| Literature DB >> 29482537 |
Cory E Goldstein1, Charles Weijer2, Jamie C Brehaut3, Dean A Fergusson3, Jeremy M Grimshaw3, Austin R Horn2, Monica Taljaard3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Pragmatic randomized controlled trials (RCTs) are designed to evaluate the effectiveness of interventions in real-world clinical conditions. However, these studies raise ethical issues for researchers and regulators. Our objective is to identify a list of key ethical issues in pragmatic RCTs and highlight gaps in the ethics literature.Entities:
Keywords: Disclosure; Ethics; Informed consent; Literature review; Oversight; Pragmatic randomized controlled trials; Regulation; Research ethics committees; Risk
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29482537 PMCID: PMC5827974 DOI: 10.1186/s12910-018-0253-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Ethics ISSN: 1472-6939 Impact factor: 2.652
Fig. 1Electronic search strategy and article screening
Sumary of major themes
| Main Themes | Associated Question | Majority View |
|---|---|---|
| Research-Practice Distinction | Is research morally distinct from clinical practice? | • Rejects the distinction between research and practice |
| Consent | Is consent required, and if so how extensive must the consent process be for low-risk pragmatic RCTs? | • Low-risk pragmatic RCTs may proceed without consent (i.e., waiver of consent) |
| Disclosure | What aspects of research must be disclosed to research participants of low-risk pragmatic RCTs? | • Information should only be disclosed if research participation adds risks over and above clinical practice |
| Oversight | What level of oversight is required for low-risk pragmatic RCTs? | • Oversight is time consuming, costly and complex |
Models of informed consent
| Consent model | Characteristics | Authors |
|---|---|---|
| Standard informed consent | • Written disclosure of all information | Anderson & Schonfeld 2014 |
| Targeted consent model | • Verbally disclose information | Wendler 2015 |
| Integrated consent model | • Verbally disclose information | Kim & Miller 2014 |
| Streamlined consent | • No consent is sought | Faden, Kass, Whicher, Stewart, & Tunis 2013 |
Critical analysis of the major themes and gaps identified
| Main themes | Critical Analysis of the Dominant View | Gaps in the Literature |
|---|---|---|
| Research-practice distinction | • The rejection of the research-practice distinction rests on a mistaken assumption that the classification turns solely on risk. | • Given that pragmatic RCTs are research, what are the implications for consent, disclosure, and oversight? |
| Consent | • The central focus on risk leads to the spurious conclusion that consent need not be sought for all low-risk research. | • When are waivers appropriate? |
| Disclosure | • Grounding the disclosure of information in risk is irrelevant to why information is disclosed. | • What type of notification is best for disclosing information? |
| Oversight | • The level of scrutiny from RECs need not be proportionate to the level of risk of the research. | • What models for centralized review of multisite pragmatic RCTs are successful, and why? |