Title: IRB Review: Beyond the Basics
1IRB Review Beyond the Basics
- Kevin L. Nellis, M.S., M.T. (A.S.C.P.)
- Program Analyst
- Program for Research Integrity Development and
Education (PRIDE) - March 23, 2011
2Goal
- Applying
- The Belmont Report
- Common Rule
- VHA Handbook 1200.05
- to VA IRB Review
-
3The Belmont Report
4The Belmont Report
- Boundaries Between Practice and Research
- Principles
- Respect for persons
- Beneficence
- Justice
5The Common Rule
6Common Rule IRB Approval Criteria38 CFR 16.111
- 38 CFR 16.111 criteria must be met before the IRB
can grant approval - Expedited review
- Convened initial review
- Continuing review
- Amendments
7Common Rule IRB Approval Criteria38 CFR 16.111
- Risks are minimized
- Risk/benefit balance is reasonable
- Subject selection is equitable
- Appropriate informed consent will be sought
- Informed consent will be appropriately documented
- Safety will be appropriately monitored
- Privacy and confidentiality will be protected
- Additional safeguards included for vulnerable
subjects - VHA Handbook 1200.05, Paragraph 17
8Additional Requirements of VHA Handbook 1200.05
9Additional Criteria for IRB ApprovalVHA Handbook
1200.05, Paragraph 17(i-k)
- Conflicts of interest must be managed or
eliminated - Investigator must have appropriate background and
experience - Ensure consistency of
- Protocol
- Informed consent form
- HIPAA authorization
- When applicable, comply with other VA regulations
10Applying Belmont Principles to IRB Review
11Home Telemonitoring Case Study
- Veterans over the age 60 with multiple chronic
illnesses and at risk for worsening medical
status are randomized - 100 provided with home telemonitoring device
- 100 placed in a usual care arm
- Make appointments when problems arise
- Use the 24 hr nurse hotline and My HealtheVet
that is available to all patients at the XYZ VAMC - Outcomes are assessed by hospitalizations and ER
visits over 1 yr
12Boundaries Between Practice and ResearchThe
Belmont Report
- Research and clinical practice can be blurred
when they occur together - Practice provides diagnosis, preventive
treatment or therapy - Research designates an activity designed to
develop or contribute to generalizable knowledge - VHA Handbook 1200.05 differentiates usual care
from research
13How Are Boundaries Between Practice and Research
Applied to IRB Review of Home Telemonitoring
Study?
- IRB ensures
- Protocol clearly differentiates the usual care
(appointments and 24 hr nurse hotline) from the
research (home telemonitoring arm) - Informed consent defines risks related to the
research - Risks associated with reliance on telemonitoring
(versus the usual care risks from appointments
and 24 hr hotline)
14Principle of Respect for PersonsThe Belmont
Report
- IRB review must ensure
- Persons are treated in an ethical manner
- Respect their decisions
- Protect them from harm
- Individuals are treated as autonomous agents
- Provide potential subjects with sufficient
information so they are free to make their own
decisions
15Principle of Respect for PersonsThe Belmont
Report
- IRB review must ensure the immature and the
incapacitated are respected and protected - Some may need to be excluded
- Others require little protection beyond making
sure they undertake activities freely and are
aware of possible risks - Extent of protection varies based on
- Person or population
- Circumstances
16How is the Principle for Respect for Persons
Applied to IRB Review?
- Ensure full disclosure of information
- Debrief subjects involving incomplete disclosure
- Manner and context is important
- Adapt process to subjects ability to comprehend
information - May be suitable to give oral or written tests of
comprehension
17How is the Principle for Respect for Persons
Applied to IRB Review?
- Ensure that informed consent process is
- Voluntary
- Without undue influence
- Ensure additional protections described for
vulnerable populations - Required additional findings
- Provisions for surrogate consent
18How is Respect Applied to IRB Review of Home
Telemonitoring Study?
- IRB should ensure full disclosure of information
in the informed consent process - IRB may require testing subjects to ensure they
understand how to operate home telemonitoring
equipment - IRB may require investigator to exclude certain
populations (e.g., patients with certain
diseases, persons who lack decision-making
capacity, etc) - IRB ensures privacy is maintained
19Principle of BeneficenceThe Belmont Report
- Make efforts to secure subjects well-being
- Do not harm - fundamental principle of medical
ethics - Benefits must outweigh the risks
- Risks must be justified
20Principle of BeneficenceHow is This Applied to
IRB Review?
