Literature DB >> 10609930

Implementing the Food and Drug Administration's final rule for waiver of informed consent in certain emergency research circumstances.

M H Biros1, S S Fish, R J Lewis.   

Abstract

In 1996, the Food and Drug Administration released its Final Rule for Waiver of Informed Consent in Certain Emergency Research Circumstances (the Final Rule). The Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) also released an update of its regulations related to waiver of informed consent in emergency research. These new regulations allow resuscitation research to proceed with a waiver of informed consent under very narrow and specific clinical research circumstances. Waiving informed consent for research participation has profound ethical and scientific implications. However, in unpredictable life-threatening clinical situations for which current therapy is unproven or unsatisfactory, patients usually are unable to consent on their own behalf to participate in clinical trials of potentially beneficial but experimental interventions. Because of the time-dependent nature of most resuscitation interventions, it is usually not feasible to identify and contact the legally authorized representative who can speak on behalf of the patient within the presumed therapeutic window of the intervention under investigation. For such clinical trials to proceed, a waiver of informed consent is usually necessary. Patients who are critically ill or injured and unable to provide meaningful prospective informed consent because of their current life-threatening condition are vulnerable and require additional protections beyond those for research subjects who can speak on their own behalf. The Final Rule and the DHHS-updated regulations incorporate a number of additional patient safeguards that must occur if a clinical trial is to proceed with waiver of informed consent. Specific means of adequately meeting these requirements are not described in the regulations. Although this was intentional on the part of the federal regulators so that individual protocols and research environments would direct the development of these patient safeguards, the lack of specific guidance has led to confusion on the appropriate implementation of the new regulations. This article reviews some of the key concepts of the Final Rule, with suggestions on their purpose and meaning. It also reviews the studies that have been approved to date to proceed with waiver of informed consent, and offers suggestions for the process of implementing the requirements of the Final Rule for research involving patients who are unable to give prospective informed consent.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10609930     DOI: 10.1111/j.1553-2712.1999.tb00144.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acad Emerg Med        ISSN: 1069-6563            Impact factor:   3.451


  9 in total

1.  Enrollment of racially/ethnically diverse participants in traumatic brain injury trials: effect of availability of exception from informed consent.

Authors:  Jose-Miguel Yamal; Claudia S Robertson; M Laura Rubin; Julia S Benoit; H Julia Hannay; Barbara C Tilley
Journal:  Clin Trials       Date:  2014-04       Impact factor: 2.486

2.  What determines whether patients are willing to participate in resuscitation studies requiring exception from informed consent?

Authors:  P-A Abboud; K Heard; A A Al-Marshad; S R Lowenstein
Journal:  J Med Ethics       Date:  2006-08       Impact factor: 2.903

3.  Community consultation and public disclosure: preliminary results from a new model.

Authors:  Cornelia A Ramsey; Bonnie Quearry; Elizabeth Ripley
Journal:  Acad Emerg Med       Date:  2011-07-05       Impact factor: 3.451

4.  Ethical and regulatory challenges in advancing prehospital research: focus on sepsis.

Authors:  Carmen C Polito; Jonathan E Sevransky; Neal W Dickert
Journal:  Am J Emerg Med       Date:  2015-12-12       Impact factor: 2.469

5.  Stroke patients' preferences and values about emergency research.

Authors:  C E Blixen; G J Agich
Journal:  J Med Ethics       Date:  2005-10       Impact factor: 2.903

6.  Research without consent: exception from and waiver of informed consent in resuscitation research.

Authors:  Michelle H Biros
Journal:  Sci Eng Ethics       Date:  2007-07-28       Impact factor: 3.525

7.  Perceived challenges to obtaining informed consent for a time-sensitive emergency department study of pediatric status epilepticus: results of two focus groups.

Authors:  James M Chamberlain; Kathleen Lillis; Cheryl Vance; Kathleen M Brown; Olubunmi Fawumi; Shari Nichols; Colleen O Davis; Tasmeen Singh; Jill M Baren
Journal:  Acad Emerg Med       Date:  2009-08       Impact factor: 3.451

8.  Informed consent: the rate-limiting step in acute stroke trials.

Authors:  David Z Rose; Scott E Kasner
Journal:  Front Neurol       Date:  2011-10-17       Impact factor: 4.003

Review 9.  Exceptions to the rule of informed consent for research with an intervention.

Authors:  Susanne Rebers; Neil K Aaronson; Flora E van Leeuwen; Marjanka K Schmidt
Journal:  BMC Med Ethics       Date:  2016-02-06       Impact factor: 2.652

  9 in total

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