GOOD
CLNICAL PRACTICES
FOR CLINICAL RESEARCH IN INDIA
FOREWORD
Clinical
research is the key to the discovery of latest diagnostic methods and to
develop modern drugs for treatment of diseases. Good Clinical Practices (GCP)
is an ethical and scientific quality standard for designing, conducting and
recording trials that involve the participation of human subjects. Compliance
with this standard provides assurance to public that the rights, safety and
well being of trial subjects are protected, consistent with the principles
enshrined in the Declaration of Helsinki and ensures that clinical trial data
are credible.
It has been
widely recognized that India offers unique opportunities for conducting
clinical trials in view of the large patient pool, well- trained and
enthusiastic investigators and premiere medical institutes available in the
country along with considerable low per patient trial cost, as compared to
developed countries.
A need was,
however, felt to develop our own Indian Guidelines to ensure uniform quality of
clinical research throughout the country and to generate data for registration
for new drugs before use in the Indian population. An Expert Committee set up
by Central Drugs Standard Control Organisation (CDSCO) in consultation with clinical
expert has formulated this GCP guideline for generation of clinical data on
drugs.
The Drug
Technical Advisory Board (DTAB), the highest technical body under D&C, Act,
has endorsed adoption of this GCP guideline for streamlining the clinical
studies in India.
I am confident
that this guideline will be immensely useful to research institutions,
investigators, institutional ethics committees and regulators in providing
desired direction. The guideline would also be helpful to companies who may
want to locate their clinical programme in the country.
Place: New Delhi
Dr. S.P.
Agarwal,
Director General of Health Services
Introduction
1. Definitions
2. Pre-requisites for the study
2.1. Investigational Pharmaceutical Product
2.2. Pre-Clinical supporting data
2.3. Protocol
2.3.1. Relevant components of Protocol
2.3.1.1. General Information
2.3.1.2. Objectives and Justification
2.3.1.3. Ethical Considerations
2.3.1.4. Study design
2.3.1.5. Inclusion, Exclusion & Withdrawal of Subjects
2.3.1.6. Handling of the Product(s)
2.3.1.7. Assessment of Efficacy
2.3.1.8. Assessment of Safety
2.3.1.9. Statistics
2.3.1.10. Data handling and management
2.3.1.11. Quality control and quality assurance
2.3.1.12. Finance and Insurance
2.3.1.13. Publication policy
2.3.1.14. Evaluation
2.3.2. Supplementaries and appendices:
2.4. Ethical & Safety Considerations
2.4.1. Ethical Principles
2.4.2. Ethics Committee
2.4.2.1. Basic Responsibilities
2.4.2.2. Composition
2.4.2.3. Terms of Reference
2.4.2.4. Review Procedures
2.4.2.5. Submission of Application
2.4.2.6. Decision Making Process
2.4.2.7. Interim Review
2.4.2.8. Record Keeping
2.4.2.9. Special Considerations
2.4.3. Informed Consent Process
2.4.3.1. Informed Consent of Subject
2.4.3.2. Essential information for prospective research subjects
2.4.3.3. Informed Consent in Non-Therapeutic Study
2.4.4. Essential Information on Confidentiality for Prospective Research Subjects
2.4.5. Compensation for Participation
2.4.6. Selection of Special Groups As Research Subject
2.4.6.1. Pregnant or nursing women
2.4.6.2. Children
2.4.6.3. Vulnerable groups
2.4.7. Compensation for Accidental Injury
2.4.7.1. Obligation of the sponsor to pay
3. Responsibilities
3.1. Sponsor
3.1.1. Investigator and Institution Selection
3.1.2. Contract
3.1.3. SOP
3.1.4. Allocation of duties and responsibilities
3.1.5. Study management, data handling and record keeping
3.1.6. Compensation for Participation
3.1.7. Confirmation of review by the Ethics Committee
3.1.8. Information on Investigational Products
3.1.9. Supply, storage and handling of Pharmaceutical Products
3.1.10 Safety Information
3.1.11 Adverse Drug Reaction Reporting
3.1.12 Study Reports
3.1.13 Monitoring
3.1.14 Audit
3.1.15 Multicentre Studies
3.1.16 Premature Termination or Suspension of a Study
3.1.17 Role of Foreign Sponsor
3.2. The Monitor
3.2.1. Qualifications
3.2.2. Responsibilities
3.3. Investigator
3.3.1. Qualifications
3.3.2. Medical Care of the Study Subjects
3.3.3. Monitoring and Auditing of records
3.3.4. Communication with Ethic Committee
3.3.5. Compliance with the Protocol
3.3.6. Investigational Product(s)
3.3.7. Selection and recruitment of Study Subjects
3.3.8. Records/Reports
4. Record Keeping and Data Handling
4.1. Documentation
4.2. Corrections
4.3. Electronic Data Processing
4.4. Validation of Electronic Data Processing Systems
4.5. Language
4.6. Responsibility of Investigator
4.7. Responsibilities of Sponsor and Monitor
5. Quality Assurance
6. Statistics
6.1. Role of Biostatistician
6.2. Study design
6.2.1. Randomisation and Blinding
6.3. Statistical Analysis
7. Special Concerns
7.1. Clinical Trials of Vaccines
7.1.1. Phases of Vaccine Trials
7.1.2. Guidelines
7.2. Clinical Trials of contraceptives
7.3. Clinical Trials with Surgical Procedures / Medical devices.
7.3.1. Definitions
7.3.2. Guidelines
7.4. Clinical Trials for Diagnostic agents – Use of radioactive materials and X-rays
7.4.1. Guidelines
7.5. Clinical Trials of Herbal Remedies and Medicinal Plants
7.5.1. Categories of Herbal Product
7.5.2. Guidelines
Appendices
Appendix I: Declaration of Helsinki
Appendix II: Schedule Y
Appendix III: Format for submission of Pre-clinical and clinical data for r-DNA based vaccines, diagnostics and other biologicals.
Appendix IV: Investigator’s Brochure
Appendix V: Essential Documents
Good Clinical
Practice Guidelines
The history of Good Clinical Practice (GCP) statute traces back to one of the oldest enduring traditions in the history of medicine: The Hippocratic Oath. As the guiding ethical code it is primarily known for its edict to do no harm to the patient. However, the complexities of modern medicine research necessitate a more elaborate set of guidelines that address a Physician’s ethical and scientific responsibilities such as obtaining informed consent or disclosing risk while involved in biomedical research.
Good Clinical Practice is a set of guidelines for biomedical studies which encompasses the design, conduct, termination, audit, analysis, reporting and documentation of the studies involving human subjects. The fundamental tenet of GCP is that in research on man, the interest of science and society should never take precedence over considerations related to the well being of the study subject. It aims to ensure that the studies are scientifically and ethically sound and that the clinical properties of the pharmaceutical substances under investigation are properly documented. The guidelines seek to establish two cardinal principles: protection of the rights of human subjects and authenticity of biomedical data generated.
These guidelines have been evolved with consideration of WHO, ICH, USFDA and European GCP guidelines as well as the Ethical Guidelines for Biomedical research on Human Subjects issued by the Indian Council of Medical Research. They should be followed for carrying out all biomedical research in India at all stages of drug development, whether prior or subsequent to product registration in India.
Act
Wherever relevant, the Act means Drugs & Cosmetics Act 1940 (23 of 1940) and the Rules made thereunder.
Adverse Event
(AE)
Any untoward medical occurrence (including a symptom / disease or an abnormal laboratory finding) during treatment with a pharmaceutical product in a patient or a human volunteer that does not necessarily have a relationship with the treatment being given. Also see Serious Adverse Event
Adverse Drug
Reaction (ADR)
(a) In case of approved pharmaceutical products: A noxious and unintended response at doses normally used or tested in humans
(b) In case of new unregistered pharmaceutical products (or those products which are not yet approved for the medical condition where they are being tested): A noxious and unintended response at any dose(s)
The phrase ADR differs from AE, in case of an ADR there appears to be a reasonable possibility that the adverse event is related with the medicinal product being studied.
In clinical trials, an untoward medical occurrence seemingly caused by overdosing, abuse / dependence and interactions with other medicinal products is also considered as an ADR.
Adverse drug reactions are type A (pharmacological) or type B (idiosyncratic). Type A reactions represent an augmentation of the pharmacological actions of a drug. They are dose-dependent and are, therefore, readily reversible on reducing the dose or withdrawing the drug. In contrast, type B adverse reactions are bizarre and cannot be predicted from the known pharmacology of the drug.
Audit of a Trial
A systematic verification of the study, carried out by persons not directly involved, such as:
(a) Study related activities to determine consistency with the Protocol
(b) Study data to ensure that there are no contradictions on Source Documents. The audit should also compare data on the Source Documents with the interim or final report. It should also aim to find out if practices were employed in the development of data that would impair their validity.
(c) Compliance with the adopted Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs)
A method of “control experimentation” in which one or more parties involved are not informed of the treatment being given. Single blind refers to the study subject(s) being unaware, while Double blind refers to the study subject(s) and/or investigator(s), monitor, data analyst(s) are being unaware of the treatment assigned.
A document designed in consonance with the Protocol, to record data and other information on each trial subject. The Case Record Form should be in such a form and format that allows accurate input, presentation, verification, audit and inspection of the recorded data. A CRF may be in printed or electronic format.
Human/Clinical
Pharmacology trials (Phase I)
The objective of phase I of trials is to determine the maximum tolerated dose in humans; pharmacodynamic effect, adverse reactions, if any, with their nature and intensity; and pharmacokinetic behaviour of the drug as far as possible. These studies are often carried out in healthy adult volunteers using clinical, physiological and biochemical observations. At least 2 subjects should be used on each dose.
Phase I trials are usually carried out by investigators trained in clinical pharmacology and having the necessary facilities to closely observe and monitor the subjects. These may be carried out at one or two centres.
Exploratory
trials (Phase II)
In phase II trials a limited number of patients are studied carefully to determine possible therapeutic uses, effective dose range and further evaluation of safety and pharmacokinetics. Normally 10-12 patients should be studied at each dose level. These studies are usually limited to 3-4 centres and carried out by clinicians specialized on the concerned therapeutic areas and having adequate facilities to perform the necessary investigations for efficacy and safety.
Confirmatory
trials (Phase III)
The purpose of these trials is to obtain sufficient evidence about the efficacy and safety of the drug in a larger number of patients, generally in comparison with a standard drug and/or a placebo as appropriate. These trials may be carried out by clinicians in the concerned therapeutic areas, having facilities appropriate to the protocol. If the drug is already approved/marketed in other countries, phase III data should generally be obtained on at least 100 patients distributed over 3-4 centres primarily to confirm the efficacy and safety of the drug, in Indian patients when used as recommended in the product monograph for the claims made.
Data on ADRs observed during clinical use of the drug should be reported along with a report on its efficacy in the prescribed format. The selection of clinicians for such monitoring and supply of drug to them will need approval of the licensing authority under Rule 21 of the Act.
Phase IV
Studies performed after marketing of the pharmaceutical product. Trials in phase IV are carried out on the basis of the product characteristics on which the marketing authorization was granted and are normally in the form of post-marketing surveillance, assessment of therapeutic value, treatment strategies used and safety profile. Phase IV studies should use the same scientific and ethical standards as applied in pre-marketing studies.
After a product has been placed on the market, clinical trials designed to explore new indications, new methods of administration or new combinations, etc. are normally considered as trials for new pharmaceutical products.
A pharmaceutical product (including placebo) used as a reference in a clinical trial.
Maintenance of privacy of study subjects including their personal identity and all medical information, from individuals other than those prescribed in the Protocol. Confidentiality also covers the prevention of disclosure of sponsor’s proprietary information to unauthorised persons.
Clinical Research
Organisation (CRO)
An organisation to which the sponsor may transfer or delegate some or all of the tasks, duties and / or obligations regarding a Clinical Study. All such contractual transfers of obligations should be defined in writing. A CRO is a scientific body – commercial, academic or other.
Contract
A written, dated and signed document describing the agreement between two or more parties involved in a biomedical study, namely Investigator, Sponsor, Institution. Typically, a contract sets out delegation / distribution of responsibilities, financial arrangements and other pertinent terms. The “Protocol” may form the basis of “Contract”.
Documentation
All records (including written documents,
electronic, magnetic or optical records, scans, x-rays etc.) that describe or
record the methods, conduct and results of the study, and the actions taken. The Documents include Protocol, copies of
submissions and approvals from the office of the Drugs Controller General of
India, ethics committee, investigator(s)’ particulars, consent forms, monitor
reports, audit certificates, relevant letters, reference ranges, raw data,
completed CRFs and the final report. Also see: Essential Documents
Escape Treatment
A supplementary treatment, usually given to alleviate pain in placebo-controlled trials, to relieve the trial subject of the symptoms caused by the investigated disease in a study.
