| Literature DB >> 25733677 |
Monique L Anderson1, Robert M Califf2, Jeremy Sugarman3.
Abstract
Cluster randomized trials randomly assign groups of individuals to examine research questions or test interventions and measure their effects on individuals. Recent emphasis on quality improvement, comparative effectiveness, and learning health systems has prompted expanded use of pragmatic cluster randomized trials in routine health-care settings, which in turn poses practical and ethical challenges that current oversight frameworks may not adequately address. The 2012 Ottawa Statement provides a basis for considering many issues related to pragmatic cluster randomized trials but challenges remain, including some arising from the current US research and health-care regulations. In order to examine the ethical, regulatory, and practical questions facing pragmatic cluster randomized trials in health-care settings, the National Institutes of Health Health Care Systems Research Collaboratory convened a workshop in Bethesda, Maryland, in July 2013. Attendees included experts in clinical trials, patient advocacy, research ethics, and research regulations from academia, industry, the National Institutes of Health Collaboratory, and other federal agencies. Workshop participants identified substantial barriers to implementing these types of cluster randomized trials, including issues related to research design, gatekeepers and governance in health systems, consent, institutional review boards, data monitoring, privacy, and special populations. We describe these barriers and suggest means for understanding and overcoming them to facilitate pragmatic cluster randomized trials in health-care settings.Entities:
Keywords: Ethics; clinical trials; cluster randomized trials; pragmatic clinical trials; regulations
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25733677 PMCID: PMC4498459 DOI: 10.1177/1740774515571140
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Trials ISSN: 1740-7745 Impact factor: 2.486
Summary of recommendations from the Ottawa Statement*
| Ethical issue | Number | Recommendation |
|---|---|---|
| Justifying CRT design | ||
| 1 | Researchers should provide a clear rationale for the use of the cluster randomized design and adopt statistical methods appropriate for this design. | |
| REC review | ||
| 2 | Researchers must submit a CRT involving human research participants for approval by a REC before commencing. | |
| Identifying research participants | ||
| 3 | Researchers should clearly identify the research participants in CRTs. A research participant can be identified as an individual whose interests may be affected as a result of study interventions or data collection procedures, that is, an individual (1) who is the intended recipient of an experimental (or control) intervention; or (2) who is the direct target of an experimental (or control) manipulation of his/her environment; or (3) with whom an investigator interacts for the purpose of collecting data about that individual; or (4) about whom an investigator obtains identifiable private information for the purpose of collecting data about that individual. Unless one or more of these criteria is met, an individual is not a research participant. | |
| Obtaining informed consent | ||
| 4 | Researchers must obtain informed consent from human research participants in a CRT, unless a waiver of consent is granted by a REC under specific circumstances. | |
| 5 | When participants' informed consent is required, but recruitment of participants is not possible before randomization of clusters, researchers must seek participants' consent for trial enrollment as soon as possible after cluster randomization—that is, as soon as the potential participant has been identified, but before the participant has undergone any study interventions or data collection procedures. | |
| 6 | A REC may approve a waiver or alteration of consent requirements when (1) the research is not feasible without a waiver or alteration of consent, and (2) the study interventions and data collection procedures pose no more than minimal risk. | |
| 7 | Researchers must obtain informed consent from professionals or other service providers who are research participants unless conditions for a waiver or alteration of consent are met. | |
| Gatekeepers | ||
| 8 | Gatekeepers should not provide proxy consent on behalf of individuals in their cluster. | |
| 9 | When a CRT may substantially affect cluster or organizational interests, and a gatekeeper possesses the legitimate authority to make decisions on the cluster or organization's behalf, the researcher should obtain the gatekeeper's permission to enroll the cluster or organization in the trial. Such permission does not replace the need for the informed consent of research participants, when it is required. | |
| 10 | When CRT interventions may substantially affect cluster interests, researchers should seek to protect cluster interests through cluster consultation to inform study design, conduct, and reporting. Where relevant, gatekeepers can often facilitate such a consultation. | |
| Assessing benefits & harms | ||
| 11 | The researcher must ensure that the study intervention is adequately justified. The benefits and harms of the study intervention must be consistent with competent practice in the field of study relevant to the CRT. | |
| 12 | Researchers must adequately justify the choice of the control condition. When the control arm is usual practice or no treatment, individuals in the control arm must not be deprived of effective care or programs to which they would have access, were there no trial. | |
| 13 | Researchers must ensure that data collection procedures are adequately justified. The risks associated with data collection procedures must (1) be minimized consistent with sound design and (2) stand in reasonable relation to the knowledge to be gained. | |
| Protecting vulnerable participants | ||
| 14 | Clusters may contain vulnerable participants. In these circumstances, researchers and RECs must consider whether additional protections are needed. | |
| 15 | When individual informed consent is required and there are individuals who may be less able to choose participation freely because of their position in a cluster or organizational hierarchy, RECs should pay special attention to recruitment, privacy, and consent procedures for those participants. |
Reproduced from Table 1 (“Summary of Recommendations”) in Weijer C, Grimshaw JM, Eccles MP, McRae AD, White A, et al. PLoS Med 2012; 9: e1001346.
