Title: Ethical Principles in Clinical Research
1 Ethical Principles in Clinical Research
- Christine Grady
- Department of Clinical Bioethics
- National Institutes of Health
2Moral problem in clinical research
- The goal of clinical research is generation of
useful knowledge about human health and illness - Benefit to participants is not the purpose of
research (although it does occur) - People are the means to developing useful
knowledge and are thus at risk of exploitation
3Ethics of Clinical Research
- Ethical requirements in clinical research aim to
- minimize the possibility of exploitation
- ensure that the rights and welfare of subjects
are respected while they contribute to the
generation of knowledge.
4Codes and Guidelines
- Nuremberg Code (1949)
- Declaration Of Helsinki (1964- 2000)
- The Belmont Report (1979)
- CIOMS/WHO International Guidelines (1993, 2002)
- ICH/GCP-International Conference on
Harmonization- Good Clinical Practice (1996)
5THE BELMONT REPORTNational Commission for the
Protection of Human Subjects of Biomedical and
Behavioral Research
- Distinction between clinical research and
clinical practice
6THE BELMONT REPORT
- Ethical principles underlying the conduct of
research - Respect for persons
- Beneficence
- Justice
7U.S. Regulations and Guidelines
- The Common Rule (US 45CFR.46)
- NIH policy and guidelines
- FDA regulations (US 21CFR50 and 56)
- NIH assurance (FWA)
845CFR.46 Protection of Human Subjects
- Composition and function of a local institutional
review board (IRB) - Criteria for IRB approval of proposals
- Requirements regarding informed consent
945CFR 46
- Subpart B- Fetuses, pregnant women, and human in
vitro fertilization - Subpart C- Prisoners as subjects
- Subpart D- Children
10FDA REGULATIONS
- 21CFR.50 Protection of Human Subjects (informed
consent) - Subpart D on research with children
- 21CFR.56 IRB composition and function
11Existing guidance
- Most developed in response to specific problems
- Some issues incompletely addressed, include
divergent recommendations - Need for a systematic, coherent, universally
applicable framework
12Ethical framework 7 principles
- Valuable scientific question
- Valid scientific methodology
- Fair subject selection
- Favorable risk-benefit evaluation
- Independent review
- Informed consent
- Respect for enrolled subjects
- Emanuel E, Wendler D, Grady C. What makes
clinical research ethical? Journal of the
American Medical Association 2000
283(20)2701-11
13Essential Elements of Ethical Research
- Valuable Scientific Question
- Limited Resources and Avoidance of Exploitation
- A socially, clinically, or scientifically useful
research question that will generate useful new
knowledge about human health
14Essential Elements of Ethical Research
- Valid Scientific Methodology
- Limited Resources and Avoidance of Exploitation
- Study design, methodology, statistical power,
and feasible strategy that will yield valid,
reliable, generalizable, and interpretable data.
15Essential Elements of Ethical Research
- Fair Subject Selection
- Justice
- Selection of subjects for reasons of science,
related to the purpose of the study, not because
they are readily available, vulnerable, or
otherwise easily exploited, or are favored.
16Selection of subjects
- Consistent with scientific goals
- Select subjects to minimize risks and maximize
benefits - Do not exclude subjects without a good reason of
science, vulnerability, or susceptibility to risk
or burden. - Consider distribution of burdens and benefits of
research
17Research as burden or benefit?
Research as burden Subjects need protection
Research as benefit Subjects need access
18Vulnerability
- There is an order of preference in selecting
subjects, for instance, adults before children
(Belmont Report) - Exclude vulnerable subjects unless their
participation is needed for scientific reasons
(CIOMS)
19Essential Elements of Ethical Research
- Balance of Risks and Benefits
- Non-maleficence and Beneficence
- Minimize risks to subjects
- Maximize benefits to individual subjects
and to society - Benefits should be proportional to or outweigh
risks.
20Risks in research
- Defining risks
- Probability and magnitude
- Types of risk
- Uncertainty
- Minimizing risks
- Limiting risk
21Benefits in research
- Defining benefits
- Direct versus secondary benefits
- Maximizing benefits
- Balancing risks and benefits
22Benefits and Risks in Research
- Interests other than those of the subject may
on some occasions be sufficient by themselves to
justify the risks involved in the research, so
long as the subjects rights have been protected. - The Belmont Report
23Essential Elements of Ethical Research
- Independent Review
- Minimize conflict of interest
- Public Accountability
- Independent review of clinical research ensures
the public that investigator biases have not
distorted the approach, that ethical requirements
have been fulfilled, and that subjects will not
be exploited.
24Criteria for IRB Review (45CFR.46.111 and
21CFR56.111)
- Risks are minimized.
- Risks are justified by anticipated benefits, if
any, to the subjects or the importance of the
knowledge to be gained - Subjects will be selected and treated fairly
- Informed consent is adequate
25Essential Elements of Ethical Research
- Informed Consent
- Respect for Persons
- Voluntary agreement to participate, based on
understanding the objectives, risks, benefits,
and alternatives of the research.
26Informed Consent
- The voluntary consent of the human subject is
absolutely essential. Nuremberg Code - For all biomedical research involving human
subjects, the investigator must obtain the
informed consent of the prospective subjector
authorized representative. CIOMS guidelines
27Informed Consent
- To the degree subjects are capable, they should
be given the opportunity to choose what shall or
shall not happen to them. The Belmont Report - Extra protections for those with limited capacity
to consent
28Informed consent
- Disclosure of information
- Understanding
- Voluntary decision making
- Authorization
29Essential Elements of Ethical Research
- Respect for Enrolled Subjects
- Beneficence and Respect for Persons
- Right to withdraw.
- Confidentiality of subject data.
- Informing subjects of new information and of
study results. - Monitoring subject welfare.
30Respect for enrolled subjects
- During the course of the experiment the human
subject should be at liberty to bring the
experiment to an end Nuremberg Code - Every precaution should be taken to respect the
privacy of the subject ,the confidentiality of
the subjects information, and to minimize the
impact of the study on physical and mental
integrity and on the personality of the subject.
Helsinki 2000
317 principles
- Valuable scientific question
- Valid scientific methodology
- Fair subject selection
- Favorable risk-benefit evaluation
- Independent review
- Informed consent
- Respect for enrolled subjects
32Framework
- Systematic and sequential
- Necessary
- Procedural requirements may be waived
- Universal
- Adapted and implemented according to context
- Require balancing, specifying
33Balancing principles
- Example Randomized Controlled Trials
- Balancing the need for a rigorous design with the
obligation to maximize benefits and minimize
harms - Equipoise
- Randomization
- Choice of control
34Choice of control
- The benefits, risks, burdens and effectiveness
of a new method should be tested against those of
the best current prophylactic, diagnostic, and
therapeutic methods. (Helsinki 2000) - Balance the need to answer the valuable question
in a scientifically rigorous way, while
minimizing risks and maximizing benefits to
participants.
35Clinical Equipoise
- Genuine uncertainty within the scientific
community... about the comparative merits of
intervention A and B (Freedman, 1987)
36Links to more information
- http//www.wma.net
- http//www.cioms.ch
- http//ohrp.osophs.dhhs.gov
- http//ohsr.od.nih.gov/
- http//www/fda.gov
- http//cme.nci.nih.gov/