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Use of Human Subjects in Research

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Title: Use of Human Subjects in Research


1
Use of Human Subjects in Research
  • Ruth A. Mulnard, RN, DNSc, FAAN
  • Associate Professor of Nursing Science
  • Chair, Institutional Review Board

2
Definition of Research
  • Research means a systematic investigation,
    including research development, testing and
    evaluation, designed to develop or contribute to
    generalizable knowledge (45CFR 46.102).

3
Definition of Human 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, or(2) Identifiable private
    information.

4
Definition of Human Subject
  • Intervention includes both physical procedures by
    which data are gathered (for example,
    venipuncture) and manipulations of the subject or
    the subject's environment that are performed for
    research purposes.
  • Interaction includes communication or
    interpersonal contact between investigator and
    subject.

5
Definition of Human Subject
  • Private information includes information about
    behavior that occurs in a context in which an
    individual can reasonably expect that no
    observation or recording is taking place, and
    information which has been provided for specific
    purposes by an individual and which the
    individual can reasonably expect will not be made
    public (for example, a medical record). Private
    information must be individually identifiable
    (i.e., the identity of the subject is or may
    readily be ascertained by the investigator or
    associated with the information) in order for
    obtaining the information to constitute research
    involving human subjects.

6
How Are We Regulated?
  • International
  • ICH Guidelines
  • Federal
  • OHRP (Office for Human Research Protections) has
    jurisdiction over Department of Health and Human
    Services (DHHS) via 45CFR46
  • FDA (Food and Drug Administration) has
    jurisdiction over all research involving food,
    biologics, drugs and devices via 21 CFR
  • State of California
  • Department of Health Services (DHS)
  • Local guidance and policy
  • UC Office of the President (UCOP)
  • Institutional Review Board (IRB)

7
Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS)
  • 45CFR Part 46 Common Rule (enforced by OHRP)
  • The Common Rule Federal Policy for the
    Protection of Human Subjects
  • Subpart A Basic HHS Policy
  • Subpart B Pregnant women, Fetuses and Neonates
  • Subpart C Prisoners
  • Subpart D Minors

8
Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
  • 21CFR Parts 50 and 56 (enforced by FDA)
  • IDE (Part 312) - Investigational New Device
    Exemption
  • IND (Part 812) - Investigational New Drugs/
    Biologics

9
State of California - CA Health and Safety Code
Section 24170-24179.5
  • Protection of Human Subjects in Medical
    Experimentation Act
  • Requires "experimental subject's bill of rights"
  • Defines Legally Authorized Representative (use of
    surrogate)
  • Specifies that children 7 years of age or older
    must also consent to research, not just their LAR

10
Key Events that Influenced Policy Development
  • Nazi doctors trial 1946
  • The Tuskegee syphilis study 1932-1972
  • Radiation exposure studies 1944-1974
  • Thalidomide tragedy (Kefauver Amendment 1962)
  • The Milgram obedience experiments 1972
  • U. Pennsylvania gene therapy 1999

11
The Tuskegee Study
  • U.S. Public Health Service project
  • 600 low-income African-American males, 400 of
    whom had syphilis infections, monitored for 40
    years.
  • Free medical examinations were given but
    participants were not told about their disease.
  • When penicillin became available in the 1950s,
    the study continued and participants were denied
    treatment. In some cases, researchers intervened
    to prevent treatment by other physicians.
  • Many participants died of syphilis. The study was
    stopped in 1973 by the U.S. DHEW only after its
    existence was publicized.

12
The Development of Human Subjects Protection
Policy
  • The Hippocratic Oath
  • The Nuremburg Code of 1947
  • Declaration of Helsinki 1964
  • National Research Act of 1974
  • The Belmont Report of 1979

13
The Nuremburg Code
  • Informed consent without coercion
  • Human experiments should be based on animal
    experimentation
  • Anticipated results should justify the experiment
  • Only qualified scientists should conduct medical
    research
  • Physical and mental suffering should be avoided
  • No expectation of death or disabling injury

14
The Belmont Report Basic Ethical Principles
  • Respect for persons
  • Autonomy
  • Protection of those with diminished autonomy
  • Beneficence
  • Justice

15
Respect for PersonsAutonomy
  • Subject must be capable of acting on personal
    goals
  • Investigator must respect the considered opinions
    of the subjects
  • Participation MUST be freely given. Cannot deny
    medical care for decision not to participate in
    research.

16
Respect for PersonsProtections
  • Those not fully capable of self determination
    must be protected, including
  • The very young, the cognitively impaired, some
    physically incapacitated
  • Those who are subject to coercion
  • staff and students of investigator
  • prisoners

17
Respect for PersonsAvailable Protections
  • Exclusion from study
  • Surrogate consent
  • Assent of minors age 7 or older
  • Prohibition on excessive inducements for
    participation

18
Beneficence
  • First, do no harm.
  • Maximize possible benefits and minimize possible
    harms. Risk-benefit analysis
  • Unavoidable risks
  • Benefits may not accrue to research subject

19
Justice
  • Fair distribution of the risks and benefits of
    research
  • Risks cannot be limited to one subset of possible
    beneficiaries (e.g. prisoners, the poor, one
    ethnic group)
  • Benefits must be reasonably available to all who
    might benefit

20
Boundaries Between Practice and Research
  • Not all experiments are research
  • Not all research is experimental
  • Practice seeks the best available result for the
    individual patient
  • Research should be hypothesis testing, systematic
    and allow conclusions that are generalizable to a
    broader population.

21
Implementation Informed Consent
  • Informed consent is a process, not a piece of
    paper.
  • Consent for all full committee protocols must be
    written and for clinical studies must be
    witnessed.
  • Verbal consent (with a waiver of documentation)
    may be possible for other kinds of research
    using a study information sheet
  • Consent form must be understandable to the
    subject and not excessively technical.

