| Literature DB >> 26715077 |
Nina H Gobat1, Micaela Gal2, Nick A Francis3, Kerenza Hood4, Angela Watkins5, Jill Turner6, Ronald Moore7, Steve A R Webb8, Christopher C Butler9, Alistair Nichol10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A rigorous research response is required to inform clinical and public health decision-making during an epi/pandemic. However, the ethical conduct of such research, which often involves critically ill patients, may be complicated by the diminished capacity to consent and an imperative to initiate trial therapies within short time frames. Alternative approaches to taking prospective informed consent may therefore be used. We aimed to rapidly review evidence on key stakeholder (patients, their proxy decision-makers, clinicians and regulators) views concerning the acceptability of various approaches for obtaining consent relevant to pandemic-related acute illness research.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26715077 PMCID: PMC4693405 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-015-1110-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Definitions of terms
| Emergency research | Research including intensive and critical care research that relates directly to a life-threatening or debilitating condition in which there is a time-imperative for intervention. |
|---|---|
| Capacity to consent | The person should have the capacity to make a choice about the proposed course of action, knows about the study risks, benefits and alternatives, understands that consent is ‘voluntary and continuing permission’, and understands that consent can be withdrawn at any time. |
| Prospective informed consent | The decision (written, dated and signed) to take part in a study, which is taken after the person is fully informed about the study nature, its significance, implications and risks. Informed consent can be given by any person capable of giving consent or, where the person is not capable, by a surrogate decision maker. Oral consent in the presence of a witness may be given in exceptional cases. |
| Third-party consent | Informed consent to research participation is provided by a surrogate or proxy decision maker, for example, a family member or legal representative where the potential participant is unable to provide consent themselves. Proxy consent can also describe the process by which people with the legal right to consent for themselves or as a surrogate can delegate that right to another person. |
| Deferred consent | When a patient is enrolled into a study, and consent is taken later, either from a surrogate decision maker or from the patient when he/she is able to provide informed consent. |
| Waiver of consent and Exception from informed consent | A consent procedure that alters elements of informed consent or waives the requirements to obtain informed consent. For example consent may be waived if the research presents no more than minimal risk of harm to subjects and could not be carried out without a waiver. |
| Exception from informed consent may also apply for enrolment of participants in emergency research. Here, requirements include consultation with representatives of and public disclosure to the communities in which the study will be conducted prior to study initiation. Deferred consent is still a requirement in most cases. |
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram of the selection and inclusion of publications
Characteristics of the included study – prospective informed consent
| Reference | Country | Clinical context | Study design | Study aim | Scenario: real or hypothetical | Study sample | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Respondents | Direct experience of clinical context or condition | Direct experience of consent model | ||||||
| Potential research participants | ||||||||
| Qualitative or mixed methods studies | ||||||||
| 1. Agard 2001 | Sweden | Acute myocardial infarction | Mixed methods | Investigate patient experience of consent process | Studies of early phase of treatment for myocardial infarction | 31 trial participants | Yes | Yes |
| 2. Blixen 2005a | USA | Stroke | Qualitative (interview) | Evaluate preferences or values | Hypothetical study – emergency stroke research | 12 stroke patients | Yes | No |
