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Roles & Responsibilities

Roles & Responsibilities. Melody Lin, Ph.D. December, 2012. Objectives. Research Suspensions Roles & Responsibilities Writing the informative consent form. Government Shutdowns. Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary UCLA VA Health Sys. Greater Los Angeles

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Roles & Responsibilities

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  1. Roles & Responsibilities Melody Lin, Ph.D. December, 2012

  2. Objectives • Research Suspensions • Roles & Responsibilities • Writing the informative consent form

  3. Government Shutdowns • Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary • UCLA • VA Health Sys. Greater Los Angeles • Rush Presbyterian St Luke’s Med Ctr. • University of Illinois Chicago • Duke University Med Ctr. • Univ. Texas Medical Branch Galveston • University of Oklahoma Tulsa • Johns Hopkins University

  4. Research Involving Human Subjects • Human Research Suspended at Major Institutions • Deficient Informed Consent • Inadequate Initial and Continuing IRB Review • Multiple Areas of Concern • Death in Gene Transfer Research • Conflicts of Interest • Unreported Deaths and Injuries • Media Attention – Congressional Hearings – Distrust

  5. Research Involving Human Subjects “The Integrity of Research and Public Confidence in Research” HHS Secretary, Donna Shalala, May 2000

  6. Good Clinical Practice • GCP is a System of Shared Responsibilities • Clinical Investigators • Institutions/Institutional Review Boards • Industry (Sponsors/Monitors) • Government Regulators

  7. Ensuring Shared Responsibility • Attention to ambiguities in the lines of responsibility • Investigator/subinvestigator • Sponsors/contractors • Institutions/Institutional Review Boards • Suspension cases have brought attention to inadequacies in the “culture” of institutions

  8. Human Subject Protections Institutions IRB Investigator Subjects Research Team Sponsor Advocates Family Government Public

  9. Basic Protections Afforded by Regulations Institutional Assurance IRB Review InformedConsent

  10. Institutional Assurance “Each institution engaged in research which is covered by this policy and which is conducted or supported by a Federal Department or Agency shall provide written assurance ... that it will comply with the requirements set forth in this policy.” §46.103(a) See OHRP guidance on engagement in research: http://www.hhs.gov/ohrp/humansubjects/assurance/engage.htm

  11. Institutional Assurance, cont’d • Approved by OHRP • Terms of Assurance • Federalwide Assurance (FWA) • Method of compliance oversight for OHRP • Generally recognized by other federal departments & agencies • Registering IRB and filing Federalwide Assurance (FWA): http://www.hhs.gov/ohrp/assuranceshttp://www.hhs.gov/ohrp/assurances/assurances_index.html

  12. Who is covered by an Institution’s Assurance? • Employees and agents, including students, involved in the conduct of research covered by the FWA.

  13. Institutional Responsibilities • Institutions have full responsibility for all research involving human subjects covered by their Assurance • All requirements of 45 CFR 46 must be met for all HHS-conducted or supported research

  14. Roles and Responsibilities:Authorized Institutional Official • Legal Signatory for Institution (e.g. Assurance) • Overall Organizational Responsibility • AdequatePlacement of IRB within Institutional Structure • Adequate resources for IRB (staff, computers, office space, etc.) • Enforce Institutional Culture of Respect and Compliance eg: Oversight and Monitoring of Research • OHRP primary contact

  15. Investigator Responsibility #1 Design and implement ethical research, consistent with ethical principles

  16. The Belmont Report Three Basic Ethical Principles: • Respect for Persons • Individual autonomy • Protection of individuals with reduced autonomy • Beneficence • Maximize benefits and minimize harms • Justice • Equitable distribution of research costs and benefits

  17. Comply with applicable regulations that protect human subjects Investigator Responsibility #2

  18. U.S.Federal Regulations and Policy • 45 CFR 46 - Basic DHHS Policy for Protection of Human Research Subjects adopted May, 1974, Revised January 13, 1981, Revised June 18, 1991 • Additional protections for vulnerable populations in Subparts B-D, 1983 • Federal Policy for the Protection of Human Subjects - “The Common Rule” June 18, 1991 • Departments of Agriculture, Energy, Commerce, HUD, Justice, Defense, Education, Veterans Affairs, Transportation, and HHS. NSF, NASA, EPA, AID, Social Security Administration, CIA, and the Consumer Product Safety Commission.