22
Informed Consent (cont)
  • Consent must identify risks, benefits, and
    possible outcomes.
  • Consent must be obtained by a member of the
    investigative team.
  • The subject must have an opportunity to ask
    questions and raise concerns.
  • Financial interests must be disclosed.

23
Implementation The IRB (Institutional Review
Board)
  • Delegated to institution
  • Federal-Wide Assurance (FWA) in place with OHRP
  • Reports to VC for Research
  • UCI 2 medical and 1 social-behavioral
  • Medical committee composed of physicians,
    scientists, other medical personnel, pharmacists,
    community representatives.
  • Community member (non-scientific) must be present
    for IRB to proceed.

24
IRB Responsibilities
  • Safeguard rights, safety and well-being of all
    trial subjects (with special attention to
    vulnerable subjects)
  • Obtain the following documents
  • Trial protocol and all amendments
  • Informed consent and any updates
  • Subject recruitment procedures, anything written
    to subjects
  • Investigators Brochure and applicable safety
    data
  • Investigators qualifications

25
IRB Responsibilities
  • Review of the proposed research
  • Approval / favorable opinion
  • Minor changes required to make it approvable
  • Disapproval / negative opinion
  • Termination / suspension of prior approval
  • Consider the qualifications of the investigator
    to conduct the research

26
IRB Responsibilities
  • May request additional information not supplied
    by investigator and/or sponsor
  • Must conduct continuing review of protocol at
    least once a year (time interval should be
    appropriate to risk)
  • Review the amount and method of payment
  • No coercion, pro-rated for partial completion

27
IRB Responsibilities
  • Require that information given to subjects as
    part of informed consent is in accordance with
    the regulations
  • Require documentation of informed consent or may
    waive documentation in accordance with the
    regulations
  • Notify investigators and the institution in
    writing of its decision to approve or disapprove
    proposed research or of modifications required to
    secure IRB approval of the research activity

28
IRB Responsibilities
  • May observe or have a third party observe the
    consent process and the research and
  • May suspend or terminate approval of research
    that is not being conducted in accordance with
    the IRB's requirements or that has been
    associated with unexpected serious harm to
    subjects.

29
Authority of the IRB
  • Approve or disapprove research
  • Suspend or terminate approval that is not being
    done in accordance with IRB requirements, or that
    has resulted in unexpected harm to subjects

30
Investigator Responsibilities
  • Obtain all required approvals prior to commencing
    the research (CRFA, DSMB, IRB, CTPRMC, GCRC)
  • Obtain informed consent of all human subjects or
    their legally authorized representatives (unless
    waived) and use only the currently approved,
    stamped consent form
  • Make no changes without prior review and approval
    by the IRB
  • Obtain re-review at least every 365 days

31
Full Committee Review
  • Full Committee Research
  • Most common level of review
  • Requires full committee vote (majority decides)
  • 2 reviewers plus staff
  • Scientific review - IRB reviews the science as it
    relates to risk/benefit ratio

32
Other Levels of Review
  • Expedited
  • No greater than minimal risk (e.g. blood samples
    from healthy donors, hair or saliva specimens)
  • Reviewed by one committee member or Chair unless
    problems identified
  • No greater than minimal risk
  • Means that the probability and magnitude of harm
    or discomfort anticipated in the research are not
    greater in and of themselves than those
    ordinarily encountered in daily life or during
    the performance of routine physical or
    psychological examinations or tests

33
Other Levels of Review
  • Exempt registration
  • Exempt from federal regulations
  • Virtually no risk (e.g. retrospective data
    analysis, discarded pathology materials
    de-identified)
  • Investigator cannot decide if their research is
    exempt IRB must decide
  • 3 year registration required at UCI

34
Case study 1
  • Investigator X wants to do a study where cadavers
    will be run through an x-ray machine to scan for
    healed fractures. No information about the
    cadavers or their living relatives is required.
  • Is this research?
  • Is this human subjects research?

35
Case study 2
  • An Instructor wants to have all students in a
    class interview each other to practice
    interviewing skills. The results will not be
    written up or distributed outside the classroom
    in any way.
  • Is this research?
  • Is this human subjects research?

36
Case study 3
  • A physician wants to compare Tylenol with Advil
    for controlling headache. He plans to prescribe
    Tylenol on odd days and Advil on even days. Then
    compare the results. Both drugs already are
    approved by the FDA to treat headache and are
    available over the counter.
  • Is this research?
  • Is this human subjects research?

37
Case study 4
  • A physician wants to review the medical charts of
    his patients to test the theory that women heal
    more quickly than men from a certain type of
    surgery. The only information to be recorded
    from the charts is gender and number of days in
    the hospital.
  • Is this research?
  • Is this human subjects research?

38
Advancement of IRB Processes
  • All IRB processes are now electronic
  • Reporting of adverse events, unanticipated
    problems, protocol violations, protocol
    deviations
  • Modification requests (E-Mod)
  • Continuing protocol applications (E-CPA)
  • Initial IRB Application
  • Non Human Subjects Determination form

39
Take Home LessonsHuman Subject Protection Rules
  • The rules are there to protect the subjects from
    excessive risk or exploitation.
  • The welfare and reputation of the institution and
    the investigators are also at stake.
  • The investigator is responsible for knowing the
    relevant regulations.
  • When in doubt, ask the IRB staff.

40
UCI IRB Accomplishment
  • UCI achieved re-accreditation from AAHRPP in June
    of 2008.
  • This is a three-year accreditation
  • http//www.rgs.uci.edu/ora/rp/hrpp/index.htm
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