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By News Staff | August 26th 2009 05:18 PM | 2 comments | Print | E-mail | Track Comments

Informed consent is tricky business because there are disagreements about what informed consent can mean outside the country of the company conducting the trial and people will grant a lot of consent if they believe a treatment can help them, which can lead to exploitation.

One item that is not a topic of heavy debate is financial interest disclosures.  Everyone seems to agree they are important but there are no comprehensive guidelines governing it.  In an age of increased demand for transparency, conflict of interest information is regarded as vital, including relevant financial relationships that might affect a patient's decision about participation in a research project, such as owning stock in the company that funds the study, or having a patent on the device being tested.

Kevin Weinfurt, Ph.D., a medical psychologist at Duke University Medical Center and the lead author of a paper published in the August 27 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine, along with Jeremy Sugarman, M.D., professor of bioethics and medicine at the Berman Institute of Bioethics at Johns Hopkins and the senior author of the paper, drew upon a five-year research project examining disclosure policies and practices (the Conflict of Interest Notification Study, or "COINS") and developed the following guidelines for institutions attempting to fully comply with the spirit and intent of disclosure:

  • Study participants should not be allowed to be the sole arbiters of acceptable risk when evaluating researchers' financial relationships with organizations that support their work. Institutional Review Boards, conflict of interest oversight committees, and other such authorities should play a much larger role.
  • Disclosure statements during the consent process should be brief and simple, and should encourage patients' questions.
  • Study coordinators need to be thoroughly familiar with researcher or institutional conflicts of interest so they can adequately answer patients' questions. COINS research showed that coordinators are often ill-prepared to do so, or are unaware of any financial conflicts of interest.
  • Boards, committees, or entities charged with designing disclosure regulations should be clear about the goals they want to achieve and should be able to determine if their directives help reach those goals.


"Disclosure alone is not enough," says Sugarman. "It is not the remedy that many seek, although the process may have a positive effect on patients' satisfaction with and trust in the research process."

Weinfurt says patients considering whether to enter a clinical trial have every right to know about financial interests in research, such as doctors owning stock in the company that is paying for the research, or a physician who holds a patent interest in a device that is being studied. But he also argues that patients need to do their homework, too. He says any patient considering enrolling in a clinical trial might want to be prepared to ask these four questions:

  • If I enroll in this study, how will I be treated differently than you would otherwise treat me for this health problem?
  • As a participant, what will I be asked to do?
  • If there is more than one treatment group, how am I assigned to one or the other?
  • Who will have access to the data from the trial?

The study was funded by a grant from the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute. 

Colleagues who contributed to the study include Kevin Schulman and Joelle Friedman, from Duke; and Mark Hall and Nancy King of Wake Forest University.



Comments

Becky Jungbauer's picture
This is a really interesting, and really convoluted, topic. One of my medical research ethics courses was just on the issue of informed consent. There is some onus on patients to do their homework, definitely - but many of the people who participate in clinical trials (outside the oncology and rare/lethal pediatric disease categories) are college kids, lower to middle class, grad students, people who need a little extra cash and aren't that concerned about whether they get placebo or a live experimental drug. Their incentive is the money - there may be some altruism involved, of course, but they're less concerned about whether the PI has a financial stake in the research and more about paying bills and having a little spending money. Perhaps putting those four questions Weinfurt proposes on the consent form itself would encourage patients to engage in conversation that could be helpful on both sides of the research.

Fred Phillips's picture

Um, this is kind of embarrassing. I was once a hungry grad student who fell for a clinical trial ad. It was for (don’t read this if you’re squeamish) toenail fungus. I think when I’d been a young student in Japan I didn’t wash my socks often enough, and I got the fungus on both feet.


The clinic was just the other side of I-35 from the UT-Austin campus. So off I went, to lend my feet to science for fifty bucks.


A doctor examined them very closely, and told me my condition was too advanced for the trial protocol, which called only for volunteers with milder forms of the infestation. (The ad had not mentioned this.)


As he explained this to me at some length – this is kinda embarrassing, don’t read on if you’re squeamish – it dawned on me that he was still holding my foot and, no doubt about it, fondling it.

I left the clinic (i) musing about investigator bias, as this doctor was obviously in it more to gratify his fetish than to advance science, and (ii) determined to watch the newspapers to see how the drug, if it were approved, would be announced.

About a year later an ad for the new drug appeared in magazines. Did it say “for mild cases only”? Duh, no.


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