Literature DB >> 33530721

An ethics framework for consolidating and prioritizing COVID-19 clinical trials.

Michelle N Meyer1, Luke Gelinas2, Barbara E Bierer3, Sara Chandros Hull4, Steven Joffe5,6, David Magnus7, Seema Mohapatra8, Richard R Sharp9, Kayte Spector-Bagdady10, Jeremy Sugarman11, Benjamin S Wilfond12, Holly Fernandez Lynch5,6.   

Abstract

Given the dearth of established safe and effective interventions to respond to COVID-19, there is an urgent ethical imperative to conduct meaningful clinical research. The good news is that interventions to be tested are not in short supply. Unfortunately, the human and material resources needed to conduct these trials are finite. It is essential that trials be robust and meet enrollment targets and that lower-quality studies not be permitted to displace higher-quality studies, delaying answers to critical questions. Yet, with few exceptions, existing research review bodies and processes are not designed to ensure these conditions are satisfied. To meet this challenge, we offer guidance for research institutions about how to ethically consolidate and prioritize COVID-19 clinical trials, while recognizing that consolidation and prioritization should also take place upstream (among manufacturers and funders) and at a higher level (e.g. nationally). In our proposed three-stage process, trials must first meet threshold criteria. Those that do are evaluated in a second stage to determine whether the institution has sufficient capacity to support all proposed trials. If it does not, the third stage entails evaluating studies against two additional sets of comparative prioritization criteria: those specific to the study and those that aim to advance diversification of an institution's research portfolio. To implement these criteria fairly, we propose that research institutions form COVID-19 research prioritization committees. We briefly discuss some important attributes of these committees, drawing on the authors' experiences at our respective institutions. Although we focus on clinical trials of COVID-19 therapeutics, our guidance should prove useful for other kinds of COVID-19 research, as well as non-pandemic research, which can raise similar challenges due to the scarcity of research resources.

Entities:  

Keywords:  COVID-19; clinical trials; coronavirus; prioritization; research ethics; triage

Mesh:

Year:  2021        PMID: 33530721      PMCID: PMC8009845          DOI: 10.1177/1740774520988669

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Trials        ISSN: 1740-7745            Impact factor:   2.486


  30 in total

1.  Clinical Trial Portfolios: A Critical Oversight in Human Research Ethics, Drug Regulation, and Policy.

Authors:  Alex John London; Jonathan Kimmelman
Journal:  Hastings Cent Rep       Date:  2019-07       Impact factor: 2.683

Review 2.  Clinical trials in orthopaedics research. Part II. Prioritization for randomized controlled clinical trials.

Authors:  Jeffrey N Katz; James G Wright; Elena Losina
Journal:  J Bone Joint Surg Am       Date:  2011-04-06       Impact factor: 5.284

Review 3.  Prioritization schema for immunotherapy clinical trials in glioblastoma.

Authors:  Tiffany R Hodges; Sherise D Ferguson; Hillary G Caruso; Gary Kohanbash; Shouhao Zhou; Timothy F Cloughesy; Mitchel S Berger; George H Poste; Mustafa Khasraw; Sujuan Ba; Tao Jiang; Tom Mikkelson; W K Alfred Yung; John F de Groot; Howard Fine; Lewis C Cantley; Ingo K Mellinghoff; Duane A Mitchell; Hideho Okada; Amy B Heimberger
Journal:  Oncoimmunology       Date:  2016-02-18       Impact factor: 8.110

4.  Ethical Guidance for Selecting Clinical Trials to Receive Limited Space in an Immunotherapy Production Facility.

Authors:  Nancy S Jecker; Aaron G Wightman; Abby R Rosenberg; Douglas S Diekema
Journal:  Am J Bioeth       Date:  2018-04       Impact factor: 11.229

5.  Accelerating COVID-19 Therapeutic Interventions and Vaccines (ACTIV): An Unprecedented Partnership for Unprecedented Times.

