| Literature DB >> 30342507 |
Karine Dubé1, Sara Gianella2,3, Susan Concha-Garcia2,3, Susan J Little2, Andy Kaytes4, Jeff Taylor4,5, Kushagra Mathur3, Sogol Javadi3, Anshula Nathan6, Hursch Patel6, Stuart Luter6, Sean Philpott-Jones7, Brandon Brown8, Davey Smith2,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The U.S. National Institute of Allergies and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) and the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) have a new research priority: inclusion of terminally ill persons living with HIV (PLWHIV) in HIV cure-related research. For example, the Last Gift is a clinical research study at the University of California San Diego (UCSD) for PLWHIV who have a terminal illness, with a prognosis of less than 6 months. DISCUSSION: As end-of-life (EOL) HIV cure research is relatively new, the scientific community has a timely opportunity to examine the related ethical challenges. Following an extensive review of the EOL and HIV cure research ethics literature, combined with deliberation from various stakeholders (biomedical researchers, PLWHIV, bioethicists, and socio-behavioral scientists) and our experience with the Last Gift study to date, we outline considerations to ensure that such research with terminally ill PLWHIV remains ethical, focusing on five topics: 1) protecting autonomy through informed consent, 2) avoiding exploitation and fostering altruism, 3) maintaining a favorable benefits/risks balance, 4) safeguarding against vulnerability through patient-participant centeredness, and 5) ensuring the acceptance of next-of-kin/loved ones and community stakeholders.Entities:
Keywords: Altruism; End-of-life (EOL); Ethical considerations; HIV cure research; Last gift; Rapid research autopsy
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30342507 PMCID: PMC6196016 DOI: 10.1186/s12910-018-0321-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Ethics ISSN: 1472-6939 Impact factor: 2.652
Fig. 1The Last Gift logo was designed by Andy Kaytes, HIV activist and chair of the AntiViral Research Center Community Advisory Board. Each piece of the puzzle represents one Last Gift participant
Benefit-Risk Assessment for HIV Cure-Related Research at the EOL
| HIV Cure-Related Research Approaches | Possible Positive Outcomes | Potential Risks | Benefit-Risk Assessment for PLWHIV at the EOL | Other Considerations |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Latency-reversing agents | Stimulation of replication-competent provirus from latently-infected cells and perturbation of HIV reservoir (although this has no direct clinical benefit) | Side effects of latency-reversing compounds (various toxicity levels) | Favorable | Already being tested in ‘otherwise healthy volunteers’; long-term effects would not become manifest |
| Immune-based strategies (e.g. broadly neutralizing antibodies) | Improved immune response to HIV | Risks of immune-based approaches, including potential for development of auto-immunity | Favorable | Already being tested in ‘otherwise healthy volunteers’; long-term effects would not become manifest |
| Stem cell transplants | Modality aims at making cells resistant to HIV infection | Risks associated with irradiation and chemotherapy; hepatic effects, renal failure, graft-versus-host-disease (GVHD); too great to withstand for PLWHIV at the EOL | Unfavorable; cannot be justified in PLWHIV at the EOL | Not indicated in ‘otherwise healthy volunteers’; engraftment and chimerism may not have time to manifest at the EOL |
| Gene editing or modification | Process of editing deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) inside immune cells to make them less susceptible to HIV or better able to clear infected cells | Off-target modifications or activation of proto-oncogenes causing malignancies; other risks associated with gene editing | Contingent on the intervention | Long-term effects would not become manifest; EOL translational research model could still be useful to determine how gene editing techniques can be delivered safely to cells and tissues – including the brain |
| Analytical treatment interruptions | N/A | Development of resistance to ART regimen; increased risks of developing opportunistic infections; other risks associated with analytical treatment interruptions | Favorable | Already being conducted in Last Gift study – in observational studies, PLWHIV should not be explicitly asked to interrupt ART, but should elect to do so on their own; some interventional studies (e.g. immune-based strategies) may include an analytical treatment interruption in the design |
Examples of Patient-Participant Centeredness Considerations for Last Gift Study
| EOL Clinical Research Conduct | |
| • Minimize burden of study participation for terminally ill participants [ | |
| • Ensure research remains flexible, taking into consideration fatigue and fluctuating symptoms across disease trajectory [ | |
| • Assist participants with completion of study procedures and questionnaires [ | |
| Quality of Life at the EOL | |
| • Pay attention to quality of life at the EOL [ | |
| • Honor treatment preferences of terminally ill individuals, including pain management and palliative care [ | |
| • Respect participants’ privacy and need for time with next-of-kin/loved ones | |
| • Consider participants’ food preferences and other small attentions | |
| • Consider how substance use at the EOL affects study participation (e.g. alcohol, cannabis) | |
| Advance Care Planning | |
| • Assist participants with advance care planning needs [ | |
| • Provide proper referral and counseling for participants who desire medical aid to end life under California End of Life Option Act (EOLOA) of 2016 | |
| Mental Health, Cultural and Spiritual Issues | |
| • Provide adequate psychosocial support to study participants. The Last Gift study team has a two psychiatrists and one licensed psychologist on staff. | |
| • Give consideration to mental health issues of participants, including fear, suicide ideation, depression, among others [ | |
| • Pay attention to cultural issues, spiritual well-being and meaning as integral to the dying process [ | |
| Financial and Legal Issues | |
| • Pay attention to issues around the burden of cost of dying and health insurance | |
| • Help ensure participants have support for EOL legal needs [ |
Ethical Considerations for HIV Cure-Related Research at the End of Life
| Themes | Considerations |
|---|---|
| EOL clinical research, rapid research autopsy and gifting relationship | The research team should: |
| Protecting autonomy through informed consent | • The informed consent process must clearly state that EOL HIV cure-related research will not be curative, and must convey the research objectives, methods, procedures, decision will not affect medical care, and right to refuse enrollment or withdraw from research at anytime. |
| Avoiding exploitation and fostering altruism | • Protection from exploitation relates to the principle of distributive justice, in that there should be fair distribution of the benefits and burdens from the transaction. |
| Maintaining a favorable benefits to risks balance | • EOL HIV cure research should minimize risks, enhance potential benefits, and ensure that risks and burdens are justified in relation to prospective benefits. |
| Safeguarding against vulnerability through patient-participant centeredness | • Vulnerability implies the need for specific protection or safeguards. |
| Ensuring acceptance of loved ones and community | • The research team should ensure acceptability of the research from next-of-kin/loved ones, and clarify the role of next-of-kin/loved ones in study participation. Next-of-kin/loved ones should also be briefed on the study to be willing to let go of the Last Gift participants’ body at the time of death. The research team should actively support and (if needed) protect next-of-kin/loved ones, and account for the fact that next-of-kin/loved ones arrangements may be untraditional for PLWHIV. |