Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
1 Informed consent Bernard Lo, M.D. August 11 and 12, 2010
2
Neonatal blood samples Screen for birth defects Required by law Parental consent not required Later used for research on Preterm birth Environmental levels of pesticides Gene-environment interactions (smoking, folic acid, cleft palate) 2
3
Questions for audience Do regulations permit research be carried out on leftover neonatal spots without consent? Yes /No / Unsure 3
4
Questions for audience Should regulations permit research be carried out on leftover neonatal spots without consent? Yes /No / Unsure 4
5
Neonatal blood samples Parents in Texas sued over storage of samples for for research without consent 2002 Texas law allows opt-out 5.3 million samples from before 2002 destroyed 5
6
Use of neonatal blood spots for research Permitted under federal regulations Ethically contested 6
7
7 Outline for today What does informed and voluntary consent require? How can consent be improved? What are exceptions to consent? Why are some exceptions in regulations ethically problematic?
8
Why is consent needed? Research compared to clinical care Risks and benefits uncertain Risk/benefit balance less favorable Purpose is not to benefit participants 8
9
Rationale for informed consent Respect for values and choices of subjects Deter research with unacceptable risks 9
10
Questions for audience After signing consent forms, do most participants understand key features of study? Do IRB modifications improve consent? 10
11
11 1. HIV prevention trial RCT of diaphragm + gel vs. diaphragm + placebo in women in Africa at risk for HIV infection Both arms receive free condoms
13
13 What must researchers disclose? Nature and purpose of research Research procedures, risks, benefits Unforeseeable risks Participation voluntary, may discontinue IRB template
14
14 Why is informed consent difficult?
15
15 Why is informed consent difficult? Participants commonly misunderstand Not understand how RCT differs from clinical care Believe that study interventions are Standard therapy Best treatment for condition No additional risks For their personal benefit
16
16 Why is informed consent difficult? Participants commonly misunderstand Basic features of trial design May be in control group Randomization Therapeutic options restricted by study design rather than individualized for them
17
17 Why is informed consent difficult? Vulnerable participants Low health literacy, low literacy Poverty, few options Cultural context No informed consent in clinical care No acknowledgement of medical uncertainty
18
18 How can informed consent be enhanced? Empirical studies Spend more time talking to participants Questions and feedback Shorter, simpler consent forms Multimedia -- mixed evidence
19
19 How can informed consent be enhanced? Practical suggestions Take point of view of participant Use simple language that 8th grader can understand Explain how RCT differs from clinical care Invite questions
21
21 How can informed consent be enhanced? Focus on comprehension by participant, not consent forms Administer questionnaire to ensure appreciation of key aspects of study
22
22 What is essential for participants to comprehend?
23
23 What is essential for participants to comprehend? Could still get HIV Don’t know whether intervention works May not get active intervention Keep using condoms every time
24
24 What is essential for participants to comprehend? May refuse to participate May withdraw from study
25
25 Why is voluntary consent difficult? Hard to say no to persons in power Defer to husband or father Relationship to investigator Student Employee Undue monetary influence
26
Research participants who may lack decision-making capacity Persons receiving CPR, ICU care Severe dementia Severe psychiatric illness Young children 26
27
27 Concerns about participants who lack decision-making capacity Not appreciate risks Not able to refuse Might be subjected to risks that competent persons would refuse
28
Options if lack decision-making capacity Exclude from trials But lack evidence safety and effectiveness of treatments Additional protections 28
29
29 Additional protections if lack decision-making capacity Formal assessment of decision-making capacity Permission from surrogate Assent of participant
30
30 Additional protections for vulnerable partcipants Closer monitoring for adverse effects Subject advocate who can withdraw participant from study IRB include persons familiar with the condition that impairs capacity Research advance directives
31
Questions for audience Without consent, may researcher Use EMR to study whether patients have worse outcomes if admitted over weekend? Use leftover cancer tissue to identify prognostic markers? 31
32
Ethical rationale for no consent Very low risk No physical risks Confidentiality the main risk Cannot be breached if not identifiable Benefits of research >> risks 32
33
Ethical rationale for no consent No one would or should object if asked Cancer tissue would be discarded Leftover tubes of blood Impracticable to get consent Could not carry out important study 33
34
34 Consent not required 1. Not human subjects research No IRB review 2. Exempt from human subjects regulations 3. Qualifies for waiver
35
What is human subjects research? Interact with person OR Use identifiable private information Not human subjects research if data and materials cannot be identified Examples of tissue from cancer surgery 35
36
1. Not human subjects research De-identified data and materials Coded data and materials, researcher cannot access keys to code None of 18 HIPAA identifiers Code may be retained by database or biobank 36
37
2. Exempt from federal regulations Most survey and interview research Unless subjects can be identified and responses could put respondents at risk Not if ask about illegal activities, sensitive or private topics 37
38
2. Exempt from federal regulations Existing data or materials Publicly available Existing data or specimens if researcher records information in manner than subjects cannot be identified Can look at medical records 38
39
39 Studies that require identifiers Link specimens with clinical records Prognostic markers in cancer HER2/neu overexpression = poor prognosis Trastuzumab effective only in patients who overexpress HER2/neu
40
40 3. Waiver of consent Minimal risk Not adversely affect rights and welfare Could not be practicably carried out IRB may allow identifiable data to be used without consent Use identifiers to link different databases
41
Research with cancer specimens Not human subjects research if Completely de-identified Coded and researcher has no access to key Can determine prevalence of marker 41
42
Neonatal spots Not human subjects research if Completely de-identified Coded and researcher has no access to key Waiver of consent Can link spots to medical records 42
43
Neonatal spots Permissible in regulations Approved by IRBs But still problematic New standard is to offer opt-out for research 43
44
Questions for audience Do regulations permit whole genome sequencing on de-identified materials? Yes /No / Unsure Should regulations permit whole genome sequencing on de-identified materials? Yes /No / Unsure 44
45
45 Re-identification in whole genomic sequencing Reference samples in forensic databases DOJ has 8.3 million profiles STRs at 13 locations Full genome sequence yields DOJ identifiers
46
Whole genome sequence an overt identifier? Need access to DOJ database Is access to DOJ identifiers more secure than access to SSN? May need to rethink concept of “de- identified” samples 46
47
Concerns about whole genome sequencing Subject may consider information very private and sensitive Privacy concerns access to information about self May not want others to access Even if identity not explicitly known 47
48
Concerns about whole genome sequencing Some donors may object When giving blanket consent for research, donors did not consider this If donors had been told, would they object? Respect donors who have strong objections 48
49
Questions for audience Genetics of criminal behavior Match DOJ database with neonatal blood spots without consent Do regulations permit this? Yes /No / Unsure Should regulations permit this? Yes /No / Unsure 49
50
Objections to certain research on existing samples Genetics of criminal and antisocial behavior Stigmatize vulnerable populations Undermine individual responsibility Human evolution Derivation of embryonic stem cells from IVF embryos 50
51
Options Sensitive research only with express consent IRB determination of “sensitive” More specific consent at donation Re-consent participants? Make research much more difficult 51
52
Take home message Consent is important but challenging Important exceptions to consent permitted in federal regulations But some exceptions ethically contested Ethical standards may be stricter than regulatory requirements Ultimate researcher is repsonsible 52
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.