| Literature DB >> 35578535 |
Amal Matar1, Henry J Silverman2.
Abstract
Lately, there has been increased research performed in Egypt. In response, the Egyptian Parliament published its first clinical research law in December 2020. The official version of the law was translated to English from Arabic and back by an accredited translation service. We performed an ethical analysis of the law based on the seven ethical requirements for clinical research proposed by Emanuel et al. and compared it with other regulations in the Arab region. The law contains provisions that fulfill all requirements for ethical research to varying degree. Provisions necessitating the sharing of participants' data and biospecimens by the Central Intelligence Agency requires further specifications to ensure privacy protection. Also, the law poses problematic liabilities that could hamper medical research. Egypt's law compares favorably with other laws in the region. Potential items that require further specification can be addressed in the executive regulations currently being drafted for the law.Entities:
Keywords: Egypt; clinical trial law; ethical regulations; informed consent; low- and middle-income country; research ethics
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35578535 PMCID: PMC9398927 DOI: 10.1177/15562646221096188
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Empir Res Hum Res Ethics ISSN: 1556-2646 Impact factor: 1.978
Description of the Law and its Different Chapters.
| Chapter | Title | Description |
|---|---|---|
| One | Definitions | Has one article that defines the terms used in the law, such as interventional medical research, preclinical research, research protocol etc. |
| Two | General Provisions | Has articles 2, 3, 4 & 5, which outline provisions on vulnerable populations, mandatory approvals for research and requirements of Egypt's GIA. |
| Three | The Supreme Council for Reviewing the Ethics of Clinical Research. | The two articles (6 & 7) detail the composition, role and responsibilities of the Supreme Council |
| Four | Institutional Review Boards and the Egyptian Drug Authority | Article 8 describes the role and responsibilities of IRBs and article 9 details Egyptian DA function in regards to clinical research. |
| Five | Phases of Clinical research and the Use of Placebos | Article 10 – describes the phases of clinical trials while article 11 details placebo use in clinical research. |
| Six | Research Participants Rights | Article 12 describes research participants' rights including provisions for obtaining an withdrawing informed consent, privacy protection. Articles 13 and 14 are provisions for enrolling and payment of research participants. Article 15 addresses handling of research participants' information and confidentiality of their data. |
| Seven | The Conditions, Procedures and Obligations Principal Investigator | This chapter has 4 articles dedicated to outlining the qualifications, roles & responsibilities of the PI and Co-PI |
| Eight | Obligations of the Sponsor of Research. | Articles 20 & 21 describe the roles, responsibilities as well as approvals required by sponsor to implement medical research. |
| Nine | Suspension and Early Termination of Medical Research | The previsions to suspend medical research is detailed in article 22 in this chapter. |
| Ten | Provisions for Using Human Samples for Medical Research | Provision for obtaining consent, storing and commercialization of human samples are outlined in article 23. |
| Eleven | Requirements of the Research Entity | It includes one article (24) which details the requirements for research entities to be able to conduct medical research. for example prohibition of conducting research in private clinics. |
| Twelve | Liabilities and Penalties | The chapter encompasses articles 25–32 that outlines liabilities in the event that those in charge of conducting medical research do not abide by the provisions of the law. |