| 3. Gammelgaard 2004a | Denmark | Acute myocardial infarction | Qualitative (interviews) | Investigate patient experience of consent process | Clinical trial comparing intervention (primary angioplasty) with medical strategy (fibrinolysis) | 32 trial candidates (23 participants, 9 who did not consent) | Yes | Yes |
| 4. Mangset 2008 | Norway | Stroke | Qualitative (interviews) | Investigate patient experience of consent process | Clinical trial evaluating thrombolytic drug treatment for stroke | 11 trial participants | Yes | Yes |
| Survey studies | ||||||||
| 5. Chenaud 2009a | Switzerland | ICU | Survey (Self-administered) | To evaluate preferences | Hypothetical scenarios of ICU research | 67 patients; 52 relatives from recent ICU admission | Yes | No |
| 6. Gammelgaard 2014b | Denmark | Acute myocardial infarction | Survey (Self-administered) | Investigate experience of consent process | Clinical trial comparing intervention (primary angioplasty) with medical strategy (fibrinolysis) | 181 trial candidates (103 participants, 78 who did not consent) | Yes | Yes |
| 7. Gigon 2013 | Switzerland | ICU | Survey (self-administered) | Evaluate choice | Hypothetical scenarios of ICU research | 185 patients, 125 relatives following ICU discharge | Yes | No |
| 8. Paradis 2010 | USA | ED research | Survey (interview) | Investigate perspectives on consent process | 10 studies involving cardiac conditions | 150 study participants | Yes | Yes |
| 9. Schats 2003a | Netherlands | Stroke | Survey (interview) | Post-trial evaluation. | Two clinical trials that evaluated interventions for subarachnoid haemorrhage | 49 patients; 47 relatives (trial participants) | Yes | Yes |
| 10. Williams 2003 | Australia, New Zealand | Acute myocardial infarction | Survey (interview) | Evaluation of consent for trial | Clinical trial of two antithrombin therapies for acute myocardial infarction | 399 trial candidates | Yes | No |
| 11. Yuval 2000 | Israel | Acute myocardial infarction | Survey (Self-administered) | Post-trial evaluation | Large trial evaluating therapies for acute myocardial infarction | 129 trial participants | Yes | Yes |
| Clinical, research staff and regulators | ||||||||
| Qualitative or mixed methods studies | ||||||||
| 12. Chamberlain 2009b | USA | Paediatrics –status epilepticus | Qualitative (focus groups) | Evaluation during trial | Pharmacokinetic study evaluating lorazapam for status epilepticus | 18 research staff | Yes | Yes |
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Characteristics of included studies – third-party consent
| Reference | Country | Clinical context | Study design | Study aim | Scenario: real or hypothetical | Study sample | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Respondents | Direct experience of clinical context or condition | Direct experience of consent model | ||||||
| Potential research participants | ||||||||
| Qualitative or mixed methods studies | ||||||||
| 13. Ali 2006 | UK | Stroke | Mixed methods | Inform clinical trial design. | Proposed trial evaluates the effect of routine oxygen supplementation after acute stroke | 49 stroke patients, 24 carers | Yes | No |
| 14. Blixen 2005a | USA | Stroke | Qualitative (interview) | Evaluate preferences or values | Hypothetical study – emergency stroke research | 12 stroke patients | Yes | No |
| 15. Koops 2002 | UK | Stroke | Mixed methods | Inform study design. | Proposed study evaluates thrombolysis for acute ischaemic stroke | 54 stroke patients and carers | Yes | No |
| Survey studies | ||||||||
| 16. Barrett 2012 | Canada | ICU | Survey (interview) | Evaluate attitude or opinion | Hypothetical scenarios of ICU research | 136 surrogate decision makers of critically ill patients (adults and children) | Yes | No |
| 17. Biros 2009a | USA | Status seizure – | Survey (self-administered) | Part of a public consultation prior to trial initiation. | Proposed trial evaluates pre-hospital intervention for status seizures | 1901 community members | No | Some |
| 18. Chenaud 2009a | Switzerland | ICU | Survey (Self-administered) | Evaluate preferences | Hypothetical scenarios of ICU research | 67 patients; 52 relatives from recent ICU admission | Yes | No |
| 19. Clark 2013 | UK | Neurosurgery | Survey (Self-administered) | Part of a public consultation prior to trial initiation. | Proposed study evaluates surgical techniques | 171 patients and carers in neuro-surgical clinic | No | No |
