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Food and Drug Administration and Institutional Review Board Approval of a Novel Prehospital Informed Consent Process for Emergency Research.

Publication ,  Journal Article
McMullan, J; Droege, C; Strilka, CR; Lindsell, C; Linke, MJ
Published in: Prehosp Emerg Care
2021

Research on the management of acute pain in the prehospital setting is fraught with challenges. The prehospital setting is complex due to constrained time, resources, and training. Research activities must not interfere with the underlying clinical priorities of immediate patient stabilization and rapid transport to an appropriate hospital. The patient's pain, fear, and anxiety immediately after a traumatic event may interfere with undertaking an adequate informed consent process.Pain management trials do not satisfy the criteria for application of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) 21 CFR 50.24 exception from informed consent. While nonstandard informed consent processes exist, waiver or alteration of informed consent may be limited if Institutional Review Boards or the FDA consider these studies to involve more than minimal risk related to the setting of the study, even if the interventions themselves might involve no more than minimal risk in other settings. In addition, any study requiring an Investigational New Drug application requires fully documented standard informed consent.Emergency Medical Services agencies and fire departments become research institutions, and paramedics become study staff, but both the institutions and the staff often lack experience conducting human subjects research and are rarely formally affiliated with the academic institution overseeing the research. As such, additional administrative burdens must be overcome in interventional prehospital studies, including additional training in the study protocol, research operations, and human subjects protections. Institutions conducting federally funded studies commit to regulations covering human subjects protections in the form of a Federalwide Assurance (FWA); prehospital organizations participating in research must either obtain an FWA or have coverage extended to them from an academic partner.We describe how these challenges were addressed during Institutional Review Board review and approval of an FDA-regulated randomized placebo-controlled trial of intranasal ketamine (vs. placebo) in acutely injured patients receiving standard of care fentanyl for prehospital pain management (NCT02866071). To our knowledge, this trial is the first instance in the United States of paramedics screening, consenting, enrolling, and administering study medications to patients without direct, real-time support from a dedicated clinical research team.

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Published In

Prehosp Emerg Care

DOI

EISSN

1545-0066

Publication Date

2021

Volume

25

Issue

4

Start / End Page

512 / 518

Location

England

Related Subject Headings

  • United States Food and Drug Administration
  • United States
  • Informed Consent
  • Humans
  • Ethics Committees, Research
  • Emergency Medical Services
  • Emergency & Critical Care Medicine
  • Emergencies
  • 4206 Public health
  • 4203 Health services and systems
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
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McMullan, J., Droege, C., Strilka, C. R., Lindsell, C., & Linke, M. J. (2021). Food and Drug Administration and Institutional Review Board Approval of a Novel Prehospital Informed Consent Process for Emergency Research. Prehosp Emerg Care, 25(4), 512–518. https://doi.org/10.1080/10903127.2020.1806969
McMullan, Jason, Christopher Droege, Col Richard Strilka, Christopher Lindsell, and Michael J. Linke. “Food and Drug Administration and Institutional Review Board Approval of a Novel Prehospital Informed Consent Process for Emergency Research.Prehosp Emerg Care 25, no. 4 (2021): 512–18. https://doi.org/10.1080/10903127.2020.1806969.
McMullan J, Droege C, Strilka CR, Lindsell C, Linke MJ. Food and Drug Administration and Institutional Review Board Approval of a Novel Prehospital Informed Consent Process for Emergency Research. Prehosp Emerg Care. 2021;25(4):512–8.
McMullan, Jason, et al. “Food and Drug Administration and Institutional Review Board Approval of a Novel Prehospital Informed Consent Process for Emergency Research.Prehosp Emerg Care, vol. 25, no. 4, 2021, pp. 512–18. Pubmed, doi:10.1080/10903127.2020.1806969.
McMullan J, Droege C, Strilka CR, Lindsell C, Linke MJ. Food and Drug Administration and Institutional Review Board Approval of a Novel Prehospital Informed Consent Process for Emergency Research. Prehosp Emerg Care. 2021;25(4):512–518.

Published In

Prehosp Emerg Care

DOI

EISSN

1545-0066

Publication Date

2021

Volume

25

Issue

4

Start / End Page

512 / 518

Location

England

Related Subject Headings

  • United States Food and Drug Administration
  • United States
  • Informed Consent
  • Humans
  • Ethics Committees, Research
  • Emergency Medical Services
  • Emergency & Critical Care Medicine
  • Emergencies
  • 4206 Public health
  • 4203 Health services and systems