Office for Human Research Protections Releases Draft Guidance on Disclosing Risks in Standard-of-Care Research


On October 20, 2014 the Office for Human Research Protections (OHRP) released a draft guidance on how to apply the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) regulations on protecting human subjects (45 CFR Part 46) who participate in research studies intended to evaluate risks of treatments or procedures commonly used by healthcare professionals and recognized as “standard of care.” In standard-of-care research (or comparative effectiveness research), participants are randomized to receive one of two (or more) treatments that are accepted by medical experts as appropriate treatments for a given disease or condition.

Because treatments assigned to some participants might be different than the treatments they would have been assigned if they were not participating in the study, and the risks associated with one treatment might be different from the risks associated with another treatment, the OHRP recommends that these risks be fully described to potential participants as a part of the informed consent process.

Click here for the full draft guidance: Draft Guidance on Disclosing Reasonably Foreseeable Risks in Research Evaluating Standards of Care

The Institute of Medicine is planning a two-day public workshop in December to discuss human subjects protections in standard-of-care research. Click here for more information.​