Authors:  Francis S Collins; Paul Stoffels
Journal:  JAMA       Date:  2020-05-18       Impact factor: 56.272

6.  Which interventions work best in a pandemic?

Authors:  Johannes Haushofer; C Jessica E Metcalf
Journal:  Science       Date:  2020-05-21       Impact factor: 47.728

7.  Target and Agent Prioritization for the Children's Oncology Group-National Cancer Institute Pediatric MATCH Trial.

Authors:  Carl E Allen; Theodore W Laetsch; Rajen Mody; Meredith S Irwin; Megan S Lim; Peter C Adamson; Nita L Seibel; D Williams Parsons; Y Jae Cho; Katherine Janeway
Journal:  J Natl Cancer Inst       Date:  2017-05-01       Impact factor: 13.506

8.  Institutional Scientific Review of Cancer Clinical Research Protocols: A Unique Requirement That Affects Activation Timelines.

Authors:  Ning Ning; Jingsheng Yan; Martin F Dietrich; Xian-Jin Xie; David E Gerber
Journal:  J Oncol Pract       Date:  2017-10-11       Impact factor: 3.840

9.  Clinical characteristics and intrauterine vertical transmission potential of COVID-19 infection in nine pregnant women: a retrospective review of medical records.

Authors:  Huijun Chen; Juanjuan Guo; Chen Wang; Fan Luo; Xuechen Yu; Wei Zhang; Jiafu Li; Dongchi Zhao; Dan Xu; Qing Gong; Jing Liao; Huixia Yang; Wei Hou; Yuanzhen Zhang
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2020-02-12       Impact factor: 79.321

10.  Dexamethasone in Hospitalized Patients with Covid-19.

Authors:  Peter Horby; Wei Shen Lim; Jonathan R Emberson; Marion Mafham; Jennifer L Bell; Louise Linsell; Natalie Staplin; Christopher Brightling; Andrew Ustianowski; Einas Elmahi; Benjamin Prudon; Christopher Green; Timothy Felton; David Chadwick; Kanchan Rege; Christopher Fegan; Lucy C Chappell; Saul N Faust; Thomas Jaki; Katie Jeffery; Alan Montgomery; Kathryn Rowan; Edmund Juszczak; J Kenneth Baillie; Richard Haynes; Martin J Landray
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2020-07-17       Impact factor: 91.245

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  6 in total

1.  Allocation of Opportunities to Participate in Clinical Trials during the Covid-19 Pandemic and Other Public Health Emergencies.

Authors:  Kayte Spector-Bagdady; Holly Fernandez Lynch; Barbara E Bierer; Luke Gelinas; Sara Chandros Hull; David Magnus; Michelle N Meyer; Richard R Sharp; Jeremy Sugarman; Benjamin S Wilfond; Ruqaiijah Yearby; Seema Mohapatra
Journal:  Hastings Cent Rep       Date:  2021-12-15       Impact factor: 4.298

Review 2.  Health science research barriers and facilitators in the midst of the COVID-19 crisis: scoping review

Authors:  Karen Daniela Neira-Fernández; Laura Gaitán-Lee; Olga Janneth Gómez-Ramírez
Journal:  Rev Colomb Obstet Ginecol       Date:  2021-12-30

3.  Patient and Citizen Participation in the Identification of Ethical Considerations Aiming to Address Uncertainty in the Evaluation of Promising Interventions in a Pandemic Context.

Authors:  Catherine Olivier; Isabelle Ganache; Olivier Demers-Payette; Louis Lochhead; Sandra Pelaez; Michèle de Guise; Marie-Pascale Pomey
Journal:  Front Med Technol       Date:  2021-12-24

4.  How informative were early SARS-CoV-2 treatment and prevention trials? a longitudinal cohort analysis of trials registered on ClinicalTrials.gov.

Authors:  Nora Hutchinson; Katarzyna Klas; Benjamin G Carlisle; Jonathan Kimmelman; Marcin Waligora
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2022-01-21       Impact factor: 3.240

5.  A snapshot of U.S. IRB review of COVID-19 research in the early pandemic.

Authors:  Holly A Taylor; Kimberley Serpico; Holly Fernandez Lynch; John Baumann; Emily E Anderson
Journal:  J Clin Transl Sci       Date:  2021-09-13

6.  Ethical, regulatory, and practical barriers to COVID-19 research: A stakeholder-informed inventory of concerns.

Authors:  Bryan A Sisk; Kari Baldwin; Meredith Parsons; James M DuBois
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2022-03-24       Impact factor: 3.240

  6 in total

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