Essential Documents
The Documents that permit evaluation of the conduct of a study and the quality of the data generated. See Appendix V.
Ethics Committee
An independent review board or committee comprising of medical / scientific and non-medical / non-scientific members, whose responsibility is to verify the protection of the rights, safety and well-being of human subjects involved in a study. The independent review provides public reassurance by objectively, independently and impartially reviewing and approving the “Protocol”, the suitability of the investigator(s), facilities, methods and material to be used for obtaining and documenting “Informed Consent” of the study subjects and adequacy of confidentiality safeguards.
Final Report
A complete and comprehensive description of the study after its completion. It includes description of experimental and statistical methods and materials, presentation and evaluation of the results, statistical analyses and a critical ethical, statistical and clinical appraisal. The Investigator’s declaration closing the study is a part of the Final Report.
Good Clinical Practice (GCP)
It is a standard for clinical studies or trials that encompasses the design, conduct, monitoring, termination, audit, analyses, reporting and documentation of the studies. It ensures that the studies are implemented and reported in such a manner that there is public assurance that the data are credible, accurate and that the rights, integrity and confidentiality of the subjects are protected. GCP aims to ensure that the studies are scientifically authentic and that the clinical properties of the “Investigational Product” are properly documented.
Impartial Witness
Informed Consent
Voluntary written assent of a subject’s willingness to participate in a particular study and in its documentation. The confirmation is sought only after information about the trial including an explanation of its status as research, its objectives, potential benefits, risks and inconveniences, alternative treatment that may be available and of the subject’s rights and responsibilities has been provided to the potential subject.
Inspection
An official review/ examination conducted by regulatory authority(ies) of the documents, facilities, records and any other resources that are deemed by the authority(ies) to be related to the study. The inspection may be carried out at the site of the trial, at the sponsor’s / or CRO’s facilities in order to verify adherence to GCP as set out in these documents.
Institution
Any public or private medical facility where a clinical study is conducted.
Investigator
A person responsible for the conduct of the study at the trial site. Investigator is responsible for the rights, health and welfare of the study subjects. In case the study is conducted by a team of investigators at the study site then the designated leader of the team should be the Principal Investigator. Also see Principal Investigator, Sub-investigator.
Investigational Labelling
Labelling developed specifically for products involved in
the study.
Investigational Product
A pharmaceutical product (including the Comparator Product) being tested or used as reference in a clinical study. An Investigational Product may be an active chemical entity or a formulated dosage form.
Investigator’s Brochure
A collection of data (including justification for the proposed study) for the Investigator consisting of all the clinical as well as non-clinical information available on the Investigational Product(s) known prior to the onset of the trial. There should be adequate data to justify the nature, scale and duration of the proposed trial and to evaluate the potential safety and need for special precautions. If new substantially relevant data is generated during the trial, the information in the Investigator’s Brochure must be updated. See Appendix IV.
Monitor
A person appointed by the Sponsor or Contract Research Organisation (CRO) for monitoring and reporting the progress of the trial and for verification of data. The monitor ensures that the trial is conducted, recorded and reported in accordance with the Protocol, Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs), Good Clinical Practice (GCP) and the applicable regulatory requirements.
Multi-Centric Study
A clinical trial conducted according to one single protocol in which the trial is taking place at different investigational sites, therefore carried out by more than one investigator.
Non-Clinical
Study
Biomedical studies that are not performed on human subjects.
Non-Therapeutic
Study
A study in which there is no anticipated direct clinical benefit to the Subject(s). Such studies, unless an exception is justified, should be conducted in patient(s) having a disease or condition for which the Investigational Product is intended. Subject(s) in these studies should be particularly closely monitored and should be withdrawn if they appear to be unduly distressed.
Pharmaceutical
Product(s)
Any substance or combination of substances which has a therapeutic, prophylactic or diagnostic purpose or is intended to modify physiological functions, and presented in a dosage form suitable for administration to humans.
Principal Investigator
The investigator who has the responsibility to co-ordinate between the different Investigators involved in a study at one site or different sites in case of a multi-center study.
Protocol
A document that states the background, objectives, rationale, design, methodology (including the methods for dealing with AEs, withdrawals etc.) and statistical considerations of the study. It also states the conditions under which the study shall be performed and managed.
A list of items to be included in the Protocol is compiled in a subsequent chapter.
The content and format of the protocol should take into consideration the adopted SOPs, the regulatory requirements and the guiding principles of GCP.
The term Protocol, unless otherwise specified, relates to the latest amended version of the document, read in conjunction with all its appendices and enclosures.
Protocol
Amendment(s)
Any changes or
formal clarifications appended to the protocol. All Protocol Amendments should be agreed upon and signed by the
persons who were the signatories to the Protocol.
Quality
Assurance (QA)
Systems and
processes established to ensure that the trial is performed and the data are
generated in compliance with GCP. QA is
validated through in-process Quality Control and in and post-process auditing
of clinical trial process as well as data.
Quality
Control (QC)
The operational techniques and activities undertaken within the system of QA to verify that the requirements for quality of the trial related activities have been fulfilled. QC activities concern everybody involved with planning, conducting, monitoring, evaluating, data handling and reporting.
The objective of QC is to avoid exposure of study subjects to unnecessary risks and to avoid false conclusions being drawn from unreliable data.
The process of assigning study subjects to either the treatment or the control group. Randomisation gives all subjects the same chance of being in either group in order to reduce bias.
Regulatory
Authority
The Drugs Controller General of India or an office nominated by him is the regulatory authority for the purpose of carrying out Clinical Trials in India. The Regulatory Authority approves the study Protocol, reviews the submitted data and conducts inspections.
Raw Data
It refers to all
records or certified copies of the original clinical and laboratory findings or
other activities in a clinical study necessary for the reconstruction and
evaluation of the trial. Also see Source
Data.
Serious Adverse
Event (SAE) or Serious Adverse Drug Reaction (SADR)
An AE or ADR that is associated with death, inpatient hospitalisation (in case the study was being conducted on out-patients), prolongation of hospitalisation (in case the study was being conducted on in-patients), persistent or significant disability or incapacity, a congenital anomaly or birth defect, or is otherwise life threatening.
Schedule
Unless repugnant to the context, the
Schedule means Schedule Y to the Drugs
& Cosmetics Rules. (Reproduced here
at Appendix II)
Source Data
Original
documents (or their verified and certified copies) necessary for evaluation of
the Clinical Trial. These documents may
include Study Subjects’ files, recordings from automated instruments, tracings,
X-Ray and other films, laboratory notes, photographic negatives, magnetic
media, hospital records, clinical and office charts, Subjects’ diaries,
evaluation check-lists, and pharmacy dispensing records.
Sponsor
An individual or
a company or an institution that takes the responsibility for the initiation,
management and / or financing of a Clinical Study. An Investigator who independently initiates and takes full
responsibility for a trial automatically assumes the role of a Sponsor.
Study Product
Any Pharmaceutical Product or Comparator Product used in a clinical study.
Sub-Investigator
See Co-Investigator
Subject Files /
Patient Files
A file
containing demographic and medical information about a study subject. It includes hospital files, consultation
records or special subject files allowing the authenticity of the information
presented in CRF to be verified and where necessary allowing it to be completed
or corrected. The conditions regulating
the use and consultation of such documents must be honoured as prescribed under
Confidentiality.
Study Subject
(Subject)
An individual
participating in a clinical trial as a recipient of the Investigational Product.
A Study Subject may be a healthy person
volunteering in a trial or a person with a medical condition that is unrelated
to the use of the Investigational Product
or a person whose medical condition is relevant to the use of the Investigational Product.
Standard
Operating Procedures (SOP)
Standard elaborate written instructions to achieve uniformity of performance in the management of clinical studies. SOPs provide a general framework for the efficient implementation and performance of all the functions and activities related to a particular study.
Subject
Identification Code
A unique identification number / code assigned by the Investigator to each Study Subject to protect the Subject’s identity. Subject Identification Code is used in lieu of the Subject’s name for all matters related to the study.
Study Management
Validation of Study: The process of proving, in accordance with the principles of Good Clinical Practice, that any procedure, process equipment, material, activity or system actually leads to the expected results
Prerequisites for the study
2.1. Investigational
Pharmaceutical Product:
Physical, chemical, pharmaceutical properties and the formulation of the Investigational Product must be documented to permit appropriate safety measures to be taken during the course of a study. Instructions for the storage and handling of the dosage form should be documented. Any structural similarity(ies) to the other known compounds should be mentioned.
2.2. Pre-clinical
supporting data
The available pre-clinical data and clinical information on the Investigational Product should be adequate and convincing to support the proposed study.
2.3. Protocol
A well designed study relies predominantly on a thoroughly considered, well-structured and complete protocol.
2.3.1. Relevant
components of Protocol
2.3.1.1. General
information
a. Protocol title, protocol identifying number and date. All amendments should bear amendment number and date(s)
b. Name, address & contact numbers of the sponsor and the monitor / CRO
c. Name and title of the persons authorised to sign the protocol and the protocol amendments for the sponsor
d. Name, title, address and contact numbers of the sponsor's medical expert for the study
e. Name(s), title(s), address(es) and contact numbers of the investigator(s) who is / are responsible for conducting the study, along with their consent letter(s)
f. Name(s), address(es) and contact numbers of the institution(s) - clinical laboratories and / or other medical and technical departments along with the particulars of the head(s) of the institution(s) and the relevant department(s)
2.3.1.2. Objectives and Justification
a. Aims and objectives of the study, indicating the Phase to which the study corresponds
b. Name and description of the investigational product(s)
c. A summary of findings from non-clinical studies that potentially have clinical significance and from clinical studies that are relevant to the study
d. Summary of the known and potential risks and benefits, if any, to human subjects
e. Description of and justification for the route of administration, dosage regimen and treatment periods for the pharmaceutical product being studied and the product being used as control. Dose-response relationships should be considered and stated.
f. A statement that the study will be conducted in compliance with the protocol, GCP and the applicable regulatory requirements
g. Description of the inclusion & exclusion criteria of the study population
h. References to the literature and data that are relevant to the study and that provide background for the study
2.3.1.3. Ethical
Considerations
a. General ethical considerations related to the study
b. Description of how patients / healthy volunteers will be informed and how their consent will be obtained
c. Possible reasons for not seeking informed consent
2.3.1.4. Study design
The scientific integrity of the study and the credibility of the data from the study depend substantially on the study design. Description of the study design should include:
a. Specific statement of primary and secondary end points, if any, to be measured during the study
b. Description of the type of the study (randomised, comparative, blinded, open, placebo controlled), study design (parallel groups, cross-over technique), blinding technique (double-blind, single-blind), randomisation (method and procedure) and placebo controlled.
c. A schematic diagram of the study design, procedures and stages
d. Medications/treatments permitted (including rescue medications) and not permitted before and / or during the study
e. A description of the study treatments, dosage regimen, route of administration and the dosage form of the investigational product and the control proposed during the study
f. A description of the manner of packaging and labelling of the investigational product
g. Duration of the subject participation and a description of the sequence of all study periods including follow-up, if any
h. Proposed date of initiation of the study
i. Justification of the time-schedules e.g. in the light of how far the safety of the active ingredients, medicinal products has been tested, the time course of the disease in question
j. Discontinuation criteria for study subjects and instructions on terminating or suspending the whole study or a part of the study
k. Accountability procedures for the investigational products including the comparator product
l. Maintenance of study treatment randomisation codes and procedures for breaking codes
m. Documentation of any decoding that may occur during the study
n. Procedures for monitoring subjects’ compliance
2.3.1.5. Inclusion,
Exclusion and Withdrawal of Subjects
a. Subject inclusion criteria: specifications of the subjects (patients / healthy volunteers) including age, gender, ethnic groups, prognostic factors, diagnostic admission criteria etc. should be clearly mentioned where relevant.
b. Subject exclusion criteria, including an exhaustive statement on criteria for pre-admission exclusions
c. Subject withdrawal criteria (i.e. terminating investigational product treatment / study treatment) and procedures specifying – when and how to withdraw subjects from the treatment, type and timing of the data to be collected from withdrawn subjects, whether and how subjects are to be replaced and the follow-up on the withdrawn subjects
d. Statistical justification for the number of Subjects to be included in the Study
2.3.1.6. Handling
of the Product(s)
a. Measures to be implemented to ensure the safe handling and storage of the pharmaceutical products.
b. System to be followed for labelling of the product(s) (code numbering etc.)
c. The label should necessarily contain the following information: the words - “For Clinical Studies only”, the name or a code number of the study, name and contact numbers of the investigator, name of the institution, subject’s identification code.
2.3.1.7. Assessment
of Efficacy
a. Specifications of the effect parameters to be used
b. Description of how effects are measured and recorded
c. Time and periodicity of effect recording
d. Description of special analyses and / tests to be carried out (pharmacokinetic, clinical, laboratory, radiological etc.)