Funded 2012 NIH Health Care Systems Research Collaboratory demonstration projects incorporating cluster designs (UH2)
| Demonstration project | Lead institution/organization | Participating institutions | Randomization | Planned |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| A Pragmatic Trial of Lumbar Image Reporting with Epidemiology (LIRE) (NCT02015455) | University of Washington | KP Northern California, Group Health Cooperative, Mayo Clinic, Henry Ford Health System | Clinics | Alteration/Waiver |
| Collaborative Care for Chronic Pain in Primary Care (NCT01888146) | Kaiser Permanente Health Systems | KP Hawaii, KP Georgia, KP Northwest | Clinics | Alteration/Waiver |
| Active Bathing to Eliminate Infection Project (ABATE) (NCT02063867) | University of California, | Hospital Corporation of America, Harvard Pilgrim Health Care | Hospitals | Alteration/Waiver |
| Strategies and Opportunities to Stop Colon Cancer in Priority Populations (Stop CRC) (NCT01742065) | Kaiser Foundation Research Institute | Oregon Community Health Information Network (OCHIN) Federally Qualified Health Center Clinics | Federally Qualified Health Centers | Alteration/Waiver |
| Time to Reduce Mortality in End-Stage Renal Disease (TiME) Trial (NCT02019225) | University of Pennsylvania | Fresenius Medical Care North America; DaVita | Dialysis Centers | Alteration/Waiver |
Key issues in deploying pragmatic cluster randomized trials in contemporary health systems
| Issue type | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Domains | Ethical | Regulatory | Practical | Responsible parties | Next steps |
| Trial design | Guidance | ||||
| Subject identification | X | X | X | FDA, NIH, ORHP | |
| Indirect participant/bystander | X | X | Ethicists, trialists | Scholarship | |
| Gatekeepers and governance | |||||
| Gatekeepers | X | X | Healthcare system leaders, research and/or clinical oversight committees, ethicists | Research to include stakeholder perspectives, scholarship, develop and evaluate governance models | |
| Governance | X | X | |||
| Consent | X | X | Ethicists, FDA, NIH, OHRP | Guidance and policy development, research with stakeholders, scholarship, and evaluation | |
| Feasibility | X | X | X | ||
| Differential risk/benefit balance in arms | X | X | X | ||
| When can consent be waived? | X | X | |||
| Determination of minimal risk | X | X | |||
| FDA regulation | X | ||||
| Institutional review boards | HHS, OHRP, IRBs | Guidance and policy development, curriculum development and implementation | |||
| Education | X | X | |||
| Local, shared, and central review | X | X | X | ||
| Data monitoring | Ethicists, statisticians, DMC experts | Scholarship, guidance development | |||
| Use in CRTs | X | X | |||
| Stopping rules | X | X | |||
| Data sources for interim analysis | X | X | |||
| Privacy | X | Office of Civil Rights, ethicists, CRT experts | Policy development | ||
| Application to CRTs | X | ||||
| Alteration or waiver Use | X | ||||
| Gatekeepers | X | X | |||
| Special populations | Ethicists, FDA, NIH, OHR, CRT Researchers | Guidance and policy development; think tanks, public hearings | |||
| Vulnerable populations | X | X | X | ||
CRT: cluster-randomized trial; HHS: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services; DMC: data monitoring committee; FDA: U.S. Food and Drug Administration; IRB: institutional review board; NIH: National Institutes of Health; OHRP: Office for Human Research Protections
Participants in the Health Care Systems Research Collaboratory’s Workshop on Cluster Randomized Trials: Ethical, Regulatory, and Practical Issues
| Name | Title and Affiliation |
|---|---|
| Monique L. Anderson, MD | Medical Instructor, Division of Cardiology, Department of Medicine, Duke University School of Medicine |
| Patrick Archdeacon, MD | Medical Officer, Office of Medical Policy, Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, Food and Drug Administration |
| Mark Barnes, JD, LLM | Co-Director, Multi-Regional Clinical Trials Center, Harvard University |
| Laura M. Beskow, MPH, PhD | Associate Professor, Duke Clinical Research Institute and Faculty Associate, Trent Center for Bioethics, Humanities & History of Medicine |
| Barbara E. Bierer, MD | Senior Vice President for Research, Brigham Research Institute, and Director, Center for Faculty Development and Diversity, Brigham and Women's Hospital; Harvard Medical School |
| Robert Califf, MD | Director, Duke Translational Medicine Institute and Vice Chancellor for Clinical & Translational Research, Duke University School of Medicine |