- Ensure that science is valid
- Ensure protocol and informed consent process
distinguish and clarify risks as much as possible - Psychological
- Physical
- Legal
- Social
- Economic
-
21How is the Principle of Beneficence Applied to
IRB Review?
- IRB cannot permit brutal or inhumane treatment of
subjects - IRB ensures that benefits and risks are
balanced and shown to be in a favorable ratio - IRB ensures justification of
- Significant risks
- Appropriateness of involving vulnerable
populations - IRB can add protections to minimize the
significant risks
22How is the Principle of Beneficence Applied to
IRB Review?
- IRB ensures appropriate safety monitoring
- Privacy Officer and ISO ensure appropriate
protections for - Privacy
- Confidentiality
- Information security
23How is Beneficence Applied to IRB Review of Home
Telemonitoring Study?
- IRB must ensure that the risks are reasonable in
relationship to the potential benefits of the
research - IRB determines whether the subjects are
vulnerable and if additional protections are
needed - Privacy Officer and ISO evaluate protections for
privacy, confidentiality, and information
security
24A Closer Look at Beneficence
- Principle of Therapeutic Misconception
- Principle of Equipoise
25Principle of Therapeutic Misconception
- Subjects misunderstand the primary purpose of the
research as therapeutic - Fail to appreciate the difference between
research and treatment - Underestimate risk
- Overestimate benefit
- Undermines informed consent
- Investigators can be susceptible to believing
research offers a direct benefit
26How is Therapeutic Misconception Avoided?
- IRB should evaluate quality of protocol and
informed consent process to ensure they do not
promote potential therapeutic misconception - In Phase I trials (e.g., first time testing in
humans to assess safety and tolerability), IRB
should insist on clarity for - Proposed dosing strategy
- How investigators plan to assure that subjects
understand the nature of the purpose of the study
27How is Therapeutic Misconception is Avoided in
the Home Telemonitoring Study?
- IRB may ensure that telemonitoring is fully
described as a research intervention in the
protocol and informed consent - IRB may ensure home telemonitoring is not
described as a standard clinical intervention for
this entity
28Principle of Equipoise
- Genuine uncertainty as to whether the outcomes of
the research will be beneficial - If the answer to the research question is known,
the research is not in equipoise - Subjects may participate in a randomized
controlled research study only when uncertainty
surrounds which arm they should be in
29How is Equipoise applied to IRB Review of
Telemonitoring Study?
- There must be a genuine uncertainty as to whether
the outcomes of telemonitoring are different than
the outcomes of usual care - There are no data demonstrating home
telemonitoring is or is not equivalent to usual
care
30Principle of JusticeThe Belmont Report
- Distribute the burdens and benefits of research
equally - Ensure subjects are selected for reasons directly
related to the problem being studied - Do not select subjects because they are
- Readily availability
- In a compromised position
- Easy to manipulate
31Principle of JusticeThe Belmont Report
- Advances resulting from research should provide
advantages to everyone affected - Research should not unduly involve persons from
groups unlikely to benefit from the research
32How is the Principle of Justice Applied to IRB
Review?
- Select classes of subjects in an order of
preference (e.g., adults before children) - Be cognizant of biases
- Social
- Racial
- Sexual
- Cultural
33How is the Principle of Justice Applied to IRB
Review?
- Ensure that researchers exhibit fairness
- Should not offer research to only favored
individuals or populations - Should not select only "undesirable" persons for
risky research - Should not focus on vulnerable populations for
convenience - IRB must consider the individuals access to
research participation and the impact on groups
34How is This Applied to IRB Review of Home
Telemonitoring Study?
- IRB should determine if the right group of
subjects are selected for the study - Are the inclusion criteria appropriate?
- Are others appropriately excluded?
- Is it appropriate to exclude homeless Veterans?
- Does the recruitment strategy select Veterans at
risk for worsening medical status because they
are easy to approach in clinics?
35Applying 111 Criteria to IRB Review
36How are Minimization of Risks and Risks and
Benefits Analysis Applied to IRB Review?
