January 25, 2024: Living Textbook Offers Pointers for Using an sIRB

The NIH Pragmatic Trials Collaboratory this week published a new chapter in its Living Textbook of Pragmatic Clinical Trials. Part of the Living Textbook’s new Ethics and Regulatory collection, the chapter discusses the logistics of using a single IRB (sIRB).

In 2016, the NIH issued a policy establishing the expectation that a “single IRB of record” will be used for all NIH-funded, multisite, human subjects research. The 2017 revision of the Common Rule likewise sets out a requirement for sIRB review of cooperative research.

The new chapter on sIRBs in the Living Textbook covers:

  • The process for setting up an sIRB
  • The responsibilities of “relying institutions”
  • Working with an sIRB while conducting research

Read more about the Living Textbook.

January 23, 2024: Ethics Consultation Documents Now Available for RAMP Trial

Ethics and regulatory onboarding documentation is now available for RAMP, one of the NIH Pragmatic Trials Collaboratory's newest pragmatic clinical trials. The documents include meeting minutes and supplementary materials summarizing recent discussions of ethics and regulatory issues associated with the study.

The consultation took place by video conference and included representation from the study's principal investigator and study team, members of the NIH Collaboratory's Ethics and Regulatory Core, NIH staff, and NIH Collaboratory Coordinating Center personnel.

The goal of RAMP is to evaluate the use of a 12-week mind-body skills training program for patients with pain, including a one-on-one session with a “whole health coach” followed by 11 weekly group sessions to include prerecorded expert-led education videos, mind-body skills training and practice, and group discussions.

Ethics and regulatory documentation for all of the NIH Collaboratory Trials is available on our Data and Resource Sharing page.

January 16, 2024: Ethics Consultation Documents Now Available for AIM-CP and MOMs Chat & Care Study

Ethics and regulatory onboarding documentation for 2 of the NIH Pragmatic Trials Collaboratory's newest trials is now available. The documents include meeting minutes and supplementary materials summarizing recent discussions of ethics and regulatory issues associated with the AIM-CP trial and the MOMs Chat & Care Study.

The consultations took place by video conference and included representation from the studies' principal investigators, members of the NIH Collaboratory's Ethics and Regulatory Core, NIH staff, and NIH Collaboratory Coordinating Center personnel.

AIM-CP will address test a care management program to address inequities in access to nonpharmacological treatment for chronic pain in rural populations.

The MOMs Chat & Care Study will test the effectiveness of an integrated care model approach at 2 levels of intensity designed to facilitate timely, appropriate care for Black patients to reduce their risk for severe maternal morbidity.

Ethics and regulatory documentation for all of the NIH Collaboratory Trials is available on our Data and Resource Sharing page.

December 18, 2023: Ethics Consultation Documents Now Available for ARBOR-Telehealth and I CAN DO Surgical ACP

Ethics and regulatory onboarding documentation for 2 of the NIH Pragmatic Trials Collaboratory's newest trials is now available. The documents include meeting minutes and supplementary materials summarizing recent discussions of ethics and regulatory issues associated with the ARBOR-Telehealth and I CAN DO Surgical ACP studies.

The consultations took place by video conference and included representation from the studies' principal investigators, members of the NIH Collaboratory's Ethics and Regulatory Core, NIH staff, and NIH Collaboratory Coordinating Center personnel. Both projects are in their planning phase.

ARBOR-Telehealth will evaluate the use of a telehealth physical therapy strategy for patients who present to primary care clinics with low back pain in rural communities. A secondary aim of the study is to compare the effectiveness of the study's risk-stratification approach.

I CAN DO Surgical ACP will identify a system-based approach to help older adults undergoing elective surgery engage in advance care planning. The project will leverage the existing electronic health record and patient portal, PREPARE for Your Care materials to assist patients with completion of advance care planning, virtual healthcare navigators, and electronic nudges. Another goal of the study is to understand digital engagement, language, and social drivers of health that drive engagement in the intervention.

Ethics and regulatory documentation for all of the NIH Collaboratory Trials is available on our Data and Resource Sharing page.

