Kaori_Muto
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Research
ethics
commi-ees
Kaori
Muto,
Ph.D.
Department
of
Public
Policy
The
Ins;tute
of
Medical
Science
The
University
of
Tokyo
Outline
1. Research
ethics
commiCees
in
Japan
2. DoH
and
research
ethics
commiCees
3. Discussions
on
RECs
in
30
years
4. Points
to
consider
in
revision
of
DoH
2
Defini4on
“research
ethics
commiCee”
(ar;cle
15)
may
include:
1. CommiCee
set
by
ins;tu;on
– Ins;tu;onal
Review
Boards
(IRBs)
2. CommiCee
in
community
– LRECs,
Comité
de
protec;on
des
personnes,
State
IRBs
3. Centralized
commiCee
– Central/
Joint
IRBs
4. Commercial
en;ty
– commercial
IRBs
5. Others
3
4
Classifica4on
of
clinical
research
in
Japan
Clinical
Research
includes
most
of
clinical
trials
and
observa;onal
studies
using
human
samples
and/or
data
derived
from
individuals
“Chiken”
are
legally
regulated
clinical
trials,
specially
intended
for
collec;ng
evidence
for
applica;on
to
the
regula;ve
authority
(PMDA)
for
approval
of
produc;on
and
sales
of
drug
or
medical
devices
Clinical Research
Clinical Trials
“Chiken”
Pharmaceutical
Affairs Law
ICH-GCP
Ethical
Guidelines
for
Clinical
Research
(MHLW*,
2003)
5
Regula4on
of
Clinical
Research
in
Japan:
Guideline
Clinical
Research
Ethical Guidelines for Clinical Research
(MHLW*)
Clinical
Trials
* MHLW, Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare
** MEXT, Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology
*** METI, Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry
Ethical Guidelines for Human Genome/Genetic Analysis
Research (MEXT**, MHLW*, METI***)
Ethical Guidelines for Clinical Research on Gene Therapy
(MEXT, MHLW)
Ethical Guidelines for Clinical Research Using Human Stem
Cells (MHLW)
Ethical Guidelines for Epidemiological Research (MEXT**,
MHLW*)
6
RECs
in
Japan
• GCP
and
all
ethical
guidelines
require
to
establish
REC
in
each
research
ins;tu;on
and
govern
all
protocols
• No
official
registry
to
cover
all
RECs.
How
many?
3,000?
(Sasaguri
et
al,
2008)
• So-‐called
“IRB
offices”
or
“research
ethics
consulta;on
service”
are
slightly
increasing
for
quality
assurance
of
RECs
• No
original
accredita;on
system
• Central
RECs—under
discussion
How
RECs
have
been
discussed?
• Found
271
papers
between
1978-‐2013
• Most
papers
from
USA;
some
from
Europe,
Asia
and
Africa
• Where
to
submit?
“IRB”
7
0
5
10
15
20
25
• PubMed
Search=
(ins;tu;onal
review
board[Title])
OR
(research
ethics
commiCee
[Title])
“Bulle;n
of
Medical
Ethics”
“Journal
of
Medical
Ethics”
“PLoS
ONE”
“BMC
Medical
Ethics”
”Journal
of
Empirical
Research
on
Human
Research
Ethics”
30
years
ago…
1978-‐1983
Informed
consent
in
a
university
hospital
Sorensen
AA.
1978.
The
IRB
as
deputy
sheriff
Huff
TA.
Clin
Res.
1979.
The
costs
of
IRBs
Brown
JH
et
al.
J
Med
Educ.
1979.
Pharmacists’
role
Donehew
GR
et
al.
Hosp
Pharm.
1979.
The
responsibility
of
IRBs
Holloway
PJ
and
Worthington
HV.
J
Dent
Res.
1980.
The
philosophy
of
IRBs
Brown
JH
et
al.
J
Med
Educ.
1980.
The
roles
of
IRBs
Bosso
JA.
Drug
Intell
Clin
Pharm.