  19. Food and Drug Administration Regulations: • IRB - 21 CFR 56 • Informed Consent - 21 CFR 50

  20. HHS vs. FDA Regulations • Basic requirements for IRBs and for Informed Consent are congruent • Differences center on differences in applicability • HHS regulations based on federal funding of research • FDA regulations based on use of FDA regulated product: drugs, devices, or biologics

  21. Investigator Responsibility #3 • Ensure that all research human subjects is • Submitted to and approved by the appropriate IRB

  22. IRB Review • To assure that the rights and welfare of human subjects are adequately protected • Why do we need IRB review? • No one can be objective about their own work • People underestimate the risks involved in things they are very familiar with • People overestimate the benefit of things that are important to them

  23. Investigator Responsibility #4 • Comply with all applicable IRB • Policies • Procedures • Decisions • Conditions • Requirements

  24. BENEFICENCE JUSTICE RESPECT FOR PERSONS Privacy & ConfidentialityProtection of subjects (especially vulnerable populations) Informed consent Surrogate consent Assent IRB Decision Matrix Subject selection Inclusion/exclusion Recruitment Risk/Benefit Analysis Experimental Design Qualifications of PI J. Cooper, Albany Medical Center

  25. Investigator Responsibility #5 • Implement research as approved • Obtain prior IRB approval for changes

  26. Investigator Responsibility #6 • Obtain informed consent and assent • in accord with rules • As approved by the IRB

  27. Informed Consent Beyond the Consent Form

  28. The Consent Process Informed consent is not a single event or just a form to be signed -- it is an educational process that takes place between the investigator and the subject. The basic elements of the consent process include: • full disclosure of the nature of the research and the subject's participation, • adequate comprehension on the part of the potential subjects, and • the subject's voluntary choice to participate.

  29. Investigator Responsibility #7 • Document informed consent and assent • In accord with rules • As approved by the IRB

  30. Documentation of Consent • Factors that improve readability include the following: • Technical terms should be replaced with simple language; • Use active tense rather than passive tense verbs ("We did" rather than "It was done"); • Write shorter sentences and • Make clear the links of • logical sequences • cause-and-effect • We will do this because what happened

  31. Documentation of Consent • Format can help comprehend and remember complex material. Good format uses: • headings • indents • bolded type • lists • extra spacing between sub-topics • repetition • reasonable-size type • plenty of margins and empty space in general

  32. Investigator Responsibility #8 • Report progress • Of approved research to the IRB • As often and in the manner prescribed by the IRB

  33. Continuing Review An IRB shall conduct continuing review at intervals appropriate to the degree of risk, but not less than once per year… 21 CFR 56.109(e) 45 CFR 46.109(e)

  34. Investigator Responsibility #9 • Report to the IRB • Any injuries • Adverse Events • Unanticipated problems Involving risks to subjects or others

  35. Investigator Responsibility #10 Retain • Signed consent documents • IRB research records At least 3 years after completion of the research activities

  36. Research Team • “The PI should have available an adequate number of qualified staff…” ICH-GCP [4.2.3] • Pharmacist • Subinvestigator • Site coordinator/study nurse • Referring physician(s) • Back-up team • Other specialists • Laboratory technician

  37. RESEARCH TEAM CONT’D • Issues to consider: • Availability • Qualifications and training • Understanding of ICH-CGP and local regulations • The PI can delegate activities, but remains the responsible leader of the team. This delegation must be documented.

  38. Contingency • Make contingency plans for: • Sabbaticals • Staff leaving the institution • Medical leave • Vacations • Equipment breakdown

  39. Training Your Team ICH-GCP & applicable regulations Their responsibilities Trial activities IP handling Safety reporting Confidentiality obligations Protocol requirements IRB submission Training must be documented!

  40. “Informative” Informed Consent What PI need to: • Know about IC • Do to create an “informative” Informed Consent Form

  41. Need to Know! IC is • a process – not just a form • is necessary to conduct ethical research • ensuring respect for persons through thoughtful consent for voluntary participation

  42. Need to Know! (cont’d) • IC is government regulated • 45 CFR 46 116, 117 • 21 CFR 50 and 56 • International norm • ICH-GCP

  43. Need to Know! (cont’d) • The IRB is responsible for ensuring regulations are being followed • Review the Informed Consent form, is it … ? • Clear, easy-to-read, accurately reflects the project • Review the process of obtaining Informed Consent • Who, what, where, when and how …

  44. Need to Do! • Meet the regulatory requirements • Eight mandatory elements of informed consent • Six additional elements when appropriate • Apply the local requirements • Follow the instructions! • SOP (IRB policies & procedures)

  45. Confidentiality Whom to contact Compensation/ treatment for research related injury Right to refuse or withdraw Required Elements of Consent (8) • Research • Purpose • Duration • Procedures • Risks/discomforts • Benefits • Alternatives

  46. Additional Elements (6) Unforeseen risks to subject (fetus) Anticipated reasons for termination from the study by PI Costs Consequences of withdrawal by participant New findings Number of subjects

  47. Writing the Consent Form Write in 2nd person Not valid unless the subject understands the information that has been provided The PI must consider subject population, type of information, and circumstances under which the consent will be obtained

  48. Writing the Consent Form (cont’d) Avoid technical terms Simple sentences Translation is required when English is not participants’ primary language

  49. Amendments ALL changes to the consent form must be submitted to the IRB for review and approval, no matter how small! Update version date when submitting for amendments

  50. Don’ts Use complicated terms Write above an 8th grade level Put or leave unnecessary information in the form Forget “Respect” for subjects Informed Consent Forms Do’s • Write simply • Use small words • Include details • Describe timeframes • Use standardized language • Define risks • Define acronyms

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