October 12, 2023: GRACE Team Shares Lessons About Monitoring Signals of Suicidality in Pragmatic Clinical Trials

In a new article published this week in Contemporary Clinical Trials Communications, the GRACE DNIH Collaboratory Trial team recommends that suicidality should be monitored in pragmatic clinical trials that measure depression as an outcome. The work builds on their experience conducting research involving patients with sickle cell disease and on previous work from the NIH Pragmatic Trials Collaboratory’s Ethics and Regulatory Core.

The authors offer 7 recommendations to address ethical considerations in the development of protocols, procedures, and monitoring activities related to suicidality in depressed patients in a pragmatic clinical trial.

Recommendations:

  • Understand our responsibility to act
  • Define triggers for action
  • Examine responsibilities for action
  • Protect patient autonomy and privacy
  • Identify indirect and collateral participants
  • Mitigate the risk of bias
  • Integrate responses within the clinical practice and understand the sociotechnical considerations.

Severe depression symptoms such as suicidal ideation can be assessed in patients using the PHQ-9, a validated self-report instrument used to score depression severity by inquiring about the  presence and severity of depression, passive thoughts of death, and active ideas of self-harm.

For more, read the full article or the article Responding to Signals of Mental and Behavioral Health Risk in PCTs from the Ethics and Regulatory Core.

The GRACE is supported by the NIH through the NIH HEAL Initiative under an award administered by the National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health. Learn more about the GRACE trial.

October 10, 2023: Ethics Consultation Documents Now Available for BEST-ICU, Chat 4 Heart Health, and TAICHIKNEE

Ethics and regulatory onboarding documentation for the NIH Pragmatic Trials Collaboratory’s newest NIH Collaboratory Trials is now available. The documents include meeting minutes and supplementary materials summarizing recent discussions of ethics and regulatory issues associated with the BEST-ICU, Chat 4 Heart Health, and TAICHIKNEE studies.

The consultations took place by video conference and included representation from the studies’ principal investigators, members of the NIH Collaboratory’s Ethics and Regulatory Core, NIH staff, and NIH Collaboratory Coordinating Center personnel. All of the projects are in their 1-year planning phase.

BEST-ICU will explore the prevention of health impairments exacerbated by health disparities in the intensive care unit (ICU) through the application of the ABCDEF bundle, a multicomponent, evidence-based intervention to improve team-based care. The objective of the study is to evaluate 2 strategies grounded in behavioral economic theory and implementation science to increase ABCDEF bundle adoption and, in turn, address known health disparities in the ICU.

Chat 4 Heart Health will use a patient-level randomized pragmatic trial to test the comparative effectiveness of 3 text messaging delivery strategies that have been shown to improve individuals’ self-management health behaviors, including physical activity and medication adherence. The study findings will provide evidence regarding the best population-based strategy for universal delivery to engage all patients with health disparities in self-management to improve the American Heart Association’s “Life’s Essential 8” measures for improving and maintaining cardiovascular health.

TAICHIKNEE will compare the effects of web-based tai chi interventions versus routine care for individuals experiencing knee pain due to osteoarthritis. The practice of tai chi integrates physical, psychosocial, and behavioral components and has exhibited clinically significant improvements in chronic knee osteoarthritis pain conditions. The results of the study will inform widespread adoption of mind-body approaches for knee osteoarthritis, which affects more than 32.5 million individuals in the United States, across healthcare systems.

Ethics and regulatory documentation for all of the NIH Collaboratory Trials is available on our Data and Resource Sharing page.

August 17, 2023: American Journal of Bioethics Publishes Special Issue on Pragmatic Clinical Trials

A graphic that includes the cover image from the August 2023 issue of the American Journal of Bioethics. The text in the graphic reads as follows: "American Journal of Bioethics Special issue on pragmatic trials, featuring target articles from the NIH Pragmatic Trials Collaboratory."When research and clinical care are deliberately integrated in an embedded pragmatic clinical trial, the nature and extent of investigators’ obligations to patient-subjects are blurred, as is the clinician’s duty to participate is such research. To address these questions, the American Journal of Bioethics (AJOB) recently published commentaries on 2 target articles in a special issue on pragmatic clinical trials. Both of the target articles for the special issue are from the NIH Pragmatic Trials Collaboratory’s Ethics and Regulatory Core.