1983.
IRB
inconsistency
Veatch
RM.
JAMA.
1982.
Ethical
issues
in
nursing
research
Davis
AJ.
West
J
Nurs
Res.
1979.
A
case
study
of
no-‐risk
decisions
in
health-‐related
research
Gortner
SR
et
al.
Nurs
Res.
1982.
8
20
years
ago…
1992-‐93
Pharmacist’
role
Mutnick
AH,
Miller
LS.1983.
Standards
of
opera;on
procedures
Reynolds
MB.
1992;
Castronovo
FP
Jr.
1993;
Rosnow
RL
et
al.
1993;
Reflec;on
of
ac;vi;es
of
IRBs
Bartolo.1992;
Readability
of
consent
forms
Hammerschmidt
DE,
Keane
MA.
1992.
Understanding
IRBs
Lovell
SL.
1992.
Audi;ng
Cookson
JB.
1992.
IRB
chair
perspec;ves
on
ethical
issues
in
phase
I
oncology
research
Kodish
E
et
al.
1992.
9
10
years
ago…2002-‐03
The
cost
of
the
IRBs
Humphreys
K
et
al.
2003.
Court
decision
and
IRBs
Maloney
DM.
2003;
Roles
of
RECs
in
follow
up
Mar;ni
N
et
al.
2003;
Suñe-‐Mar;n
P
and
Montoro-‐Ronsano
JB.
2003.
Conflict
of
Interests
Weber
LJ,
Bissell
MG.2003.
Variety
of
review
process
in
minimal
risk
Hirshon
JM
et
al.
2003.
IRB
reform
Paasche-‐Orlow
MK,
Taggart
JC.2002;
Mann
H.2002;
Kornfeld
DS.2002;
Emanuel
EJ.2002.
Research
administrators
shouldn’t
serve
IRBs
Maloney
DM.
2002.
Central
IRBs
Chris;an
MC
et
al.2002.
Research
on
stored
blood
and
;ssue
samples
White
MT
&
Gamm
J.2002.
Pediatric
research
Smith
DE.2002.
Assessment
of
the
risk/benefit
ra;o
of
phase
II
cancer
clinical
trials
Van
Luijn
HE
et
al.
200210
Recent
topics:
papers
in
2011-‐12
Need
for
IRB
registry
Quality
assurance
Quality
improvement
Roles
of
community
IRB
Conflict
of
interests
Who
are
IRB
members?
Who
should
be
members?
Successful
examples
Training
workshops
Observa;on
of
review
process
Variety
of
review
process
in
mul;center
studies
Variety
of
review
process
in
minimal
risk
Variety
of
review
results
on
surrogate
consent
11
Recent
topics:
papers
in
2011-‐12
Anesthesia
and
informed
consent
Medical
educa;on
research
Facial
transplanta;on
Community-‐based
par;cipatory
research
Tissue
research
Incidental
findings
in
genome
research
Pediatric
drug-‐trial
recruitment
Interna;onal
research
(HIV/
AIDS)
Different
views
of
chairs:
data
sharing
in
gene;c
research
12
DoH
and
REC
Tokyo
(1975):
Protocols
‘should
be
transmiCed
to
a
specially
appointed
independent
commiCee’.
Hong
Kong
(1989):
‘transmiCed
for
considera;on,
comment
and
guidance’,
‘
independent
of
the
inves;gator
and
the
sponsor’
Edinburgh
(2000):
‘ethical
review
commiCee’,
independent
of
‘any
other
undue
influence’
‘the
right
to
monitor
ongoing
studies’
Seoul
(2008):
‘research
ethics
commiCee’,
‘where
consent
would
be
impossible
or
imprac;cal
to
obtain,
the
research
using
iden;fiable
human
material
or
data
may
be
done
only
awer
considera;on
and
approval
of
a
REC’,
‘take
into
considera;on
the
laws
and
regula;ons
of
the
country
or
countries’
13
Points
to
consider
in
revision
of
DoH
1. Rela;onships
between
DoH
and
RECs
2. Interna;onal
Research
3. Who
should
be
members?
