Use of altered informed consent in pragmatic clinical research

Author:

McKinney Ross E1,Beskow Laura M2,Ford Daniel E3,Lantos John D4,McCall Jonathan2,Patrick-Lake Bray5,Pletcher Mark J6,Rath Brian7,Schmidt Hollie8,Weinfurt Kevin29

Affiliation:

1. Trent Center for Bioethics, Humanities, & History of Medicine and Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Pediatrics, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, NC, USA

2. Duke Clinical Research Institute, Durham, NC, USA

3. Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, USA

4. Children’s Mercy Bioethics Center, Children’s Mercy Hospital, Kansas City, MO, US

5. Clinical Trials Transformation Initiative, Duke Translational Medicine Institute, Durham, NC, USA

6. Departments of Epidemiology and Biostatistics and Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, USA

7. Buchanan Ingersoll & Rooney PC, Princeton, NJ, USA

8. Accelerated Cure Project for Multiple Sclerosis, Waltham, MA, USA

9. Department of Psychiatry, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, NC, USA

Abstract

There are situations in which the requirement to obtain conventional written informed consent can impose significant or even insurmountable barriers to conducting pragmatic clinical research, including some comparative effectiveness studies and cluster-randomized trials. Although certain federal regulations governing research in the United States (45 CFR 46) define circumstances in which any of the required elements may be waived, the same standards apply regardless of whether any single element is to be waived or whether consent is to be waived in its entirety. Using the same threshold for a partial or complete waiver limits the options available to institutional review boards as they seek to optimize a consent process. In this article, we argue that new standards are necessary in order to enable important pragmatic clinical research while at the same time protecting patients’ rights and interests.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Pharmacology,General Medicine

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