2.3.1.8. Assessment
of Safety
a. Specifications of safety parameters
b. Methods and periodicity for assessing and recording safety parameters
c. Procedures for eliciting reports of and for recording and reporting adverse drug reactions and / or adverse events and inter-current illnesses
d. Type and duration of the follow-up of the subjects after adverse events
e. Information on establishment of the study-code, where it will be kept and when, how and by whom it can be broken in the event of an emergency
2.3.1.9. Statistics
a. Description of the statistical methods to be employed, including timing of any planned interim analysis
b. Number of study subjects needed to achieve the study objective, and statistical considerations on which the proposed number of subjects is based
c. Detailed break-up of the number of subjects planned to be enrolled at each study site (in case of multi-center studies)
d. The level of statistical significance to be used
e. Procedures for managing missing data, unused data and unauthentic data
f. Procedures for reporting any deviations from the original statistical plan (any deviations from the original statistical plan should be stated and justified in protocol and / in the final report, as appropriate)
g. Selection of the subjects to be included in the final analyses (e.g. all randomized subjects / all dosed subjects / all eligible subjects / evaluable subjects
2.3.1.10. Data handling and management
A statement should be clearly made in the protocol that “The investigator(s) / institution(s) will permit study related monitoring, audits, ethics committee review and regulatory inspection(s) providing direct access to source data / documents”.
A copy of the CRF should be included in the protocol. Besides, the following details should be given:
a. Procedures for handling and processing records of effects and adverse events to the product(s) under study
b. Procedures for the keeping of patient lists and patient records for each individual taking part in the study. Records should facilitate easy identification of the individual subjects.
2.3.1.11.
Quality control and
quality assurance
a. A meticulous and specified plan for the various steps and procedures for the purpose of controlling and monitoring the study most effectively
b. Specifications and instructions for anticipated deviations from the protocol
c. Allocation of duties and responsibilities with-in the research team and their co-ordination
d. Instructions to staff including study description (the way the study is to be conducted and the procedures for drug usage and administration)
e. Addresses and contact numbers etc. enabling any staff member to contact the research team at any hour
f. Considerations of confidentiality problems, if any arise
g. Quality control of methods and evaluation procedures
2.3.1.12. Finance and insurance
a. All financial aspects of conducting and reporting a study may be arranged and a budget made out.
b. Information should be available about the sources of economic support (e.g. foundations, private or public funds, sponsor / manufacturer). Likewise it should be stated how the expenditures should be distributed e.g. payment to subjects, refunding expenses of the subjects, payments for special tests, technical assistance, purchase of apparatus, possible fee to or reimbursement of the members of the research team, payment of the investigator / institution etc.)
c. The financial arrangement between the sponsor, the individual researcher(s) / manufacturer involved, institution and the investigator(s) in case such information is not stated explicitly
d. Study Subjects should be satisfactorily insured against any injury caused by the study
e. The liability of the involved parties (investigator, sponsor / manufacturer, institution(s) etc.) must be clearly agreed and stated before the start of the study
2.3.1.13. Publication
policy
A publication policy, if not addressed in a separate agreement, should be described in the protocol.
2.3.1.14. Evaluation
a. A specified account for how the response is to be evaluated
b. Methods of computation and calculation of effects
c. Description of how to deal with and report subjects withdrawn from / dropped out of the study
2.3.2. Supplementaries
and appendices:
The following documents should be appended with the protocol:
a. Information to the Study Subjects and the mode of providing it
b. Instructions to staff
c. Descriptions of special procedures
2.4. Ethical & Safety Considerations
2.4.1. Ethical
Principles
All research involving human subjects should be conducted in accordance with the ethical principles contained in the current revision of Declaration of Helsinki (see Appendix 1) and should respect three basic principles, namely justice, respect for persons, beneficence (to maximize benefits and to minimize harms and wrongs) and non malaficence (to do no harm) as defined by “Ethical Guidelines for Biomedical Research on Human Subjects” issued by the Indian Council of Medical Research and any other laws and regulations of the country, which ensure a greater protection for subjects.
The following principles are to be followed:
a. Principles of essentiality whereby, the research entailing the use of human subjects is considered to be absolutely essential after a due consideration of all alternatives in the light of the existing knowledge in the proposed area of research and after the proposed research has been duly vetted and considered by an appropriate and responsible body of persons who are external to the particular research and who, after careful consideration, come to the conclusion that the said research is necessary for the advancement of knowledge and for the benefit of all members of the human species and for the ecological and environmental well being of the planet.
b. Principles of voluntariness, informed consent and community agreement whereby, Study Subjects are fully apprised of the Study and the impact and risk of such Study on the Study Subjects and others; and whereby the research subjects retain the right to abstain from further participation in the research irrespective of any legal or other obligation that may have been entered into by them or by someone on their behalf, subject to only minimal restitutive obligations of any advance consideration received and outstanding.
c. Principles of non-exploitation whereby as a general rule, research subjects are remunerated for their involvement in the research or experiment; and, irrespective of the social and economic condition or status, or literacy or educational levels attained by the research subjects kept fully apprised of all the dangers arising in and out of the research so that they can appreciate all the physical and psychological risks as well as moral implications of the research whether to themselves or others, including those yet to be born.
d. Principles of privacy and confidentiality whereby, the identity and records of the human subjects of the research or experiment are as far as possible kept confidential; and that no details about identity of said human subjects, which would result in the disclosure of their identity, are disclosed without valid scientific and legal reasons which may be essential for the purposes of therapeutics or other interventions, without the specific consent in writing of the human subject concerned, or someone authorised on their behalf; and after ensuring that the said human subject does not suffer from any form of hardship, discrimination or stigmatisation as a consequence of having participated in the research or experiment.
e. Principles of precaution and risk minimisation whereby due care and caution is taken at all stages of the research and experiment (from its inception as a research idea, its subsequent research design, the conduct of the research or experiment and its applicative use) to ensure that the research subject and those affected by it are put to the minimum risk, suffer from no irreversible adverse effects and, generally, benefit from and by the research or experiment.
f. Principles of professional competence whereby, the research is conducted at all times by competent and qualified persons, who act with total integrity and impartiality and who have been made aware of, and mindful of, the ethical considerations to be borne in mind in respect of such Study.
f. Principles of accountability and transparency whereby, the research or experiment will be conducted in a fair, honest, impartial and transparent manner, after full disclosure is made by those associated with the Study of each aspect of their interest in the Study, and any conflict of interest that may exist; and whereby, subject to the principles of privacy and confidentiality and the rights of the researcher, full and complete records of the research inclusive of data and notes are retained for such reasonable period as may be prescribed or considered necessary for the purposes of post-research monitoring, evaluation of the research, conducting further research (whether by the initial researcher or otherwise) and in order to make such records available for scrutiny by the appropriate legal and administrative authority, if necessary.
h. Principles of the maximisation of the public interest and of distributive justice whereby, the research or experiment and its subsequent applicative use are conducted and used to benefit all human kind and not just those who are socially better off but also the least advantaged; and in particular, the research subject themselves.
i. Principles of institutional arrangements whereby, there shall be a duty on all persons connected with the research to ensure that all the procedures required to be complied with and all institutional arrangements required to be made in respect of the research and its subsequent use or application are duly made in a bonafide and transparent manner; and to take all appropriate steps to ensure that research reports, materials and data connected with the research are duly preserved and archived.
j. Principles of public domain whereby, the research and any further research, experimentation or evaluation in response to, and emanating from such research is brought into the public domain so that its results are generally made known through scientific and other publications subject to such rights as are available to the researcher and those associated with the research under the law in force at that time.
k. Principles of totality of responsibility whereby the professional and moral responsibility, for the due observance of all the principles, guidelines or prescriptions laid down generally or in respect of the research or experiment in question, devolves on all those directly or indirectly connected with the research or experiment including the researchers, those responsible for funding or contributing to the funding of the research, the institution or institutions where the research is conducted and the various persons, groups or undertakings who sponsor, use or derive benefit from the research, market the product (if any) or prescribe its use so that, inter alia, the effect of the research or experiment is duly monitored and constantly subject to review and remedial action at all stages of the research and experiment and its future use.
l. Principles of compliance whereby, there is a general and positive duty on all persons, conducting, associated or connected with any research entailing the use of a human subject to ensure that both the letter and the spirit of these guidelines, as well as any other norms, directions and guidelines which have been specifically laid down or prescribed and which are applicable for that area of research or experimentation, are scrupulously observed and duly complied with.
2.4.2. Ethics Committee:
The sponsor and / or investigator should seek the opinion of an independent Ethics Committee regarding suitability of the Protocol, methods and documents to be used in recruitment of Subjects and obtaining their Informed Consent including adequacy of the information being provided to the Subjects. The Ethics Committees are entrusted not only with the initial view of the proposed research protocols prior to initiation of the projects but also have a continuing responsibility of regular monitoring for the compliance of the Ethics of the approved programmes till the same are completed. Such an ongoing review is in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki and all the international guidelines for biomedical research
2.4.2.1
Basic Responsibilities
The basic responsibility of an IEC is to ensure a competent review of all ethical aspects of the project proposals received and execute the same free from any bias and influence that could affect their objectivity.
The IECs should specify in writing the authority under which the Committee is established, membership requirements, the terms of reference, the conditions of appointment, the offices and the quorum requirements. The responsibilities of an IEC can be defined as follows :
a. To protect the dignity, rights and well being of the potential research participants.
b. To
ensure that universal ethical values and international scientific standards are
expressed in terms of local community values and customs.
c. To assist in the development and the education of a research community responsive to local health care requirements
2.4.2.2.
Composition
a. IEC should be multidisciplinary and multi-sectorial in composition. Independence and competence are the two hallmarks of an IEC.
b. The number of persons in an ethical committee be kept fairly small (5-7 members). It is generally accepted that a minimum of five persons is required to compose a quorum. There is no specific recommendation for a widely acceptable maximum number of persons but it should be kept in mind that too large a Committee will make it difficult in reaching consensus opinion. 12 to 15 is the maximum recommended number
c. The Chairperson of the Committee should preferably be from outside the Institution and not head of the same Institution to maintain the independence of the Committee. The Member Secretary who generally belongs to the same Institution should conduct the business of the Committee. Other members should be a mix of medical/non-medical, scientific and non-scientific persons including lay public to reflect the differed viewpoints. The composition may be as follows :-
1. Chairperson
2. 1-2 basic medical scientists (preferably one pharmacologists).
3. 1-2 clinicians from various Institutes
4. One legal expert or retired judge
5. One social scientist / representative of non-governmental voluntary agency
6. One philosopher / ethicist / theologian
7. One lay person from the community
8. Member Secretary
d. The ethical committee at any institution can have as its members, individuals from other institutions or communities if required. There should be adequate representation of age, gender, community; etc. in the Committee to safeguard the interests and welfare of all sections of the community/society. Members should be aware of local, social and cultural norms, as this is the most important social control mechanism. If required subject experts could be invited to offer their views.
2.4.2.3. Terms of
Reference
The IEC members should be made aware of their role and responsibilities as committee members. Any change in the regulatory requirements should be brought to their attention and they should be kept abreast of all national and international developments in this regard. The Terms of References should also include a statement on Terms of Appointment with reference to the duration of the term of membership, the policy for removal, replacement and resignation procedure etc. Each Committee should have its own operating procedures available with each member.
2.4.2.4. Review
Procedures
The Ethics Committee should review every research proposal on human subjects. It should ensure that a scientific evaluation has been completed before ethical review is taken up. The Committee should evaluate the possible risks to the subjects with proper justification, the expected benefits and adequacy of documentation for ensuring privacy, confidentiality and justice issues. The ethical review should be done through formal meetings and should not resort to decisions through circulation of proposals.
2.4.2.5. Submission
of Application
The researcher should submit an appropriate application to the IEC in a prescribed format along with the study protocol at least three weeks in advance. The protocol should include the following:
1. Clear research objectives and rationale for undertaking the investigation in human subjects in the light of existing knowledge.
2. Recent curriculum vitae of the Investigators indicating qualification and experience.
3. Subject recruitment procedures.
4. Inclusion and exclusion criteria for entry of subjects in the study.
5. Precise description of methodology of the proposed research, including intended dosages and routes of administration of drugs, planned duration of treatment and details of invasive procedures if any.
6. A description of plans to withdraw or withhold standard therapies in the course of research.
7. The plans for statistical analysis of the study.
8. Procedure for seeking and obtaining informed consent with sample of patient information sheet and informed consent forms in English and vernacular languages.
9. Safety of proposed intervention and any drug or vaccine to be tested, including results of relevant laboratory and animal research.
10. For research carrying more than minimal risk, an account of plans to provide medical therapy for such risk or injury or toxicity due to over-dosage should be included.
11. Proposed compensation and reimbursement of incidental expenses.
12. Storage and maintenance of all data collected during the trial.
13. Plans for publication of results - positive or negative - while maintaining the privacy and confidentiality of the study participants.