| 20. Gigon 2013 | Switzerland | ICU | Survey (self-administered) | Evaluate choice | Hypothetical scenarios of ICU research | 185 patients, 125 relatives following ICU discharge | Yes | No |
| 21. Kamarainen 2012c | Finland | Cardiac arrest | Survey (Self-administered) | Post-trial evaluation. | Trial evaluated pre-hospital intervention for cardiac arrest | 11 patient; 17 consent providers; 13 physicians (trial participants) | Yes | Yes |
| 22. Perner 2010 | Denmark | ICU | Survey (self-administered) | Assess attitudes | Hypothetical trials and new medications | 42 next-of-kin of unconscious ICU patients | Yes | No |
| 23. Scales 2009a | Canada | Critical illness | Survey (interview) | Survey preferences | Hypothetical study scenarios of research during critical illness | 240 survivors of critical illness | Yes | No |
| 24. Schats 2003a | Netherlands | Stroke | Survey (interview) | Post-trial evaluation. | Two trials that evaluated interventions for subarachnoid haemorrhage | 49 patients; 47 relatives (trial participants) | Yes | Yes |
| 25. Stephenson 2007 | Australia | Emergency care | Survey (self-administered) | Attitudes survey | Hypothetical scenarios of critical care research | 185 patients | Possible | No |
| Clinical, research staff or regulators | ||||||||
| Survey studies | ||||||||
| 26. Burns 2013 | Canada | Pandemic research | Survey (self-administered) | Evaluate experiences, beliefs and practices | Hypothetical -pandemic research | 168 administrative and clinical staff involved in H1N1 pandemic research | Yes | Yes |
| 27. Cook 2008c | Canada, Australia, New Zealand | Critical illness | Survey (self-administered) | Evaluate experience, beliefs, and practices | Hypothetical – enrolment of critically ill children and adults | 284 clinicians caring for critically ill patients | Yes | Yes |
| 28. Duffett 2011a | Canada | Critical care research | Survey (self-administered) | Evaluate attitudes and beliefs | Hypothetical scenario of double-blind, placebo-controlled, RCT evaluating single dose of medication perceived by REB as minimal risk | 98 ICU researchers; 52 members of hospital research ethics boards. | Yes | Possible |
| 29. Kompanje 2005a | Netherlands | Traumatic brain injury | Survey (self-administered) | Evaluate opinions | Hypothetical -clinical emergency care | 79 neuro-trauma clinical staff across 19 European countries | Yes | Possible |
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Characteristics of included studies – deferred consent
| Reference | Country | Clinical context | Study design | Study aim | Scenario: real or hypothetical | Study sample | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Respondents | Direct experience of clinical context or condition | Direct experience of consent model | ||||||
| Potential research participants | ||||||||
| Qualitative or mixed methods studies | ||||||||
| 30. Woolfall 2014b | UK | Paediatric – status epilepticus | Qualitative (focus groups, interviews) | Inform study design | Proposed trial evaluating new treatment for status epilepticus | 17 parents | Mixed | No |
| Survey studies | ||||||||
| 31. Chenaud 2009a | Switzerland | ICU | Survey (Self-administered) | Evaluate preferences | Hypothetical scenarios of ICU research | 67 patients; 52 relatives from recent ICU admission | Yes | No |
| 32. Gamble 2012b | UK | Meningitis | Survey (self-administered) | Investigate views | Proposed trial evaluating two currently used treatments for emergency resuscitation and treatment | 68 families | Yes | No |
| 33. Gigon 2013a | Switzerland | ICU | Survey (self-administered) | Evaluate choice | Hypothetical scenarios of ICU research | 185 patients, 125 relatives following ICU discharge | Yes | No |
| 34. Potter 2013 | Australia | ICU | Survey (self-administered) | Post-trial evaluation | Clinical trial evaluating two strategies for maintaining blood sugar in ICU | 210 trial participants | Yes | Yes |
| 35. Scales 2009a | Canada | Critical illness | Survey (interview) | Survey preferences | Hypothetical study scenarios of research during critical illness | 240 survivors of critical illness | Yes | No |
| Clinical, research staff or regulators | ||||||||
| Survey studies | ||||||||