Target Article #1

Think Pragmatically: Investigators’ Obligations to Patient-Subjects When Research Is Embedded in Care by Stephanie Morain and Emily Largent

  • The authors challenge the notion that the current ethical model can simply be extended to pragmatic research. Instead, the authors suggest a shift to a model that better reflects the team- and institution-based nature of both clinical care and embedded research.

Target Article #2

Do Clinicians Have a Duty to Participate in Pragmatic Clinical Trials? by Andrew Garland, Stephanie Morain, and Jeremy Sugarman

  • The authors argue that clinicians have a duty to participate in pragmatic research in usual care but suggest acceptable reasons to refuse, such as a badly designed trial, trial activities that violate the clinician’s conscience, or that the trial will impose excessive burdens on the clinician.

Some of the responses to the target articles are highlighted below.

Blurred Boundaries: Toward an Expanded Ethics of Research and Clinical Care
Megan C. Hailey and Nate Olson

  • The authors applaud the articles and offer a range of different research contexts where similar issues apply, including rare disease and genomics research.

Progressing From “Whether to” to “How to” Conduct Pragmatic Trials
Jonathan Casey, Todd Rice, and Matthew Smelner

  • The authors state that clinicians are confronted daily with clinical decisions where the best treatment is unknown and suggest that pragmatic trials are best situated to address the problem.

    “We believe that the US healthcare system has a basic choice to make: allow arbitrary variation in clinical care and continue to systematically expose patients to suboptimal or harmful therapies indefinitely or structure that variation through pragmatic trials to generate knowledge, reduce variation, and improve outcomes over time.”

Ethical Pragmatic Clinical Trials Require the Virtue of Cultivated Uneasiness
Joel Pacyna and Jon Tilburt

  • The authors suggest that softening the default requirement of documenting individual consent removes a primary tool that researchers rely on to ensure the ethical nature of their research. Cultivated uneasiness about waiving consent is warranted and will push researchers to fully examine their decisions and subsequent consequences.

Distinguishing Clinical and Research Risks in Pragmatic Clinical Trials: The Need for Further Stakeholder Engagement
Benjamin S. Wilfond, Sinem Toraman Turk, Stephanie A. Kraft, Elliott M. Weiss, Philip I. Tarr, David Schnadower, and Stephen B. Freedman

  • The authors present a case study involving complex interventions to support the target articles’ supposition that ethical frameworks for pragmatic clinical trials need to account for shortcomings in clinical care.

More-Than-Partial Entrustment in Pragmatic Clinical Trials
Henry S. Richardson

  • The author strongly supports the obligations of the investigators to report significant, actionable incidental findings about individuals.

End-to-End Integration of Pragmatic Trials Into Health Care Settings
Sarah M. Greene

  • The author agrees that pragmatic trials will provide invaluable evidence, but argues that trialists must take care not to interrupt the flow of clinical practice.

For more, see the 15 other commentaries in the special issue of AJOB and the Living Textbook chapter on Consent, Waiver of Consent, and Notification.

July 24, 2023: Bioethics Research Project Explores Data Sharing and Respect for Trial Participants

Headshot of Dr. Stepanie Morain
Dr. Stephanie Morain

At the NIH Pragmatic Trials Collaboratory Steering Committee’s annual meeting in May, Dr. Stephanie Morain discussed the results of a recent bioethics initiative to explore ethical considerations for data sharing in the context of pragmatic clinical trials. The project was supported by a supplemental grant award from the NIH through the NIH HEAL Initiative.

Morain and coauthors Juli Bolinger, Kevin Weinfurt, and Jeremy Sugarman published their work in an article in Clinical Trials and a report of stakeholder interviews in Learning Health Systems.  

With new data sharing requirements and expectations from funders, journals, and other stakeholders, Morain said the gaps in understanding related to data sharing in pragmatic clinical trials are relevant now more than ever. The supplement was an opportunity to better understand what data sharing policies exist and how well they align with pragmatic trials. 