14. A statement on probable ethical issues and steps taken to tackle the same.
15. All other relevant documents related to the study protocol including regulatory clearances.
16. Agreement to comply with national and international GCP protocols for clinical trials.
17. Details of Funding agency / Sponsors and fund allocation for the proposed work.
2.4.2.6. Decision
Making Process
The IEC should be able to provide complete and adequate review of the research proposals submitted to them It should meet periodically at frequent intervals to review new proposals, evaluate annual progress of ongoing ones and assess final reports of all research activities involving human beings through a previously scheduled agenda, amended wherever appropriate.
1. The decision must be taken by a broad consensus after the quorum requirements are fulfilled to recommend / reject / suggest modification for a repeat review or advice appropriate steps. The Member Secretary should communicate the decision in writing.
2. A member must voluntarily withdraw from the IEC while making a decision on an application which evokes a conflict of interest which should be indicated in writing to the chairperson prior to the review and should be recorded so in the minutes.
3. If one of the members has her/his own proposal for review, then the member should not participate when the project is discussed.
4. A negative decision should always be supported by clearly defined reasons.
5. An IEC may decide to reverse its positive decision on a study in the event of receiving information that may adversely affect the benefit/risk ratio.
6. The discontinuation of a trial should be ordered if the IEC finds that the goals of the trial have already been achieved midway or unequivocal results are obtained.
7. In case of premature termination of study, notification should include the reasons for termination along with the summary of results conducted till date.
8. The following circumstances require the matter to be brought to the attention of IEC :
a. any amendment to the protocol form the originally approved protocol with proper justification;
b. serious and unexpected adverse events and remedial steps taken to tackle them;
c. any new information that may influence the conduct of the study.
9. If necessary, the applicant/investigator may be invited to present the protocol or offer clarifications in the meeting. Representative of the patient groups or interest groups can be invited during deliberations to offer their viewpoint.
10. Subject experts may be invited to offer their views, but should not take part in the decision making process. However, her/his opinion must be recorded.
11. Meetings are to be minuted which should be approved and signed by the Chairperson.
2.4.2.7. Interim
Review
The IEC should decide and record the special circumstances and the mechanism when an interim review can be resorted-to instead of waiting for the scheduled time of the meeting. However, decisions taken should be brought to the notice of the main committee. This can be done for the following reasons:
i) re-examination of a proposal already examined by the IEC;
ii) research study of a minor nature such as examination of case records etc.;
iii) an urgent proposal of national interest.
2.4.2.8. Record
Keeping
All documentation and communication of an IEC are to be dated, filed and preserved according to written procedures. Strict confidentiality is to be maintained during access and retrieval procedures. Records should be maintained for the following :
i. the Constitution and composition of the IEC;
ii. the curriculum vitae of all IEC members;
iii. standing operating procedures of the IEC;
iv. national and international guidelines;
v. copies of the Protocol, data collection formats, CRFs, investigational brochures etc. submitted for review;
vi. all correspondence with IEC members and investigators regarding application, decision and follow up;
vii. agenda of all IEC meetings;
viii. minutes of all IEC meetings with signature of the Chairperson;
ix. copies of decisions communicated to the applicants;
x. record of all notification issued for premature termination of a study with a summary of the reasons;
xi. final report of the study including microfilms, CDs and Video-recordings.
It is recommended that all records must be safely maintained after the completion / termination of the study for at least a period of 5 years if it is not possible to maintain the same permanently.
2.4.2.9. Special Considerations
While all the above requirements are applicable to biomedical research as a whole irrespective of the speciality of research, there are certain specific concerns pertaining to specialised areas of research which require additional safe guards / protection and specific considerations for the IEC to take note of. Examples of such instances are research involving children, pregnant and lactating women, vulnerable subjects and those with diminished autonomy besides issues pertaining to commercialisation of research and international collaboration. The observations and suggestions of IEC should be given in writing in unambiguous terms in such instances.
2.4.3. Informed Consent Process
2.4.3.1. Informed Consent of Subject :
Prior to the beginning of the Study the Investigator(s) should obtain the Ethics Committee’s approval for the written informed consent form and all information being provided to the Subjects and / or their legal representatives or guardians as well as an impartial witness.
None of the oral and written information concerning the Study, including the written informed consent form, should contain any language that causes the Subject(s) or their legal representatives or guardians to waive or to appear to waive their legal rights, or that releases or appears to release the Investigator, the Institution, the Sponsor or their representatives from their liabilities for any negligence.
The information should be given to the Subjects and / or their legal representatives or guardians in a language and at a level of complexity that is understandable to the Subject(s) in both written and oral form, whenever possible.
Subjects, their legal representatives or guardians should be given ample opportunity and time to enquire about the details of the Study and all questions answered to their satisfaction.
The Investigator(s), Sponsor or staff of the Institution should not coerce or unduly influence a potential Subject to participate or to continue to participate in the Study. Careful consideration should be given to ensuring the freedom of consent obtained from members of a group with a hierarchical structure- such as medical, pharmacy and nursing students, subordinate hospital and laboratory personnel, employees of the pharmaceutical industry, and members of the armed forces. Persons with incurable diseases, in nursing homes, in detention, unemployed or impoverished, in emergency rooms, homeless persons, nomads, refugees and any ethnic or racial minority groups should be considered as vulnerable population whose mode of consent should be carefully considered and approved by the Ethics Committee.
Prior to the Subject’s participation in the Study the written Informed Consent form should be signed and personally dated by
1. (i) The Subject or (ii) if the Subject is incapable of giving an Informed Consent for example children, unconscious or suffering from severe mental illness or disability, by the Subject’s legal representative or guardian or (iii) if the Subject and his legal representative or guardian is unable to read / write,
2. An impartial witness who should be present during the entire informed consent discussion
3. The Investigator
By signing the consent form the witness attests that the information in the consent form and any other written information was accurately explained to, and apparently understood by, the Subject or the Subject’s legal representative or the guardian, and that informed consent was freely given by the Subject or the Subject’s legal representative or the guardian.
The Subject’s legal representative or guardian (if the subject is incapable of giving an Informed Consent for example children, unconscious or suffering from severe mental illness or disability), the inclusion of such patients in the study may be acceptable if the ethics committee is in principle, in agreement, and if the investigator thinks that the participation will promote the welfare and interest of the Subject. The agreement of a legal representative or the guardian that participation will promote the welfare and interest of the Subject should also be recorded with dated signature. If, however, neither the signed Informed Consent nor the witnessed signed verbal consent are possible – this fact must be documented stating reasons by the Investigator and also brought to the knowledge of Ethics Committee without any delay.
2.4.3.2. Essential information for prospective research on subjects : Before requesting an individual's consent to participate in research, the investigator must provide the individual with the following information in the language he or she is able to understand which should not only be scientifically accurate but should also be sensitive to their social and cultural context :
i. the aims and methods of the research;
ii. the expected duration of the subject participation;
iii. the benefits that might reasonably be expected as an outcome of research to the subject or to others;
iv. any alternative procedures or courses of treatment that might be as advantageous to the subject as the procedure or treatment to which she/he is being subjected;
v. any foreseeable risk or discomfort to the subject resulting from participation in the study;
vi. right to prevent use of his/her biological sample (DNA, cell-line, etc.) at any time during the conduct of the research;
vii. the extent to which confidentiality of records could be able to safeguard, confidentiality and the anticipated consequences of breach of confidentiality;
viii. free treatment for research related injury by the investigator / institution;
ix. compensation of subjects for disability or death resulting from such injury;
x. freedom of individual / family to participate and to withdraw from research any time without penalty or loss of benefits which the subject would otherwise be entitled to;
xi. the identity of the research teams and contact persons with address and phone numbers;
xii. foreseeable extent of information on possible current and future uses of the biological material and of the data to be generated from the research and if the material is likely to be used for secondary purposes or would be shared with others, clear mention of the same;
xiii. risk of discovery of biologically sensitive information;
xiv. publication, if any, including photographs and pedigree charts.
The quality of the consent of certain social groups requires careful consideration as their agreement to volunteer may be unduly influenced by the Investigator.
2.4.3.3.
Informed Consent in
Non-Therapeutic Study :
In case of a Non-Therapeutic Study the consent must always be given by the subject. Non-Therapeutic Studies may be conducted in subjects with consent of a legal representative or guardian provided all of the following conditions are fulfilled:
1. The objective of the Study can not be met by means of a trial in Subject(s) who can personally give the informed consent
2. The foreseeable risks to the Subject(s) are low
3. Ethics Committee’s written approval is expressly sought on the inclusion of such Subject(s)
2.4.4. Essential
Information on Confidentiality for Prospective Research Subjects
Safeguarding confidentiality - The investigator must safeguard the confidentiality of research data, which might lead to the identification of the individual subjects. Data of individual subjects can be disclosed only in a court of law under the orders of the presiding judge or in some cases may be required to communicate to drug registration authority or to health authority. Therefore, the limitations in maintaining the confidentiality of data should be anticipated and assessed.
2.4.5. Compensation for Participation
Subjects may be paid for the inconvenience and time present, and should be reimbursed for expenses incurred, in connection with their participation in research. They may also receive free medical services. However, payments should not be so large or the medical services so extensive as to induce prospective subjects to consent to participate in research against their better judgement (inducement). All payments, reimbursement and medical services to be provided to research subjects should be approved by the IEC. Care should be taken :
i. when a guardian is asked to give consent on behalf of an incompetent person, no remuneration should be offered except a refund of out of pocket expenses;
ii. when a subject is withdrawn from research for medical reasons related to the study the subject should get the benefit for full participation;
iii. when a subject withdraws for any other reasons he/she should be paid in proportion to the amount of participation.
Academic institutions conducting research in alliance with industries / commercial companies require a strong review to probe possible conflicts of interest between scientific responsibilities of researchers and business interests (e.g. ownership or part-ownership of a company developing a new product). In cases where the review board/committee determines that a conflict of interest may damage the scientific integrity of a project or cause harm to research participants, the board should advise accordingly. Institutions need self-regulatory processes to monitor, prevent and resolve such conflicts of interest. Prospective participants in research should also be informed of the sponsorship of research, so that they can be aware of the potential for conflicts of interest and commercial aspects of the research. Undue inducement through compensation for individual participants, families and populations should be prohibited. This prohibition however, does not include agreements with individuals, families, groups, communities or populations that foresee technology transfer, local training, joint ventures, provision of health care reimbursement, costs of travel and loss of wages and the possible use of a percentage of any royalties for humanitarian purposes.
2.4.6. Selection of Special Groups As Research Subject
2.4.6.1.
Pregnant or nursing women :
Pregnant or nursing women should in no circumstances be the subject of any research unless the research carries no more than minimal risk to the fetus or nursing infant and the object of the research is to obtain new knowledge about the foetus, pregnancy and lactation. As a general rule, pregnant or nursing women should not be subjects of any clinical trial except such trials as are designed to protect or advance the health of pregnant or nursing women or foetuses or nursing infants, and for which women who are not pregnant or nursing would not be suitable subjects.
a. The justification of participation of these women in clinical trials would be that they should not be deprived arbitrarily of the opportunity to benefit from investigations, drugs, vaccines or other agents that promise therapeutic or preventive benefits. Example of such trials are, to test the efficacy and safety of a drug for reducing perinatal transmission of HIV infection from mother to child, trials for detecting fetal abnormalities and for conditions associated with or aggravated by pregnancy etc. Women should not be encouraged to discontinue nursing for the sake of participation in research and in case she decides to do so, harm of cessation of breast feeding to the nursing child should be properly assessed except in those studies where breast feeding is harmful to the infant.
b. Research related to termination of pregnancy: Pregnant women who desire to undergo Medical Termination of Pregnancy (MTP) could be made subjects for such research as per The Medical Termination of Pregnancy Act, GOI, 1971.
c. Research related to pre-natal diagnostic techniques: In pregnant women such research should be limited to detect the foetal abnormalities or genetic disorders as per the Prenatal Diagnostic Techniques (Regulation and Prevention of Misuse) Act, GOI, 1994 and not for sex determination of the foetus.
2.4.6.2.
Children:
Before undertaking trial in children the investigator must ensure that -
a. children will not be involved in research that could be carried out equally well with adults;
b. the purpose of the research is to obtain knowledge relevant to health needs of children. For clinical evaluation of a new drug the study in children should always be carried out after the phase III clinical trials in adults. It can be studied earlier only if the drug has a therapeutic value in a primary disease of the children;
c. a parent or legal guardian of each child has given proxy consent;
d. the assent of the child should be obtained to the extent of the child's capabilities such as in the case of mature minors, adolescents etc;
e. research should be conducted in settings in which the child and parent can obtain adequate medical and psychological support;
f. interventions intended to provide direct diagnostic, therapeutic or preventive benefit for the individual child subject must be justified in relation to anticipated risks involved in the study and anticipated benefits to society;
g. the child's refusal to participate in research must always be respected unless there is no medically acceptable alternative to the therapy provided/tested, provided the consent has been obtained from parents/guardian;
h. interventions that are intended to provide therapeutic benefit are likely to be at least as advantageous to the individual child subject as any available alternative interventions;
i. the risk presented by interventions not intended to benefit the individual child subject is low when compared to the importance of the knowledge that is to be gained.
