944-1974 Human Radiation Experiments
6Historical Perspective
- 1948 The Universal Declaration of Human Rights
- 1963 Jewish Chronic Disease Hospital Study
- 1963 The Willowbrook Study
- In the mid-1960s Laud Humphreys, a sociologist
- 1964 Declaration of Helsinki (recently revised
2000)
71979 Belmont report
- respect for persons recognizing the autonomy and
dignity of individuals, and the need to protect
those with diminished autonomy (i.e., impaired
decision-making skills), such as children, the
aged, and the disabled - beneficence an obligation to protect persons
from harm by maximizing benefits and minimizing
risks - justice fair distribution of the benefits and
burdens of research
8- 1991 Federal Policy for the Protection of Human
Subjects - 2005 The European directive
9NZ Historical Perspective
- Late 80s- cervical cancer trial at NUM exposed
10What is informed consent?
11Definition
- Informed consent is a process in which a person
agrees to participate in a trial with complete
knowledge of all relevant facts, such as the
risks involved or any available alternatives. It
continues throughout the trial and is designed to
protect individuals participating in clinical
research trials. 1
1. The Belmont Report, Ethical Principles and
Guidelines for the Protection of Human Subjects
of Research, The National Commission for the
Protection of Human Subjects of Biomedical and
Behavioral Research, Department of Health,
Education and Welfare, April 18, 1979
12What is the Consent Form in Research?
- The information sheet and consent form are one
document. - Findings in FDA audits
- 75 relate to issues with informed consent
- Investigator blacklist on FDA website related to
findings
13What is the big deal?
- If the person has not consented in writing, they
are seen not to have consented for the trial. - Recent case in NZ with consent signed by family
member for a trial
14Why is the process so different in research?
- It is voluntary
- It is not necessary for patient care
- It may have unknown harmful effects
15Why is the process so different to normal
clinical practice?
- It is subject to more scrutiny.
- It is governed by strict rules and guidelines
16Why Do It Then?
- Emergency medicine needs to be evidenced based
- CAST study, recent CASINO study
17Governance of Research
- Consumer rights
- National legislation
- International Code of Harmonisation(ICH)
- Good Clinical Practice(GCP)
- Code of Federal Regulations (USA)
- European Directive on Research - coming out in May
18Which regulations do we follow in NZ?
- Always have to practice according to the code
with the highest standard
19Informed consent-some tips
- Before any trial related procedure is carried
out- Informed Consent MUST be obtained - Check inclusion/exclusion criteria BEFORE
consenting - Informed consent is a process not a form
20Requirements - Tell patients the following
- The overall experience- including reasonably
foreseeable, harm, discomfort, inconvenience and
risk - The benefits
- Any alternatives to participating in the project
- Confidentiality
21Requirements - Tell patients the following
- Compensation should injury occur
- Who to contact for more information or for
concerns - That the trial is voluntary and has the right to
withdraw - You can not waive or appear to waive any legal
rights of subjects
22What is the Witness used for
- Impartial witness used when participant cannot
read - Must have no relation ship to trial.
- Signs to affirm participant has been explained
study and consents to it.
23The participant is keen, now what?
- They must
- SIGN AND DATE the consent in their own hand.
- Fill in all answers themselves
- Get a copy of the information sheet and consent
form
24The standard ICF-who is it serving- regulatory
bodies/sponsors or participants?
- Long ICF- up to 16 pages long
- Language often complex and legalistic
- Message lost in all the words
- Designed to fulfil legalistic requirements rather
than focused on participants needs
25Emphasis on mitigating risk
- Long list of adverse events including animal
studies - Very little on positive aspect of trial
- Should we be able to talk about benefits of being
in research?
26And.
- Every time there is any change , you need to
repeat the whole consent process- takes time,
participants feel it is over the top, diminishes
the consent form
27Conclusion
- Regulatory bodies require all elements to be
incorporated into ICF- but want ICFs to be
easily understood - ICFs have become focused on mitigating risk
28Acute trial setting
29Issues with Acute Trials
- Drugs given in the acute setting may affect the
ability to comprehend the information given. - Patients in pain may feel that signing that
piece of paper will allow treatment to be
instituted more quickly. - Patients are in distress and are in a vulnerable
position
30Issues with Acute Trials
- When patients are admitted to hospital, they are
bombarded with information and questions from a
whole variety of people which can be confusing
and overwhelming. - Physicians may perceive that a long consent
process which affects their ability to quickly
institute treatment is not in the patients best
interest, thereby denying patients their right to
be involved in a research project..
31Issues with Acute Trials
- Delay door to needle times
- Expectation it may be all too much for patient
- Relative cannot sign on behalf of participant
- Participant is expected to sign and date form,
what about drips, monitors, pain , etc. !! - Studies1,2 shows few remember or comprehend the
study
- Williams BF, French JK, White HDfor the HERO-2
consent substudy investigators. Informed consent
during the clinical emergency of acute myocardial
infarction (HERO-2 consent substudy) a
prospective observational study. Lancet 2003 361
918-922. - Yuval R, Halon DA, Flugelman MY, Lewis BS.
Perceived patient comprehension in acute and
chronic cardiovascular clinical trials.
Cardiology 2003 99 68-71.
32Issues with Acute Trials
- In acute setting, doctor who consents often seen
to be saving the life of the patient - The Stanley Milgram's experiment
33Issues with Acute Trials
- All that paperwork and patient needs acute care!!
- Lots of procedures and protocol
- Just easier to stick to normal management-
someone else can do the research
34Issues with Acute Trials- conclusion
- The participants comprehension of the
information provided and their competence to
autonomously give consent may be less than
optimal, so that whilst the consent form is
signed, it is neither truly legal nor ethical.
35Possible Solutions
- Change law for proxy consents?
- Exclude all incapacitated patients?
- Have two step consent process?
36Two step consent process
- Short ICF with all relevant points highlighted
- Easy simple language
- Drawing of trial design
- Followed up with normal consent when patient is
more stable and one can sit down and spend time
with a participant
37Two attempts to incorporate this process into a
study have failed
- Main reason
- Sponsors/steering committee are worried
participants might refuse second time round - They are risk adverse
38What is really needed in ICF
- Simple English
- A diagram to show trial design
- Less information- at present hard to focus on the
really important bits.
39Some suggestions..
- More focus on what the trial is about and the
risk/benefit to participant, the fact that it is
voluntary and what alternatives are available. - Simple statement on cover , is it ACC or RMI
- Maybe a handout with contact details, RMI
guidelines ( in understandable language), health
advocate number - standard for each hospital
40Need to address real concerns raised by
participants
- Is this study to get a drug on market or to
improve health care? - Should the drug have major life changing
effects- is it ethical to stop it in participants
sorry the trial is over- go back on your old
medication?
41Need to address real concerns
- How much information is given when trial is
stopped prematurely- commercial/safety reasons - Ensure that participants get study results
- All trials get published/ presented in a peers
review setting
42Any other solutions???
43OR.
- Stick to the way weve practised medicine before
evidence became important