4. Educa;on
for
REC
chair
and
members
5. Quality
assurance
14
1.
Rela4onships
between
DoH
and
RECs
• Although
the
Declara;on
is
addressed
primarily
to
physicians,
the
WMA
encourages
other
par;cipants
in
medical
research
involving
human
subjects
to
adopt
these
principles.(Ar;cle.2)
15
Should
DoH
make
more
recommenda;ons
about
RECs?
2.
Interna4onal
Research
• HIV/AIDS
research
sponsored
by
a
developed
country,
but
conducted
in
a
developing
country
conducted
in
one
of
four
developing
countries
• Among
papers
on
PubMed
published
in
2007
(N
=
154)
,
only
52%
men;oned
dual
approval.
• “the
need
for
clearer
and
more
universally
accepted
guidelines”.
Chin
LJ
et
al.
J
Empir
Res
Hum
Res
Ethics:
6(3):83-‐91,
2011.
16
2.
Interna4onal
Research
“It
[This
commiCee]
must
take
into
considera;on
the
laws
and
regula;ons
of
the
country
or
countries
in
which
the
research
is
to
be
performed
as
well
as
applicable
interna;onal
norms
and
standards
but
these
must
not
be
allowed
to
reduce
or
eliminate
any
of
the
protec;ons
for
research
subjects
set
forth
in
this
Declara;on”.(Ar;cle
15)
17
What
should
RECs
in
sponsored
countries
do?
What
should
RECs
in
developing
countries
do?
In
cases
like
global
(mul;-‐na;onal)
clinical
research
collabora;on?
3.
Who
should
be
members?
• No
descrip;on
on
requirement
on
members
• Minimum
requirement
is
“diversity”
– Age
– Gender
– Ethnic
background
– Academic
background
– Pa;ents/par;cipants
18
Should
DoH
make
any
sugges;ons
about
members?
4.
Training
for
REC
chair
and
members
“Medical
research
involving
human
subjects
must
be
conducted
only
by
individuals
with
the
appropriate
scien;fic
training
and
qualifica;ons.”
(Ar;cle
16)
• “[…]the
report
recommends
that
IRB
members
and
staff
complete
educa;onal
and
cer;fica;on
programs
on
research
ethics
before
being
permiCed
to
review
research
studies”
(NBAC
2001)
19
Should
REC
chair
or
members
have
the
appropriate
training
and
qualifica;ons
to
review
new
and
complicated
maCers?
Incen;ves
to
be
trained?
5.
Quality
assurance
• Accredita;on/
recogni;on
system
would
provide
mutually
reliable
standards
to
global
community.
ü USA:
The
Associa;on
for
the
Accredita;on
of
Human
Research
Protec;on
Programs,
Inc.
(AAHRPP)
ü Asian
countries:
AAHRPP
and/or
The
Strategic
Ini;a;ve
for
Developing
Capacity
in
Ethical
Review
(SIDCER)
ü UK:
Accredita;on
Scheme
for
the
Na;onal
Research
Ethics
Service
20
Should
DoH
recommend
any
registry,
accredita;on
or
recogni;on
to
keep
minimum
quality
of
RECs?
Should
RECs
conduct
self-‐monitoring
and
improvement
?
Thank
you
very
much
for
your
a-en4on!
Doshisha
University
• Ryuichi
IDA
Na4onal
Cerebral
Cardiovascular
Center
• Kenji
MATSUI
SHOWA
UNIV
• Shimon
TASHIRO
Osaka
University
• Kazuto
KATO
University
of
Tokyo
• Masamine
JIMBA
• Yusuke
INOUE
• Hyongsoo
HONG
• Chiunfang
CHANG
• Mayumi
KUSUNOSE
Acknowledgement to our colleagues and friends
2011.03.11.
Tohoku Disaster