2.4.6.3.
Vulnerable groups :
Effort may be made to ensure that individuals or communities invited for research be selected in such a way that the burdens and benefits of the research are equally distributed.
a. research on genetics should not lead to racial inequalities;
b. persons who are economically or socially disadvantaged should not be used to benefit those who are better off than them;
c. rights and welfare of mentally challenged and mentally differently able persons who are incapable of giving informed consent or those with behavioral disorders must be protected.
d. Adequate justification is required for the involvement of subjects such as prisoners, students, subordinates, employees, service personnel etc. who have reduced autonomy as research subjects.
2.4.7. Compensation for Accidental Injury
Research subjects who suffer physical injury as a result of their participation in the Clinical Trial are entitled to financial or other assistance to compensate them equitably for any temporary or permanent impairment or disability subject to confirmation from IEC In case of death, their dependents are entitled to material compensation.
2.4.7.1. Obligation of the sponsor to pay :
The sponsor whether a pharmaceutical company, a government, or an institution, should agree, before the research begins, to provide compensation for any serious sphysical or mental injury for which subjects are entitled to compensation or agree to provide insurance coverage for an unforeseen injury whenever possible.
Responsibilities
3.1. Sponsor:
3.1.1. Investigator and Institution
Selection:
The Sponsor is responsible for selecting the Investigator(s) / Institutions taking into account the appropriateness and availability of the study site and facilities. The Sponsor must assure itself of the Investigator’s qualifications and availability for the entire duration of the Study. If organisation of a co-ordinating committee and / or selection of co-ordinating investigators are to be utilised in multi-centric studies their organisation and / or selection are Sponsor’s responsibilities.
Before entering an agreement with an Investigator(s) / Institution(s) to conduct a Study, the Sponsor should provide the Investigator(s) / Institution(s) with the Protocol and an up-to-date Investigator’s Brochure. Sponsor should provide sufficient time to review the Protocol and the information provided in the Investigator’s Brochure.
3.1.2. Contract
The Sponsor should enter into a formal and legal agreement / contract with the Investigator(s) / Institution(s) on the following terms:
a. To conduct the Study in compliance with GCP, the applicable regulatory requirements and the Protocol agreed to by the Sponsor and given approval / favourable opinion by the Ethics Committee
b. To comply with the procedures for data recording, and reporting
c. To permit monitoring, auditing and inspection
d. To retain the study related essential documents until the Sponsor informs the Investigator(s) / Institution(s) in writing that these documents are no longer needed
The agreement should define the relationship between the investigator and the sponsor in matters such as financial support, fees, honorarium, payments in kind etc.
3.1.3. SOP
The Sponsor should establish detailed Standard Operating Procedures (SOP’s). The Sponsor and the Investigator(s) should sign a copy of the Protocol and the SOPs or an alternative document to confirm their agreement.
3.1.4. Allocation of duties and responsibilities:
Prior to initiating a Study the Sponsor should define and allocate all Study related duties and responsibilities to the respective identified person(s) / organisation(s).
3.1.5. Study management, data handling and
record keeping:
The Sponsor is responsible for securing agreement with all involved parties on the allocation of Protocol related and other responsibilities like:
a. Access to all Study related sites, source data / documents and reports for the purpose of inspection, monitoring and auditing by the authorised parties and inspection by national and foreign regulatory authorities
b. Data processing
c. Breaking of the Code
d. Statistical analysis
e. Preparation of the Study Report
f. Preparation and submission of materials to the Ethics Committee, Regulatory Authorities and any other review bodies
g. Reporting the ADRs, AEs to the Ethics Committee
h. Quality Assurance and Quality Control systems with written SOPs to ensure that the Study is conducted and data are generated, documented (recorded), and reported – in compliance with the Protocol, GCP and the applicable regulatory requirement(s)
It shall be the responsibility of sponsor to make arrangements for safe and secure custody of all study related documents and material for a period of three years after the completion of the study or submission of the data to the regulatory authority(ies) whichever is later.
The Sponsor may consider establishing an Independent Data Monitoring Committee (IDMC) to assess the progress of the Study. This includes the safety data and the critical efficacy endpoints at various intervals, and to recommend to the Sponsor whether to continue, modify, or stop a Study. The IDMC should have written operating procedures and should maintain written records of all its meetings.
3.1.6. Compensation for Participation
Subjects may be paid compensation for participation in accordance with the guidelines listed in 2.4.5.
3.1.7. Confirmation of review by the Ethics
Committee
The Sponsor shall obtain from the Investigator(s) and / or the Institutions
a. The particulars about the members of the Investigator’s / Institution’s Ethics Committee including their names, addresses, qualifications and experience
b. An undertaking that the Ethics Committee is organised and operates according to the GCP and the applicable laws and regulations
c. Documented approval / favourable opinion of the Ethics Committee before the initiation of the Study
d. A copy of the recommendations in case the Ethics Committee conditions its approval upon change(s) in any aspect of the Study such as modification(s) of the Protocol, written Informed Consent Form, any other written information and / or other procedures
e. Ethics Committee’s documents relating to re-evaluations / re-approvals with favourable opinion, and of any withdrawals or suspensions of approval / favourable opinion
3.1.8. Information on Investigational
Products
As a prerequisite to planning of a Study, the Sponsor is responsible for providing the Investigator(s) with an Investigator’s Brochure. The Brochure must contain the available chemical, pharmaceutical, toxicological, pharmacological and clinical data including the available data from previous and ongoing clinical studies regarding the Investigational Product and, where appropriate, the Comparator Product. This information should be accurate and adequate to justify the nature, scale and the duration of the Study. In addition, the Sponsor must bring any relevant new information arising during the period of Study to the attention of the Investigator(s) as well as the Ethics Committee.
3.1.9. Supply, storage and handling of
Pharmaceutical Products
The Sponsor is responsible for supplying the Investigational Product’s, including Comparator(s) and Placebo if applicable. The Products should be manufactured in accordance with the principles of GMPs and they should be suitably packaged in the manner that will protect the product from deterioration and safeguard blinding procedures (if applicable) and should be affixed with appropriate investigational labelling.
The Sponsor should determine the Investigational Product’s acceptable storage conditions, reconstitution procedures and devices for product infusions if any, and communicate them in writing to all involved parties, besides stating them on the Product labels where ever possible.
In case any significant formulation changes are made in the Investigational Product during the course of the Study - the results of any additional studies of the new formulation (e.g. stability, bioavailability, dissolution rate) should be provided to the involved parties to enable them to determine their effects on the pharmacokinetic profile of the Product prior to the use in the Study.
The Sponsor should not supply an Investigator / Institution with the Product until the Sponsor obtains all required documentation (e.g. approval / favourable opinion from Ethics Committee and Regulatory Authorities).
The Sponsor should document procedures and lay down responsibilities for
a. adequate and safe receipt, handling, storage, dispensing of the Product
b. retrieval of unused Product from the Subjects and
c. return of unused Product to the Sponsor (or its alternative disposal procedure).
Sponsor should maintain records for retrieval of Product (e.g. retrieval after study completion, expired product retrieval etc.).
Sponsor should also maintain records of the quantities of Investigational Product with proper batch numbers. The Sponsor should ensure that the Investigator is able to establish a system within his / her Institution for proper management of the Products as per the procedures.
The Sponsor should maintain sufficient samples from each batch and keep the record of their analyses and characteristics for reference, so that if necessary an independent laboratory may be able to recheck the same.
3.1.10. Safety
Information:
Sponsor is responsible for the ongoing safety evaluation of the Product. The Sponsor should promptly notify all concerned of findings that could adversely affect the safety of the Subjects, impact the conduct of the Study or alter the Ethics Committee’s approval / favourable opinion to continue the Study. The Sponsor, together with Investigator(s), should take appropriate measures necessary to safeguard the study subjects.
3.1.11. Adverse
Drug Reaction Reporting:
The Sponsor should provide ADR / AE reporting forms to the Investigator(s) / Institution(s). The Sponsor should expedite the reporting to all concerned (including the Ethics Committee and the regulatory authorities) of all serious and/or unexpected adverse drug reactions.
3.1.12. Study
Reports:
The Sponsor should ensure the preparation and appropriate approval(s) of a comprehensive final clinical study report suitable for regulatory and / or marketing purposes, whether or not the study has been completed. All reports prepared should meet the standards of the GCP guidelines for Format and Content of Clinical Study Reports. The sponsor should also submit any safety updates and / or periodic reports as prescribed by the regulatory authorities.
3.1.13.
Monitoring
Although an extensively written guidance can assure appropriate conduct of the study, the sponsor should ensure that the studies are adequately monitored. The determination of the extent and the nature of monitoring should be based on considerations such as objective, purpose, design, complexity, blinding, size and endpoints of the study. The sponsor must appoint adequately trained monitors or CRO to supervise an ongoing study.
3.1.14. Audit:
Sponsor should perform an audit as a part of QA system. This audit should be conducted with the purpose of being independent and separate from routine monitoring or quality control functions. Audit should evaluate the study conduct and compliance with the protocol, SOPs, GCPs and applicable regulatory requirements. For the purpose of carrying out the audit – the sponsor may appoint individuals qualified by training and experience to conduct audits. The Auditors should be independent of the parties involved in the study and their qualifications should be documented.
The Sponsor should ensure that the auditing is conducted in accordance with the Sponsor’s SOPs on what to audit, how to audit, the frequency of audit and the form & content of audit reports. Auditors should document their observations which should be archived by the Sponsors and made available to the Regulatory Authorities when called for.
Sponsor should initiate prompt action in case it is discovered that any party involved has not entirely complied with the GCP, SOPs, Protocol and / or any applicable regulatory requirements. If monitoring / auditing identifies serious and / or persistent non-compliance - the Sponsor should terminate the defaulting party’s participation in the study and promptly notify to the regulatory authority.
3.1.15.
Multicentre Studies
Since multicentre studies are conducted simultaneously by several investigators at different institutions following the same protocol, the sponsor should make special administrative arrangements for their conduct. These administrative arrangements should provide adequate assurance that the study will be planned and conducted according to GCPs.
The various tasks that may need special consideration include responsibility for commencement and overall performance of the study, supervision of the data, monitoring of the ADRs / AEs and various other policy matters. The functions, responsibilities and mandate of any special committee(s) set up or person(s) should be described in the study protocol, along with the procedure for their nomination.
A co-ordinating committee may be set up or a co-ordinator appointed with responsibility for the control of practical performance and progress of the study and maintaining contact with the regulatory authorities and the ethics committee(s).
Ideally, the studies should begin and end simultaneously at all institutions.
The sponsor should make arrangements to facilitate the communication between investigators at various sites. All investigators and other specialists should be given the training to follow the same protocol and systems. The sponsor should obtain written acceptance of the protocol and its annexes from each of the investigator and institution involved.
The CRFs should be so designed as to record the required data at all multicentre sites. For those investigators who are collecting additional data, supplemental CRFs should be provided to record the additional data.
Before initiation of multi-centre studies the sponsor should carefully define and document the following:
a. ethics committee(s), and the number of ethics committees to be consulted
b. role and responsibilities of the co-ordinating investigators
c. role and responsibilities of the CRO
d. randomisation procedure
e. standardisation and validation of methods of evaluation and analyses of laboratory and diagnostic data at various centres
f. structure and function of a centralised data management set-up
3.1.16.
Premature Termination or Suspension of a Study
In case the sponsor chooses to or is required to terminate prematurely or suspend the study, then the sponsor should notify the investigator(s), institution(s), the ethics committee and the regulatory authorities accordingly. The notification should document the reason(s) for the termination or suspension by the sponsor or by the investigator / institution.
3.1.17. Role of Foreign Sponsor
If the sponsor is a foreign company, organisation or person(s) – it shall appoint a local representative or CRO to fulfil the appropriate local responsibilities as governed by the national regulations. The Sponsor may transfer any or all of the Sponsor’s study related duties and functions to a CRO but the ultimate responsibility for the quality and the integrity of the Study Data shall always reside with the Sponsor. Any Study related duty, function or responsibility transferred to and assumed by a local representative or a CRO should be specified in writing. Any Study related duties, functions or responsibilities not specifically transferred to and assumed by a CRO or a local representative shall be deemed to have been retained by the Sponsor. The sponsor should utilise the services of qualified individuals e.g. bio-statisticians, clinical pharmacologists, and physicians, as appropriate, throughout all stages of the study process, from designing the protocol and CRFs and planning the analyses to analysing and preparing interim and final clinical study reports.