- IRB needs to understand the research
- Science can be evaluated by Scientific Review
Committee - IRB needs to evaluate ALL the risks
(psychological, physical, legal, social,
economic) of research and ensure that risks are
minimized - Apply the Belmont principle of beneficence
- 38 CFR 16.111(a)(1)-(2)
-
37How does Equitable Selection of Subjects Apply to
IRB Review?
- IRB must take inclusion and exclusion criteria
into account, based on - Purpose of the research
- Research setting
- Vulnerabilities
- If non-Veterans are to be recruited the must be
justification - Apply the Belmont principle of justice
-
- 38 CFR 16.111(a)(3)
38How does the IRB Evaluate the Informed Consent
Process?
- Ensure that legally effective informed consent is
obtained from each prospective subject or the
subjects LAR - Ensure that Informed consent form 10-1086 meets
all the requirements of VHA Handbook 1200.05 - Ensure that information exchanged before the
study is appropriate (e.g., recruitment process
and advertising) - Ensure the process avoids overly optimistic
language - Provide genetic counseling, access to social
worker, referrals, or other support, as
appropriate - 38 CFR 16.111(a)(4-5)
- 38 CFR 16.111(a)(4)-(5)
39How Does the IRB Apply Safety Monitoring to IRB
Review?
- Ensures the research plan must make adequate
provisions for monitoring the data collected to
ensure the safety of subjects, when applicable - Research plan may include
- Establishing a Data Monitoring Committee (DMC)
- Plan for reporting DMC findings to the IRB and
the sponsor - IRB can witness the consent process
- 38 CFR 16.111(a)(6)
40How Does the IRB Ensure Privacy and
Confidentiality?
- The IRB must determine there are adequate
provisions to protect privacy of subjects and
maintain the confidentiality of data, taking into
consideration - HIPAA Privacy Rule
- Privacy Act of 1974
- VA Claims Confidentiality Statute
- Confidentiality of Drug Abuse, Alcoholism and
Alcohol Abuse, Infection with Human
Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV), and Sickle Cell
Anemia Medical Records - Confidentiality of Healthcare Quality Assurance
Review Records - VHA Handbook 1200.05, Paragraph 17(f)
41How Does the IRB Ensure Privacy and
Confidentiality?
- ISO ensures
- Implementation of applicable VHA and VA
information security policies pertaining to
research (VA Directive 6500 and its Handbooks) - 38 CFR 16.111(a)(7)
42How Does the IRB Ensure Vulnerable Subjects are
Protected?
- Ensure all required determinations are made
- Ensure additional safeguards outlined in the
protocol are appropriate - Ensure adequate plans are in place if subjects
are likely to - Loose decision-making capacity
- Become pregnant
- Become incarcerated
- 38 CFR 16.111(b)
43Applying Additional Criteria of
VHA Handbook 1200.05 to IRB Review
44Conflict of Interest (COI)VHA Handbook 1200.05,
Paragraph 17(i)
- IRB ensures COI does not undermine credibility of
the research - IRB ensures all COI is Managed, reduced, or
eliminated - Financial
- Role (investigator-patient
- relationships)
- Professional
- Institutional
- Personal roles
45Conflict of Interest (COI)Considerations
- IRB ensures disclosure of COI within the 10-1086
is done in an obvious and meaningful manner, when
appropriate - IRB considers whether the COI impacts
- Risks of the study
- Study design or Procedures
- Monitoring
- Reporting
- Data analysis
- Recruitment or enrollment
46Investigator QualificationsVHA Handbook 1200.05,
Paragraph 17(j)
- Ensure that investigators have the appropriate
background and experience to conduct the research - NOTE The IRB is not responsible for confirming
that the investigator or other research team
members have met current credentialing,
privileging, and training requirements
47IRB Must Ensure Consistent DocumentationVHA
Handbook 1200.05, Paragraph 17(k)
- IRB ensures the following are consistent with the
protocol and IRB application - Informed consent document
- Waiver (or alteration) of informed consent
- Waiver of documentation of informed consent
- HIPAA authorization
- Waiver of HIPAA authorization
48Key Points
- The IRB makes specific findings to grant IRB
approval in consideration with - The principles of the Belmont Report
- The Common Rule
- VHA Handbook 1200.05 and other VA requirements
49QUESTIONS