| 36. Cook 2008b | Canada, Australia, New Zealand | Critical illness | Survey (self-administered) | Evaluate experience, beliefs, and practices | Hypothetical – enrolment of critically ill children and adults | 284 clinicians caring for critically ill patients | Yes | Yes |
| 37. Duffett 2011a | Canada | Critical care research | Survey (self-administered) | Evaluate attitudes and beliefs | Hypothetical scenario of double-blind, placebo-controlled, RCT evaluating single dose of medication perceived by REB as minimal risk | 98 ICU researchers; 52 members of hospital research ethics boards. | Yes | Possible |
| 38. Woolfall 2013b | UK | Paediatric – status epilepticus | Survey (self-administered) | Evaluate views and experiences | Hypothetical | 45 clinical staff | Yes | Mixed |
acompares different consent models
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Characteristics of included studies – waived consent
| Reference | Country | Clinical context | Study design | Study aim | Scenario: real or hypothetical | Study sample | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Respondents | Direct experience of clinical context or condition | Direct experience of consent model | ||||||
| Potential research participants | ||||||||
| Qualitative or mixed methods studies | ||||||||
| 39. Blixen 2005a | USA | Stroke | Qualitative (interview) | Evaluate preferences or values | Hypothetical study – emergency stroke research | 12 stroke patients | Yes | No |
| 40. Dickert 2009 | USA | Cardiac arrest | Qualitative (interview) | Assess views | Hypothetical study scenarios for research emergency research | 22 sudden cardiac death survivors | Yes | No |
| 41. Kasner 2011 | USA | Acute neurologic emergency research | Qualitative (focus group) | Evaluate views on community consultation | Hypothetical study | Patients with previous stroke or brain injury, their families, and people at risk for traumatic brain injury (n = 40) | Yes | No |
| 42. Morris 2004 | USA | Paediatrics | Qualitative (focus group and interview) | Public consultation | Proposed in-patient paediatric resuscitation clinical trial | 23 parents from PICU of children who had been resuscitated; 33 staff | Yes | No |
| 43. Raymond 2010 | USA | Paediatric resuscitation | Mixed methods | Evaluation of public disclosure | Proposed in-patient resuscitation clinical trial | 93 parents attending a PICU | Yes | No |
| 44. Richardson 2005 | USA | Cardiac arrest | Qualitative (focus group) | Explore attitudes about emergency research without consent | Clinical trial evaluating pre-hospital intervention for cardiac arrest | 42 participants from community where study being conducted | No | No |
| 45. Shah 2003 | USA | Emergency | Qualitative (content analysis) | Recommendations for public disclosure | Documentation for real studies | 4 studies from repository of mandatory documents | N/A | N/A |
| Survey studies | ||||||||
| 46. Abboud 2006 | USA | Cardiopulmonary arrest | Survey (interview) | Evaluate willingness to participate | Hypothetical scenarios – intervention resuscitation research | 207 Patients attending an emergency department and a 213 geriatric clinic | Mixed | No |
| 47. Baren 1999 | USA | Paediatric | Survey (interview) | Public consultation (feasibility testing) | Hypothetical clinical trial evaluating treatment for posttraumatic seizures | 227 Parents of children treated in the emergency department | Yes | No |
| 48. Biros 2009a | USA | Status seizure – | Survey (self-administered) | Part of a public consultation prior to trial initiation. | Proposed trial evaluates pre-hospital intervention for status seizures | 1901 community members | No | Some |
| 49. Booth 2005 | UK | Cardiac arrest | Survey (self-administered) | Assess attitudes | Hypothetical – emergency research | 361 patients attending an emergency department | No | No |
| 50. Bulger 2009c | USA | Resuscitation | Survey (interview) | Public consultation | Clinical trials evaluating pre-hospital interventions for cardiac arrest and traumatic injury | 2418 representative sample of community | No | No |
| 51. Dickert 2013 | USA | Status epileptics | Survey (interview) | Assess experience and effect of public consultation | Clinical trial of a pre-hospital comparing pharmacological interventions for status epileptics | 24 patients; 37 surrogate decision makers | Yes | Yes |