3.2. The
Monitor:
The monitor is the principal communication link between the sponsor and the investigator and is appointed by the sponsor.
3.2.1. Qualifications
The monitor should have adequate medical, pharmaceutical and / or scientific qualifications and clinical trial experience. Monitor should be fully aware of all the aspects of the product under investigation and the protocol (including its annexes and amendments).
3.2.2. Responsibility
The main responsibility of the monitor is to oversee the progress of the study and to ensure that the study conduct and data handling comply with the protocol, GCPs and applicable ethical and regulatory requirements.
(a) The Monitor should verify that the investigator(s) have the adequate qualifications, expertise and the resources to carry out the study. Monitor should also confirm that the investigator(s) shall be available throughout the study period.
(b) Monitor should ascertain that the institutional facilities like laboratories, equipment, staff, storage space etc. are adequate for safe and proper conduct of the study and that they will remain available throughout the study.
(c) The Monitor should verify (and wherever necessary make provisions to ensure) that
1. the investigational product(s) are sufficiently available throughout the study and is stored properly
2. the investigational product(s) are supplied only to subjects who are eligible to receive it and at the specified dose(s) and time(s)
3. the subjects are provided with the necessary instructions on proper handling of the product(s)
4. the receipt, use, return and disposal of the product(s) at the site are controlled and documented as prescribed
5. the investigator receives the current Investigator’s Brochure and all supplies needed to conduct the study as per the protocol
6. the investigator follows the protocol
7. the investigator maintains the essential documents
8. all parties involved are adequately informed about various aspects of the study and follow the GCP guidelines and the prescribed SOPs
9. verifying that each party is performing the specified function in accordance with the protocol and / or in accordance with the agreement between the sponsor and the party concerned
10. verifying that none of the parties delegate any assigned function to unauthorised individuals
(d) The monitor should promptly inform the sponsor and the ethics committee in case any unwarranted deviation from the protocol or any transgression of the principles embodied in GCP is noted.
(e) The monitor should follow a pre-determined written set of SOPs. A written record should be kept of the monitor’s visits, phone calls and correspondence with the investigators and any other involved parties.
(f) The monitor should assess the institution(s) prior to the study to ensure that the premises and facilities are adequate and that an adequate number of subjects is likely to be available during the study.
(g) The monitor should observe and report the subject recruitment rate to the sponsor.
(h) The monitor should visit the investigator before, during and after the study to make assessments of the protocol compliance and data handling in accordance with the predetermined SOPs.
(i) The monitor should ensure that all staff assisting the investigator in the study have been adequately informed about and will comply with the protocol, SOPs and other details of the study.
(j) The monitor should assist the investigator in reporting the data and results of the study to the sponsor, e.g. by providing guidance on correct procedures for CRF completion and by providing data verification.
(k) The monitor shall be responsible for ensuring that all CRFs are correctly filled out in accordance with original observations, are legible, complete, and dated. The monitor should specifically verify that
1. the data required by the protocol are reported accurately on the CRFs and are consistent with the source documents
2. any dose and / or therapy modifications are well documented for each of the study subjects
3. adverse events, concomitant medications and inter-current illnesses are promptly reported on the CRFs in accordance with the protocol and the SOPs
4. visits that the subjects fail to make, tests that are not conducted and examinations that are not performed are clearly reported as such on the CRFs
5. all withdrawals and drop-outs of enrolled subjects from the study are reported and explained on the CRFs
(l) Any deviations, errors or omissions should be promptly clarified with the investigator, corrected and explained on the CRF. Monitor should also take appropriate actions designed to prevent recurrence of detected deviations. Monitor should ensure that investigator certifies the accuracy of CRF by signing it at the places provided for the purpose. All procedures for ensuring accuracy of CRFs must be maintained throughout the course of the study.
(m) The monitor should submit a written report to the sponsor after each site visit and after all telephone calls, letters and other correspondence with the investigator. Monitor’s report should include the date, name of site, names of the monitor and the individuals contacted, a summary of what the monitor reviewed, findings, deviations & deficiencies observed, and any actions taken / proposed to secure compliance. The review and follow-up of the monitoring report with the sponsor should be documented by the sponsor’s designated representative.
(n) The monitor should confirm that the prescribed procedures for storage, handling, dispensing and return of investigational product are being followed and their compliance is being documented in a form as in the SOPs.
3.3. Investigator
3.3.1. Qualifications
The investigator should be qualified by education, training and experience to assume responsibility for the proper conduct of the study and should have qualifications prescribed by the Medical Council of India (MCI). The investigator should provide a copy of the curriculum vitae and / or other relevant documents requested by the sponsor, the ethics committee, the CRO or the regulatory authorities. He / she should clearly understand the time and other resource demands the study is likely to make and ensure they can be made available throughout the duration of the study. The investigator should also ensure that other studies do not divert essential subjects or facilities away from the study at hand.
The investigator should be thoroughly familiar with the safety, efficacy and appropriate use of the investigational product as described in the protocol, investigator’s brochure and other information sources provided by the sponsor from time to time.
The investigator should be aware of and comply with GCPs, SOPs and the applicable regulatory requirements.
3.3.2. Medical care of the study subjects
A qualified Medical Practitioner (or a Dentist, when appropriate) who is an Investigator or a Co-Investigator for the study should be responsible for all study related medical decisions. Investigator has to ensure that adequate medical care is provided to a subject for any adverse events including clinically significant laboratory values related to the study. Investigator should inform the subject when medical care is needed for inter-current illness(es) of which the investigator becomes aware. Investigator should also inform the subject’s other attending physician(s) about the subject’s participation in the study if the subject has another attending physician(s) and if the subject agrees to such other physician(s). Subsequent to the completion of the study or dropping out of the subject(s) the investigator should ensure that medical care and relevant follow-up procedures are maintained as needed by the medical condition of the subject and the study and the interventions made.
Although a subject is not obliged to give reason(s) for withdrawing prematurely from a study, the investigator should make a reasonable effort to ascertain the reason(s) while fully respecting the subject’s rights.
3.3.3. Monitoring and Auditing of Records
The investigator / institution shall allow monitoring and auditing of the records, procedures and facilities, by the sponsor, the ethics committee, CRO or their authorised representative(s) or by the appropriate regulatory authority. The investigator should maintain a list of appropriately qualified person(s) to whom the investigator has delegated study-related duties.
Investigator should ensure that all persons involved in the study are adequately informed about the protocol, SOPs, the investigational product(s) and their study related duties and functions.
3.3.4. Communication with Ethics Committee
Before initiating a study the investigator / institution must ensure that the proposed study has been reviewed and accepted in writing by the relevant ethics committee(s) for the protocol, written informed consent form, subject recruitment procedures (e.g. advertisements) and any written / verbal information to be provided to the subjects.
The investigator should promptly report to the ethics committee, the monitor and the sponsor:
1. deviations from or changes of, the protocol to eliminate immediate hazards to the subjects
2. changes that increase the risk to subject(s) and / or affecting significantly the conduct of the study
3. all adverse drug reactions and adverse events that are serious and / or unexpected
4. new information that may adversely affect safety of the subjects or the conduct of the study
5. for reported deaths the investigator should supply any additional information e.g. autopsy reports and terminal medical reports.
3.3.5. Compliance with the protocol
The investigator / institution must agree and sign the protocol and / or another legally acceptable document with the sponsor, mentioning the agreement with the protocol, and confirm in writing that he / she has read and understood the protocol, GCPs and SOPs and will work as stipulated in them.
The investigator may implement a deviation from, or change of protocol to eliminate an immediate hazard(s) to study subjects without prior ethics committee approval / favourable opinion. The implemented deviation or change, the reasons for it and if appropriate the proposed protocol amendment(s) should be submitted by the investigator to the ethics committee (for review and approval / favourable opinion), to the sponsor (for agreement) and if required to the regulatory authority(ies).
The investigator or person designated by him/her should document and explain any deviation from the approved protocol. The Investigator should follow the study randomisation procedure, if any, and should ensure that the randomisation code is broken only in accordance with the Protocol. If the study is blinded, the Investigator should promptly document and explain to the Sponsor any premature un-blinding e.g. accidental un-blinding, un-blinding due to serious adverse event) of the Investigational Product(s).
3.3.6. Investigational Product(s)
Investigator has the primary responsibility for investigational product(s) accountability at the study site(s). Investigator should maintain records of the product’s delivery to the study site, the inventory at the site, the use by each subject, and the return to the sponsor or the alternative disposal of the unused product(s). These records should include dates, quantities, batch / serial numbers, expiry dates if applicable, and the unique code number assigned to the investigational product packs and study subjects. Investigator should maintain records that describe that the subjects were provided the dosage specified by the protocol and reconcile all investigational products received from the sponsor. Investigator should ensure that the product(s) are stored under specified conditions and are used only in accordance with the approved protocol.
The investigator should assign some or all of his / her duties for investigational product’s accountability at the study site(s) to his subordinate who is under the supervision of the investigator / institution. The investigator or subordinate should explain the correct use of the product(s) to each subject and should check at intervals appropriate for the study that each subject is following the instructions properly. The person who carries them out should document such periodic checks.
3.3.7. Selection and recruitment of study
subjects:
The investigator is responsible for ensuring the unbiased selection of an adequate number of suitable subjects according to the protocol. It may be necessary to secure the co-operation of other physicians in order to obtain a sufficient number of subjects. In order to assess the probability of an adequate recruitment rate for subjects for the study it may be useful to determine prospectively or review retrospectively the availability of the subjects. Investigator should check whether the subject(s) so identified could be included in the study according to the protocol. The investigator should keep a confidential list of names of all Study Subjects allocated to each study. This list facilitates the investigator / institution to reveal identity of the subject(s) in case of need and also serve as a proof of Subject’s existence. The investigator / institution shall also maintain a Subjects’ screening log to document identification of Subjects who enter pre-study screening. A Subject’s enrolment log shall also be maintained to document chronological enrolment of Subjects in a particular Study.
The Investigator is responsible for giving adequate information to subjects about the trial in accordance with the GCP. The nature of the investigational product and the stage of development and the complexity of the study should be considered in determining the nature and extent of the information that should be provided.
Obligations of investigators regarding informed consent: The investigator has the duty to -
1. Communicate to prospective subjects all the information necessary for informed consent. There should not be any restriction on subject's right to ask any questions related to the study as any restriction on this undermines the validity of informed consent.
2. Exclude the possibility of unjustified deception, undue influence and intimidation. Deception of the subject is not permissible However, sometimes information can be withheld till the completion of study, if such information would jeopardize the validity of research.
3. Seek consent only after the prospective subject is adequately informed. Investigator should not give any unjustifiable subject's decision to participate in the study.
4. As a general rule obtain from each prospective subject a signed form as an evidence of informed consent (written informed consent) preferably witnessed by a person not related to the trial, and in case of incompetence to do so, a legal guardian or other duly authorised representative.
5. Renew the informed consent of each subject, if there are material changes in the conditions or procedures of the research or new information becomes available during the ongoing trial.
6. Not use intimidation in any form which invalidates informed consent. The investigator must assure prospective subjects that their decision to participate or not will not affect the patient-clinician relationship or any other benefits to which they are entitled.
As part of the information provided to the Subject, the Investigator should supply subjects with, and encourage them to carry with them, information about their participation in the trial and information about contact persons who can assist in an emergency situation.
3.3.8. Records/Reports
The Investigator should ensure the accuracy, completeness, legibility, and timeliness of the data reported to the sponsor in the CRFs and in all required reports. Data reported on the CRF, that are derived from source documents, should be consistent with the source documents or the discrepancies should be explained.
Any change or correction to the CRF should be dated, signed and explained (if necessary) and should not obscure the original entry (i.e. an audit trail should be maintained); this applies to both written and electronic changes or corrections.
Sponsor should provide guidelines to investigators and / or the investigator’s designated representatives on making such corrections and should have written procedures to assure that changes in CRFs are documented and endorsed by the Investigator. The Investigator should retain records of the changes and corrections.
Progress Reports
The investigator should submit the written summaries of the study status at the periodicity specified in the protocol to the person(s) / organisation(s) to whom the investigator is reporting. All reportings made by the investigator should identify the subjects by unique code numbers assigned to the study subjects rather than by the subjects’ name(s), personal identification number(s) and / or addresses.
Termination and
final report:
In case the investigator and sponsor agree to prematurely terminate or suspend the study for any reason, the investigator / institution should promptly inform the study Subjects, the Ethics Committee as well as the Regulatory Authorities. The investigators should also ensure appropriate therapy and follow-up for the subjects.
However, if the investigator or the sponsor or the ethics committee decide to terminate or suspend the study without prior agreement of all parties concerned then the party initiating the suspension / termination should promptly inform all the concerned parties about such suspension / termination and suspension along with a detailed written explanation for such termination / suspension.