| Rowena Dolor, MD, MHS | Director, Duke Primary Care Research Consortium, Duke Translational Medicine Institute |
| Allan Donner, PhD | Professor, Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Western University |
| Susan Ellenberg, PhD | Senior Scholar, Center for Clinical Epidemiology & Biostatistics – Department of Biostatistics and Epidemiology, and Professor of Biostatistics, University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine |
| M. Khair ElZarrad, PhD, MPH | Science Policy Analyst, National Institutes of Health |
| Rachael Fleurence, PhD, MSc | Science Program Director, CER Methods and Infrastructure, Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute |
| David Forster, JD, MA | Chief Compliance Officer, WIRB-Copernicus Group; University of Washington |
| Sara Goldkind, MD, MA | Senior Bioethicist, Office of Compliance, Food and Drug Administration |
| Steve Goodman, MD, PhD, MHS | Chief of the Division of Epidemiology, Department of Health Research and Policy; Co-Director, Meta-Research Innovation Center at Stanford, Stanford University |
| R. Peter Iafrate, PharmD | Chairman, Institutional Review Board, University of Florida Health Science Center |
| Nancy Kass, ScD | Professor of Bioethics and Public Health, Department of Health Policy and Management, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health; Deputy Director for Public Health, Berman Institute of Bioethics |
| John M. Kessler, PharmD | Adjunct Associate Professor, UNC Eshelman School of Pharmacy; Chief Clinical Officer, SecondStory Health, LLC. |
| Michael Lauer, MD | Director, Division of Cardiovascular Sciences, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health |
| Joanne Less, PhD | Director, Office of Good Clinical Practice, Food and Drug Administration |
| Leanne Madre, JD, MHA | Director of Strategy, Clinical Trials Transformation Initiative, Duke Translational Medicine Institute |
| Diane Maloney, JD | Associate Director for Policy, Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research, Food and Drug Administration |
| Rachael Moloney, MHS | Research Manager, Center For Medical Technology Policy |
| Ross McKinney, MD | Director, Trent Center for Bioethics, Humanities & History of Medicine, Duke University; Professor of Pediatric Infectious Diseases, Duke University School of Medicine |
| Jerry Menikoff, MD, JD | Director, Office for Human Research Protections, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services |
| David M. Murray, PhD | Director, Office of Disease Prevention, Office of the Director, National Institutes of Health |
| Jane Perlmutter, PhD, MBA | Founder, Gemini Group |
| Richard Platt, MD, MS | Professor and Chair, Department of Population Medicine, Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute |
| Ivor Pritchard, PhD | Senior Advisor to the Director, Office for Human Research Protections, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services |
| Jim Sabin, MD | Director, Ethics Program, Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute; Clinical Professor, Population Medicine and Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School |
| Rachel Sherman, MD. MPH | Former Director, Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, Food and Drug Administration; Principal, Drug and Biological Drug Products, Greenleaf Health, LLC |
| Jeremy Sugarman, MD, MPH, MA | Deputy Director for Medicine, Johns Hopkins Berman Institute of Bioethics; Professor of Bioethics and Medicine, Johns Hopkins University |
| Robert Temple, MD | Deputy Director for Clinical Science, Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, Food and Drug Administration |
| Pamela Tenaerts, MD, MBA | Director, Clinical Trials Transformation Initiative, Duke Translational Medicine Institute |
| Wendy Weber, ND, PhD, MPH | Branch Chief, Clinical Research in Complementary and Integrative Health Branch, National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine, National Institutes of Health |
| Kevin Weinfurt, PhD | Professor in Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Duke University |
| David Wendler, PhD | Head, Unit on Vulnerable Populations, Department of Bioethics, Clinical Center, National Institutes of Health |
| Ashley Wivel, MD, MSc | Senior Director, Clinical Effectiveness and Safety, GlaxoSmithKline |
| David Zhang, PhD | Global Lead, External Collaborations and Strategic Partnership, |
| Roche |
provided feedback on the manuscript
conflict of interest, Ottawa co-author