“We suspected that pragmatic clinical trials might raise different challenges compared to sharing data from traditional explanatory trials,” she explained. 

Morain said that 2main reasons contributed to why data sharing may be different in the context of pragmatic clinical trials. First, many pragmatic trials use waivers or alterations of informed consent. But much existing ethical guidance for data sharing is based on the argument that sharing data is consistent with participants’ expectations or preferences.  

“If we didn’t get explicit permission from participants to participate in the trial, those assumptions [about expectations or preferences] may not hold,” she explained. 

The second key difference relates to the fact that pragmatic trials often use existing data from CMS or clinical records. It is often not new data generated for the research purposes, as in many traditional explanatory trials. The embedded nature of pragmatic trial data brings additional security and confidentiality concerns. 

The activities of the bioethics supplement were to:  

  • Conduct a systematic literature review to identify the specific features of pragmatic clinical trials that may alter the risk-benefit calculus for data sharing as compared to explanatory trials and other settings with ethically relevant similarities 
  • Through stakeholder interviews, explore data sharing in pragmatic trials as understood by those responsible for the oversight, generation, dissemination, and future use of data from pragmatic trials
  • Evaluate existing and proposed policies and guidance to promote data sharing

Morain highlighted four key insights from this work. 

More Data Needed on Patient Preferences 

The first takeaway was that more data are needed on patient preferences in the context of pragmatic clinical trials. 

During the qualitative interviews, stakeholders made assumptions based on irrelevant data from traditional explanatory trials. It is clear that many consider patient preferences important, and therefore, more information is needed in the context of pragmatic trials. 

“If we don’t actually have permission from the people about who these data relate, we then have to make decisions about either what we think they would prefer or what we think would be in their best interest,” she explained. “Both decisions rely on empirical data to justify them,” she said. 

Look Beyond Consent 

The second insight was that it may be necessary to look beyond consent.  

Many stakeholders in the research focused on consent as the main or only mechanism to demonstrate respect to participants. But Morain said it possible to look beyond informed consent processes to fulfill obligations of respect when sharing data from pragmatic clinical trials, particularly for trials not explicitly asking for consent.  

“Consent may be one way that we [researchers] demonstrate respect, but it’s not the only way,” she said. 

Healthcare Systems and Institutions Are Key Partners 

The third insight was that health systems and individual institutions are key partners. It may be important for them to be transparent that pragmatic research is underway and share findings with patients.

“Institutions are key partners in regards to what data can be shared, and how to do that in a way that maximizes the benefits of sharing but also protects both the patients and the health system,” Morain said.  

The Public Can’t Support What It Doesn’t Know Exists 

Finally, Morain said that the findings showed that the public can’t support sharing their data if they don’t know this type of research is happening. The medical field does a poor job explaining to patients how their information will be used.

She said that sharing information, even at the aggregate level, can be powerful. Even if informed consent is waived, health systems and institutions can find ways to communicate that pragmatic research is ongoing and highlight its value in advancing science.

“Something we have been advocating for is even if we are not asking for permission, we might still be able to notify,” she said. “Even if researchers don’t have to ask for participant permission, that doesn’t mean participants can’t be told.”

June 14, 2023: IMPACt-LBP and INSPIRE Have Updated Study Snapshots, Ethics and Regulatory Documentation

Updated study snapshots and ethics and regulatory documentation are now available for the IMPACt-LBP and INSPIRE trials, both NIH Pragmatic Trials Collaboratory Trials.

Logo for the IMPACt-LBP NIH Collaboratory TrialIMPACt-LBP transitioned from the planning phase to the implementation phase in August. As part of the transition, the study team reviewed and updated the minutes of their initial consultation with the Ethics and Regulatory Core. The study is a cluster randomized trial evaluating the effect of first-contact patient referral to physical therapists and doctors of chiropractic for the treatment of low back pain. IMPACt-LBP is supported within the NIH Collaboratory under an award from the National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health.