The Investigator should maintain documents as specified in the essential documents’ list and take measures to prevent accidental or premature destruction.
The study can be closed only when the Investigator (or the Monitor or CRO – if this responsibility has been delegated to them) has reviewed both Investigator / Institution and Sponsor files and confirm that all necessary documents are in the appropriate files.
The completion of the study should be informed by the investigator to the institution, the sponsor and the ethics committee. The investigator should sign and forward the data (CRFs, results and interpretations, analyses and reports, of the study from his / her centre to the sponsor and the ethics committee. Collaborative investigators and those responsible for the analyses (including statistical analyses) and the interpretation of the results must also sign the relevant portions of the study report. Investigator should submit his signed and dated final report to the institution, the ethics committee and the sponsor verifying the responsibility for the validity of data.
In case of a multi-centre study – the signature of the co-ordinating investigator may suffice if agreed in the protocol.
In case the investigator is the sponsor then he / she assumes the responsibilities of both the functionaries.
The investigator should familiarise himself / herself with the various other responsibilities assigned to him/her under the protocol and ensure that they are carried out as expected.
Record Keeping and Data Handling
The basic concept of record-keeping and handling of data is to record, store, transfer, and where necessary convert efficiently and accurately the information collected on the trial subject(s) into data that can be used to compile the Study Report.
4.1. Documentation
All steps involved in data management should be documented in order to allow step-by-step retrospective assessment of data quality and study performance for the purpose of audit. Following the SOPs facilitates documentation.
Documentation SOPs should include details of checklists and forms giving details of actions taken, dates and the individuals responsible etc.
4.2. Corrections
All corrections in the CRFs or any other study related documents should be made in a way that does not obscure the original entry. The correct data should be inserted with the reason for the correction if such a reason is not obvious. The corrections should carry the date and initials of the Investigator or the authorised person.
4.3. Electronic Data Processing
For electronic data processing only authorised person should be allowed to enter or modify the data in the computer and there should be a recorded trail of the changes and deletions made. A security system should be set-up to prevent unauthorised access to the data. If data is altered during processing the alteration must be documented and the system should be validated. The systems should be designed to permit data changes in such a way that the data changes are documented and there is no deletion of data once it has been entered. A list of authorised persons who can make changes in the computer system should be maintained. Adequate backup of the data should be maintained.
4.4. Validation of Electronic Data Processing Systems
If trial data are entered directly into the computer there must always be an adequate safeguard to ensure validation including a signed and dated printout and backup records. Computerised systems – hardware as well as software - should be validated and a detailed description of their use be produced and kept up-to-date.
4.5.
Language
All written documents, information and other material used in the
Study should be in a language that is clearly understood by all concerned (i.e.
the Subjects, paramedical staff, Monitors etc.)
4.6.
Responsibilities of the
Investigator
Investigator should ensure that the observations and findings are recorded correctly and completely in the CRFs and signed by the responsible person(s) designated in the Protocol.
Laboratory values with normal reference ranges should always be recorded on a CRF or enclosed with the CRF. Values outside the clinically accepted reference range or values that differ importantly from previous values must be evaluated and commented upon by the Investigator. Data other than that requested by the Protocol may appear on the CRF clearly marked as the additional findings and their significance described by the investigator. Units of measurement must always be stated and transformation of units must always be indicated and documented.
In the medical records of the patient(s) it should be clearly indicated that the individual is participating in a clinical trial.
4.8. Responsibilities of the Sponsor and
the Monitor
The sponsor must ensure that electronic data processing system conforms to the certain documented requirements for completeness, accuracy, reliability and consistent intended performance (i.e. validation). The Sponsor must maintain SOPs for using these systems. The Monitor should take adequate measures to ensure that no data is overlooked. If the computer system automatically assigns any missing values – the fact should be clearly documented.
Sponsor should safeguard the blinding, if any, particularly during data entry and processing. The Sponsor should use an explicit Subject identification code that allows identification of all the data reported for each Subject. Ownership of the data and any transfer of the ownership of data should be documented and intimated to the concerned party(ies).
Quality Assurance
The Sponsor is responsible for the implementation of a system of Quality Assurance in order to ensure that the Study is performed and the data is generated, recorded and reported in compliance with the Protocol, GCP and other applicable requirements. Documented Standard Operating Procedures are a prerequisite for quality assurance.
All observations and findings should be verifiable, for the credibility of the data and to assure that the conclusions presented are correctly derived from the Raw Data. Verification processes must therefore be specified and justified.
Statistically controlled sampling may be an acceptable method of data verification in each Study. Quality control must be applied to each stage of data handling to ensure that all data are reliable and have processed correctly.
Sponsor’s audits should be conducted by
persons independent of those responsible for the Study. Investigational sites,
facilities, all data and documentation should be available for inspection and
audit by the Sponsor’s auditor as well as by the Regulatory Authority(ies).
Statistics
6.1. Role of a Biostatistician
Involvement of a appropriately qualified and experienced statistician is necessary in the planning stage as well as throughout the Study. The Bio-statistician’s should make a statistical model to help the Sponsor, CRO and / or the Investigator in writing the Protocol. The number of Subjects to be included in the study is determined in relation to the statistical model on which the Protocol is based.
6.2.
Study Design:
The scientific integrity of a Clinical Study and the credibility of its report depends on the design of the Study. In comparative studies the Protocol should describe:
1.
an “a priori” rationale for the
target difference between treatments that the Study is being designed to
detect, and the power to detect that difference, taking into account clinical
and scientific information and professional judgment on the clinical
significance of statistical differences.
2.
measures taken to avoid bias,
particularly methods of Randomisation.
6.2.1. Randomisation
and blinding:
The key idea of a clinical trial is to compare groups of patients who differ only with respect to their treatment. If the groups differ in some other way then the comparison of treatment gets biased. Randomisation, as one of the fundamental principles of experimental design, it deals with the possible bias at the treatment allocation. It ensures that the allocation of treatment to human subjects is independent of their characteristics. Another important benefit of Randomisation is that statistical methods of analysis are based on what we expect to happen in random samples from populations with specified characteristics. The Protocol must state the method used for Randomisation.
The Study should use the maximum degree of
blindness that is possible. Study subjects, investigator or any other party
concerned with the study may observe and respond by knowledge of which
treatment was given. To avoid such bias
it is often desired that the patient or any other person involved with the
study does not know which treatment was given. Where a sealed code for each
individual treatment has been assigned in a blinded randomized study it should
be kept both at the site of the investigation and with the sponsor.
The Protocol must state the conditions under which the code is allowed to be broken and by whom. The system of breaking the code should be such that it allows access to only one Subject’s treatment at a time. The coding system for the Investigational Product(s) should include a mechanism that permits rapid identification of the products in case of a medical emergency, but does not permit undetectable breaks of the blinding.
6.3. Statistical Analysis
The type(s) of Statistical Analyses to be used must be clearly identified and should form basis of the statistical model for the Study. Any subsequent deviation(s) should be described and justified in the Final Report. The need and extent of an interim analysis must be specified in the Protocol. The results of the statistical analyses should be presented in a manner that is likely to facilitate the interpretation of their clinical importance, e.g. by estimates of the magnitude of the treatment effect / difference and confidence intervals rather than sole reliance on significance testing.
Missing, unused and spurious data should be accounted for during the statistical analyses. All such omissions must be documented to enable review.
SPECIAL CONCERNS
7.1
Clinical Trials
of Vaccines
7.1.1 Phases of Vaccine Trials
The guidelines to conduct the
clinical trial on investigational vaccines are similar to those governing a
clinical trial. The phase of these trials differ from drug trials as given
below:
Phase I: This refers to the first introduction of a vaccine
into a human population for determination of its safety and biological effects
including immunogenicity. This phase includes study of dose and route of
administration and should involve low
risk subjects. For example, immunogenicity to hepatitis vaccine should not
be determined in high-risk subjects.
Phase II: This refers to the initial trials examining
effectiveness (immunogenicity) in a limited number of volunteers. Vaccines can
be prophylactic and therapeutic in nature. While prophylactic vaccines are
given to normal subjects, therapeutic or curative vaccines may be given to
patients suffering from particular disease.
Phase III: This focuses on assessments of safety and
effectiveness in the prevention of disease, involving controlled study on a larger
number of volunteers (in thousands) in multi-centres.
7.1.2. Guidelines
·
The sponsor and investigator should
be aware of the approval process(es) involved in conducting clinical trials of
vaccines. They should familiarize themselves with the guidelines provided by
Drug Controller General (India), Department of Biotechnology (DBT) and Ministry
of Environment and Genetic Engineering Approval Committee (GEAC) in the case of
vaccines produced by recombinant DNA technology. See Appendix III.
·
Some vaccines that contain active or
live-attenuated microorganisms can possibly possess a small risk of producing
that particular infection. The subjects to be vaccinated should be informed of
the same.
·
The subjects in control groups or
when subjected to ineffective vaccines run a risk of contracting the disease.
·
The risks associated with vaccines
produced by recombinant DNA techniques are not completely known. However, for
all the recombinant vaccines/products the guidelines issued by the Department
of Biotechnology should be strictly followed.
·
Trials should be conducted by
investigator with the requisite experience and having necessary infrastructure
for the laboratory evaluation of seroconversion.
·
Protocols for such trials should
include appropriate criteria for selection of subjects, plan of frequency of
administration of the test vaccine in comparison with the reference vaccine. It
should accompany detailed validation of testing method to detect the antibody
titter levels.
·
It should specify methodology to be
adopted for prevention of centrifuged serum for the purpose of testing.
·
The investigator should be provided
with Quality Control data of the experimental batch of the vaccine made for the
purpose of clinical trials.
·
The sponsor should provide the
Independent Ethics Committee approval of the nodal body (ies) to carry out
clinical trials with the vaccine.
·
The generic version of new vaccines
already introduced in the other markets after step up clinical trials including
extensive Phase III trials should be compared with the reference vaccine with
regard to seroconversion in a comparative manner in a significant sample size.
·
Post Marketing Surveillance (PMS)
should be required following seroconversion studies. PMS data should be
generated in a significant sample size sensitive to detect side effects and
address other safety issues.
·
Protocols for test of new vaccine
should contain a section giving details of steps of manufacture, in-process
quality control measures, storage conditions, stability data and a flow chart
of various steps taken into consideration for manufacture of vaccine. It should
also contain detailed method of quality control procedure with the relevant
references.
7.2. Clinical Trials of Contraceptives
·
All procedures for clinical trials
are applicable. Subjects should be clearly informed about the alternative
available.
·
In women where implant has been used
as a contraceptive for trial, a proper follow up for removal of the implant
should be done, whether the trial is over or the subject has withdrawn from the
trial.
·
Children borne due to failure of
contraceptives under study should be followed up for any abnormalities if the
woman does not opt for medical termination of pregnancy.
7.3
Clinical trials with surgical
procedures/ medical devices
Of late, biomedical technology has
made considerable progress in the conceptualisation and designing of
bio-equipments. Several medical devices and critical care equipments have been
developed and many more are in various stages of development. However, only through
good manufacturing practices (GMP) can the end products reach the stage of
utilization by society. Most of these products are only evaluated by Central
Excise testing for taxation purposes, which discourages entrepreneurs to
venture in this area with quality products especially when they do not come
under the strict purview of the existing regulatory bodies like ISI, BSI and
Drug Controller General. This is evidenced by the very low number of patents or
propriety medical equipments manufactured and produced in the country. As the
capacity of the country in this area is improving day by day the need for a
regulatory mechanism/ authority is increasingly obvious. The concept of
regulations governing investigations involving biomedical devices is therefore
relatively new in India. At present, except for needles and syringes these are
not covered by the Drugs and Cosmetics Act, 1940. The Chief Executive of the
Society of Biomedical Technology (SBMT) set up under the Defence Research
Development Organisation (DRDO) has drafted a proposal for the setting up of a
regulatory, tentatively named as the Indian Medical Devices Regulatory
Authority (IMDRA). Until the guidelines are formulated and implemented by this
regulatory Authority clinical trials with biomedical devices should be approved
on case to case basis by committees constituted for the specific purpose.
7.3.1. Definitions:
Medical
devices: A medical device is defined as an
inert diagnostic of therapeutic article that does not achieve any of its principal
intended purposes through chemical action, within or on the body unlike the
medicated devices which contain pharmacologically active substances which are
treated as drugs. Such devices include diagnostic test kits, crutches,
electrodes, pacemakers, arterial grafts, intra-ocular lenses, orthopaedic pins
and other orthopaedic accessories.
Depending upon risks involved the
devices could be classified as follows:
a.
Non critical devices: An
investigational device that does not present significant risk to the patients’ e.g. Thermometer, B.P. apparatus.
b.
Critical devices: An investigational
device that presents a potential risk to the health, safety, welfare of the
subject- for example, pacemakers, implants, internal catheters.
