Desire to Benefit Patients Might Undercut Research Goals, New IRB Study Finds

A doctor who is also an investigator on a clinical trial has a patient who could benefit from the trial, but does not quite fit the eligibility criteria.

This content was written and submitted by the supplier. It has only been modified to comply with this publication’s space and style.

Should the doctor let the patient into the trial anyway? Or should he uphold the scientific integrity of the study and say no?

A survey published in IRB: Ethics & Human Research found that many doctors, nurses, and others who run clinical trials endorsed ignoring minor entry criteria if doing so might benefit patients who wanted to participate. Among the findings: 64 percent of respondents agreed or mostly agreed with the statement that “researchers should deviate from the protocol if doing so would improve the subject’s medical care” and 90 percent agreed or mostly agreed that “it is acceptable to disregard minor entry criteria if a patient will benefit from being in a trial.”

“The effects of such deviations are unpredictable, but given the right circumstances, they could compromise the validity of trial data,” writes Charles W. Lidz, a research professor of psychiatry at the University of Massachusetts Medical School in Worcester, and his colleagues. Among the remedies, the authors recommend better training for people who conduct clinical trials, with concrete situations that focus on the dual commitments to research and clinical care and that address how to respond to such tension.

Pharmaceutical Innovations Report
Discover the latest breakthrough packaging technologies shaping the pharmaceutical sector. This report dives into cutting-edge innovations, from smart containers that enhance patient safety to eco-friendly materials poised to transform the industry’s sustainability practices. All from PACK EXPO. Learn how forward-thinking strategies are driving efficiency and redefining what’s possible in pharma packaging.
Learn More
Pharmaceutical Innovations Report
Conveying Innovations Report
Editors report on distinguishing characteristics that define each new product and collected video demonstrating the equipment or materials as displayed at the show. This topical report, winnowed from nearly 300 PACK EXPO collective booth visits, represents a categorized, organized account of individual items that were selected based on whether they were deemed to be both new, and truly innovative, based on decades of combined editorial experience in experiencing and evaluating PACK EXPO products.
Take me there
Conveying Innovations Report