Logo for the INSPIRE NIH Collaboratory TrialINSPIRE joined the NIH Collaboratory at the beginning of its implementation phase. The study team held its initial consultation with the Ethics Regulatory Core to review their approach their approach to consent, data privacy, and the applicability of recent FDA guidance regarding clinical decision support software functions. INSPIRE consists of 2 cluster randomized trials that are using personalized clinical decision support to improve judicious antibiotic prescribing for non–critically ill patients hospitalized with abdominal infections or skin and soft tissue infections. The project is supported within the NIH Collaboratory under an award from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.

June 6, 2023: INSPIRE NIH Collaboratory Trial Principal Investigators Share Update at Annual Steering Committee Meeting

In an interview at the annual NIH Pragmatic Trials Collaboratory Steering Committee meeting in Bethesda, Maryland, Richard Platt, MD, MS (co–principal investigator) and Shruti Gohil, MD, MPH (lead investigator) of the INSPIRE NIH Collaboratory Trial shared the status of the trials, discussed recent lessons learned, described the impact they hope their trials will have on the future of healthcare, and reflected on the impact the NIH Collaboratory has had on their trials thus far.

Status Update

Headshot of Dr. Richard Platt
Richard Platt, MD

Shruti Gohil, MD, MPH

INSPIRE (or Intelligent Stewardship Prompts to Improve Real-Time Empiric Antibiotic Selection for Patients) is implementing 2 separate cluster-randomized trials to study the effectiveness of a patient/infection/hospital-specific clinical decision support program in improving antibiotic prescribing for non–critically ill patients who are hospitalized with abdominal infections or skin and soft tissue infections. The purpose of the trials is to reduce unnecessary broad-spectrum antibiotic use in non–intensive care unit inpatients.

The 12-month trial is currently in month 5, and the team has already seen a downward inflection in broad-spectrum antibiotic use.

Lessons Learned

Due to the urgent public health threat of antibiotic resistance, healthcare systems are actively seeking ways to support clinicians in judicious antibiotic prescribing. As a result, although the target recruitment was 60 hospitals out of approximately 200, 92 hospitals at HCA Healthcare requested enrollment.

"We have the privilege of being with a health system that has a strong leadership structure that is patient-safety oriented, and quality improvement is a top-notch priority," Gohil said, describing the unusual overenrollment.

The INSPIRE team determined that the trial could be shortened from 18 months to 12 by using all 92 hospitals.

"We determined that the higher number of hospitals wanting to participate gave us the opportunity to understand the usefulness of this decision support tool as quickly as possible and honor the commitment of the partner health system," Platt said. "Their view is, if it works, we want to use it everywhere as soon as possible," he said.

Impact of the Trial on Real-World Healthcare

Dr. Gohil explained that she hopes not only to reduce unnecessary prescribing of broad-spectrum antibiotics, but also to learn about how digital health can transform healthcare and its delivery.

“We have a tool that not only flags a low-risk patient, but is doing it based on data from the [electronic medical record] system, and is calculating risk specific to a patient, specific to a disease, and specific to a type of bacteria, and one that is unique to a hospital. It captures all that information and presents it to a clinician to make good judgments about antibiotic selection,” Gohil said. She hopes this work will be a step towards future systems that could be “savvy enough and real-time enough deliver high precision care tailored for individual patients as  part of an embedded learning system.”

Impact of the NIH Pragmatic Trials Collaboratory on INSPIRE

The INSPIRE intervention includes a clinical decision support tool to help clinicians make a guideline-concordant decision on antibiotic use based on a patient's personalized risk. At the time of the trial’s launch, the FDA introduced a new guidance on Clinical Decision Support Software to support determinations regarding whether a software would be considered a device and therefore subject to FDA oversight.

“It was really helpful to have the Ethics and Regulatory Core do a deep dive with us on the FDA guidance on clinical decision support and help determine that our software was not considered a device,” Platt said.

The INSPIRE NIH Collaboratory Trial is supported within the NIH Pragmatic Trials Collaboratory by a grant from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID).

All of the materials from the 2023 Steering Committee meeting are now available.