All the general principles of clinical
trials described for clinical trials should also be considered for trials of
medical devices. As for the drugs, safety evaluation and pre-market efficacy of
devices for 1-3 years with data on adverse reactions should be obtained before
pre-market certification. The duration of the trial and extent of use may be
decided in case to case basis by the appropriate authorities. However, the
following important factors that are unique to medical devices should be taken
into consideration while evaluating the related research projects.
7.3.2. Guidelines
o
Safety data of the medical device in
animals should be obtained and likely risks posed by the device should be
considered.
o
A clinical trial of medical devices
is different from drug trials, as former can not be done in healthy volunteers.
Hence phase I of drug trial is not necessary for trial on devices.
o
Medical devices used within the body
may have greater risk potential than those used on or outside the body, for
example, orthopaedic pins Vs crutches.
o
Medical device not used regularly
have less risk potential than those used regularly, for example, contact lens
Vs intraocular lenses.
o
Safety procedures to introduce a
medical device in the patient should also be followed as the procedure itself
may cause harm to the patient.
o
Informed consent procedures should
be followed as in drug trials. The patient information sheet should contain
information on following procedures to be adopted if the patient decides to
withdraw from the trial.
§
Informed
consent should be obtained before any diagnostic procedures.
§
Information
to be gained should be gathered using methods that do not expose subjects to
more radiation than exposed normally.
§
Research
should be performed on patients undergoing the procedures for diagnostic or
therapeutic purposes.
§
Safety
measures should be taken to protect research subjects and others who may be
exposed to radiation.
§
The
protocol should make adequate provisions for detecting pregnancies to avoid
risks of exposure to the embryo.
§
Information
to subject about possible genetic damage to offspring should be given.
§
Non-radioactive
diagnostic agents are considered as drugs and the same guidelines should be followed
when using them.
§
Ultrasound
to be submitted wherever possible.
7.5 Clinical trials of Herbal Remedies
and Medicinal Plants
For the herbal remedies and
medicinal plants that are to be clinically evaluated for use in the Allopathic
System and which may later be used in allopathic hospitals, the procedures laid
down by the office of the DCG (I) for allopathic drugs should be followed. This
does not pertain to guidelines issued for clinical evaluation of Ayurveda,
Siddha or Unani drugs by experts in those systems of medicine which may be used
later in their own hospitals and clinics. All the general principles of
clinical trials described earlier pertain also to herbal remedies. However,
when clinical trials of herbal drugs used in recognized Indian systems of
Medicine and Homoeopathy are to be undertaken in Allopathic Hospitals,
associations of physicians from the concerned system as co-investigators/
collaborators/ members of the expert group is desirable for designing and
evaluating the Study.
7.5.1. Categories of Herbal Products
The
herbal products can belong to any of the three categories given below:
a.
A lot is known about the use of a
plant or its extract in the ancient Ayurveda, Siddha or Unani literature or the
plant may actually be regularly used by physicians of the traditional systems
of medicine for a number of years. The substance is being clinically evaluated
for same indication for which it is being used or as has been described in the
texts.
b.
When an extract of a plant or a
compound isolated from the plant has to be clinically evaluated for a
therapeutic effect not originally described in the texts of traditional systems
or, the method of preparation is different, it has to be treated as a new
substance or new chemical entity (NCE) and the same type of acute, subacute and
chronic toxicity data will have to be generated as required by the regulatory
authority before it is cleared for clinical evaluation.
c.
An extract or a compound isolated
from a plant which has never been in use before and has not ever been mentioned
in ancient literature, should be treated as a new drug, and therefore, should
undergo all regulatory requirements before being evaluated clinically.
7.5.2. Guidelines
·
It is important that plants and
herbal remedies currently in use or mentioned in literature of recognized
Traditional System of Medicine is prepared strictly in the same way as
described in the literature while incorporating GMP norms for standardization.
It may not be necessary to undertake phase I studies. However, it needs to be
emphasized that since the substance to be tested is already in used in Indian
Systems of Medicine or has been described in their texts, the need for testing
its toxicity in animals has been considerably reduced. Neither would any
toxicity study be needed for phase II trial unless there are reports suggesting
toxicity or when the herbal preparation is to be used for more than 3 months.
It should be necessary to undertake 4-6 weeks toxicity study in 2 species of
animals in the circumstances pointed out in the preceding sentence or when a
larger multicentric phase III trial is subsequently planned based on results of
phase II study.
·
Clinical trials with herbal
preparations should be carried out only after these have been standardized and
markers identified to ensure that the substances being evaluated are always the
same. The recommendations made earlier regarding informed consent, subject,
inducements for participation, information to be provided to the subject,
withdrawal from study and research involving children or persons with
diminished autonomy, all apply to trials on plant drugs also. These trials have
also got to be approved by the appropriate scientific and ethical committees of
the concerned Institutes. However, it is essential that such clinical trials be
carried out only when a competent Ayurvedic, Siddha or Unani physician is a
co-investigator in such a clinical trial. It would neither ethically acceptable
nor morally justifiable, if an allopathic physician, based on references in ancient
literature of above-mentioned traditional systems of Medicine, carries out
clinical evaluation of the plant without any concept or training in these
systems of medicine. Hence, it is necessary to associate a specialist from
these systems and the clinical evaluation should be carried out jointly.
·
When a Folklore medicine /
Ethno-medicine is ready for commercialisation after it has been scientifically
found to be effective, then the legitimate rights/ share of the Tribe or
Community from whom the knowledge was gathered should be taken care of
appropriately while applying for the Intellectual Property Rights and / Patents
for the product.
APPENDICES
Appendix I:
Ethical
Principles for Medical Research Involving Human Subjects
Adopted by the 18th WMA General Assembly
Helsinki, Finland, June 1964
and amended by the
29th WMA General Assembly, Tokyo, Japan, October 1975
35th WMA General Assembly, Venice, Italy, October 1983
41st WMA General Assembly, Hong Kong, September 1989
48th WMA General Assembly, Somerset West, Republic of South Africa, October
1996
and the
52nd WMA General Assembly, Edinburgh, Scotland, October 2000
A. INTRODUCTION
1. The World Medical Association has
developed the Declaration of Helsinki as a statement of ethical principles to
provide guidance to physicians and other participants in medical research
involving human subjects. Medical research involving human subjects includes
research on identifiable human material or identifiable data.
2. It is the duty of the physician to
promote and safeguard the health of the people. The physician's knowledge and
conscience are dedicated to the fulfilment of this duty.
3. The
Declaration of Geneva of the World Medical Association binds the physician with
the words, "The health of my patient will be my first consideration,"
and the International Code of Medical Ethics declares that, "A physician
shall act only in the patient's interest when providing medical care which
might have the effect of weakening the physical and mental condition of the
patient."
4. Medical progress is based on research,
which ultimately must rest in part on experimentation involving human subjects.
5. In medical research on human subjects,
considerations related to the well-being of the human subject should take
precedence over the interests of science and society.
6. The
primary purpose of medical research involving human subjects is to improve
prophylactic, diagnostic and therapeutic procedures and the understanding of
the aetiology and pathogenesis of disease. Even the best proven prophylactic,
diagnostic, and therapeutic methods must continuously be challenged through
research for their effectiveness, efficiency, accessibility and quality.
7. In current medical practice and in
medical research, most prophylactic, diagnostic and therapeutic procedures
involve risks and burdens.
8. Medical research is subject to ethical
standards that promote respect for all human beings and protect their health
and rights. Some research populations are vulnerable and need special
protection. The particular needs of the economically and medically
disadvantaged must be recognised. Special attention is also required for those
who cannot give or refuse consent for themselves, for those who may be subject
to giving consent under duress, for those who will not benefit personally from
the research and for those for whom the research is combined with care.
9. Research Investigators should be aware of
the ethical, legal and regulatory requirements for research on human subjects
in their own countries as well as applicable international requirements. No
national ethical, legal or regulatory requirement should be allowed to reduce
or eliminate any of the protections for human subjects set forth in this
Declaration.
10.
It is the duty of the physician in
medical research to protect the life, health, privacy, and dignity of the human
subject.
11. Medical research involving human
subjects must conform to generally accepted scientific principles, be based on
a thorough knowledge of the scientific literature, other relevant sources of
information, and on adequate laboratory and, where appropriate, animal
experimentation.
12. Appropriate caution must be exercised in
the conduct of research which may affect the environment, and the welfare of
animals used for research must be respected.
13. The
design and performance of each experimental procedure involving human subjects
should be clearly formulated in an experimental protocol. This protocol should
be submitted for consideration, comment, guidance, and where appropriate,
approval to a specially appointed ethical review committee, which must be
independent of the investigator, the sponsor or any other kind of undue
influence. This independent committee should be in conformity with the laws and
regulations of the country in which the research experiment is performed. The
committee has the right to monitor ongoing trials. The researcher has the
obligation to provide monitoring information to the committee, especially any
serious adverse events. The researcher should also submit to the committee, for
review, information regarding funding, sponsors, institutional affiliations,
other potential conflicts of interest and incentives for subjects.
14. The research protocol should always
contain a statement of the ethical considerations involved and should indicate
that there is compliance with the principles enunciated in this Declaration.
15. Medical
research involving human subjects should be conducted only by scientifically
qualified persons and under the supervision of a clinically competent medical
person. The responsibility for the human subject must always rest with a
medically qualified person and never rest on the subject of the research, even
though the subject has given consent.
16. Every medical research project involving
human subjects should be preceded by careful assessment of predictable risks
and burdens in comparison with foreseeable benefits to the subject or to
others. This does not preclude the participation of healthy volunteers in
medical research. The design of all studies should be publicly available.
17. Physicians should abstain from engaging in
research projects involving human subjects unless they are confident that the
risks involved have been adequately assessed and can be satisfactorily managed.
Physicians should cease any investigation if the risks are found to outweigh
the potential benefits or if there is conclusive proof of positive and
beneficial results.
18. Medical
research involving human subjects should only be conducted if the importance of
the objective outweighs the inherent risks and burdens to the subject. This is
especially important when the human subjects are healthy volunteers.
19. Medical
research is only justified if there is a reasonable likelihood that the
populations in which the research is carried out stand to benefit from the
results of the research.
20. The subjects must be volunteers and informed
participants in the research project.
21. The right of research subjects to
safeguard their integrity must always be respected. Every precaution should be
taken to respect the privacy of the subject, the confidentiality of the
patient's information and to minimize the impact of the study on the subject's
physical and mental integrity and on the personality of the subject.
22. In
any research on human beings, each potential subject must be adequately
informed of the aims, methods, sources of funding, any possible conflicts of
interest, institutional affiliations of the researcher, the anticipated
benefits and potential risks of the study and the discomfort it may entail. The
subject should be informed of the right to abstain from participation in the
study or to withdraw consent to participate at any time without reprisal. After
ensuring that the subject has understood the information, the physician should
then obtain the subject's freely given informed consent, preferably in writing.
If the consent cannot be obtained in writing, the non-written consent must be
formally documented and witnessed.
23. When obtaining informed consent for the
research project the physician should be particularly cautious if the subject
is in a dependent relationship with the physician or may consent under duress.
In that case the informed consent should be obtained by a well-informed
physician who is not engaged in the investigation and who is completely
independent of this relationship.
24. For
a research subject who is legally incompetent, physically or mentally incapable
of giving consent or is a legally incompetent minor, the investigator must
obtain informed consent from the legally authorised representative in
accordance with applicable law. These groups should not be included in research
unless the research is necessary to promote the health of the population
represented and this research cannot instead be performed on legally competent
persons.
25. When
a subject deemed legally incompetent, such as a minor child, is able to give
assent to decisions about participation in research, the investigator must
obtain that assent in addition to the consent of the legally authorised
representative.
26. Research on individuals from whom it is not
possible to obtain consent, including proxy or advance consent, should be done
only if the physical/mental condition that prevents obtaining informed consent
is a necessary characteristic of the research population. The specific reasons
for involving research subjects with a condition that renders them unable to
give informed consent should be stated in the experimental protocol for
consideration and approval of the review committee. The protocol should state
that consent to remain in the research should be obtained as soon as possible from
the individual or a legally authorised surrogate.
27. Both
authors and publishers have ethical obligations. In publication of the results
of research, the investigators are obliged to preserve the accuracy of the
results. Negative as well as positive results should be published or otherwise
publicly available. Sources of funding, institutional affiliations and any
possible conflicts of interest should be declared in the publication. Reports
of experimentation not in accordance with the principles laid down in this
Declaration should not be accepted for publication.
C. ADDITIONAL PRINCIPLES FOR MEDICAL RESEARCH
COMBINED WITH MEDICAL CARE
28. The
physician may combine medical research with medical care, only to the extent
that the research is justified by its potential prophylactic, diagnostic or
therapeutic value. When medical research is combined with medical care,
additional standards apply to protect the patients who are research subjects.