| 52. Dickert 2014b | USA | Acute traumatic brain injury | Survey (various methods) | Survey nested in public consultation | Clinical trial evaluating progesterone for treatment of traumatic brain injury | 2612 community consultation participants | No | No |
| 53. Longfield 2008 | USA | Traumatic haemorrhagic shock | Survey (self-administered) | Description of public consultation | Clinical trial evaluating a pre-hospital intervention for traumatic haemorrhagic shock | 150 community meeting attendees | No | No |
| 54. McClure 2003 | USA | Resuscitation | Survey (interview) | Evaluation of views and public awareness of EFIC research | Studies conducted under waived consent (details unclear) | Convenience sample of 530 patients attending a hospital emergency department | No | No |
| 55. Morris 2006 | USA | Paediatric resuscitation | Survey (interview) | Assess feasibility of public consultation | Hypothetical scenarios of in-patient resuscitation clinical trials | 91 parents attending a PICU | Yes | No |
| 56. Nelson 2013 | USA | Cardiac arrest | Survey (interview or self-administered) | Evaluation of patient opt-out experience | Clinical trial evaluating a pre-hospital intervention for cardiac arrest | 46 community members who had opted out of participation in a study conducted under waived consent. | No | No |
| 57. Ramsey 2011 | USA | Emergency research | Survey (interview) | Evaluation of public consultation methods | Clinical trials conducted under waived consent (detailed unclear)– | Community where study being conducted –(baseline, n = 390; 11 months later, n = 325) | No | No |
| 58. Scales 2009a | Canada | Critical illness | Survey (interview) | Survey preferences | Hypothetical study scenarios of research during critical illness | 240 survivors of critical illness | Yes | No |
| 59. Smithline 1998 | USA | Emergency research | Survey (interview) | Evaluate opinions | Hypothetical study scenario of acute care research | Convenience sample of patients in an emergency department 212 | No | No |
| 60. Triner 2007 | USA | Traumatic haemorrhagic shock | Survey (self-administered) | Evaluation of effectiveness of public disclosure | Clinical trial evaluating a pre-hospital intervention for traumatic haemorrhagic shock | Convenience sample of patients to emergency department 497 | Mixed | No |
| Clinical, research staff or regulators | ||||||||
| Qualitative studies | ||||||||
| 61. McClure 2007 | USA | Resuscitation | Qualitative (interviews) | Evaluate experience | Hypothetical – based on experience of protocol review | 10 institutional review board members | Yes | Yes |
| Survey studies | ||||||||
| 62. Cook 2008c | Canada, Australia, New Zealand | Critical illness | Survey (self-administered) | Evaluate experience, beliefs, and practices | Hypothetical – enrolment of critically ill children and adults | 284 clinicians caring for critically ill patients | Yes | Yes |
| 63. DeIorio 2007 | USA | Resuscitation | Survey (self-administered) | Understand attitudes | Hypothetical – based on experience of protocol review | 69 research ethics board chairpersons | Yes | Mixed |
| 64. Dickert 2014a | USA | Status epilepticus | Survey (self-administered) | Assess views and experience of public consultation | Clinical trial of pre-hospital intervention for status epilepticus | 28 research staff | Yes | Yes |
| 65. Duffett 2011a,b | Canada | Critical care research | Survey (self-administered) | Evaluate attitudes and beliefs | Hypothetical scenario of double-blind, placebo-controlled, RCT evaluating single dose of medication perceived by REB as minimal risk | 98 ICU researchers; 52 members of hospital research ethics boards. | Yes | Possible |
| 66. Kompanje 2005a | Netherlands | Traumatic brain injury | Survey (self-administered) | Evaluate opinions | Hypothetical -clinical emergency care | 79 neuro-trauma clinical staff across 19 European countries | Yes | Possible |
| 67. Schmidt 2009 | USA | Severe traumatic injury | Survey (self-administered) | Evaluate opinions and experience of research staff | Real study of pre-hospital intervention for severe trauma | 844 emergency medical technicians participating in the trial | Yes | Yes |
acompares different consent models
bcompares different stakeholder groups
cpaediatrics