October 16, 2025: New Article Surveys Landscape of Empirical Ethics Research Related to Pragmatic Clinical Trials

Headshots of Dr. Kayla Mehl, Dr. Stephanie Morain, and Dr. Jeremy Sugarman
Left to right: Kayla R. Mehl, Stephanie R. Morain, and Jeremy Sugarman

A new article from the NIH Pragmatic Trials Collaboratory’s Ethics and Regulatory Core offers a comprehensive scoping review of published empirical ethics research related to pragmatic clinical trials. These trials, which are designed to assess evidence-based interventions in real-world settings, present a variety of unique ethical and regulatory challenges.

The article was published online ahead of print in Learning Health Systems.

The review analyzed 82 published studies of ethics issues that have been explored in the context of pragmatic clinical trials. The authors, led by Kayla Mehl at Johns Hopkins University, identified 22 distinct ethical themes, with the 5 most prevalent being consent and disclosure, risk assessment, trust and transparency, operational burdens and implementation barriers, and the role of engagement.

  • Consent and disclosure: Traditional written informed consent is often impractical in pragmatic trials, prompting the exploration of alternative approaches such as opt-out or general notification.
  • Risk assessment: Pragmatic trials present challenges in risk assessment, particularly regarding how “minimal risk” is defined and communicated, which complicates regulatory determinations and participant protections.
  • Trust and transparency: Trust-building practices, such as results sharing and transparent data use disclosures, are essential for fostering participant confidence.
  • Burdens, barriers, and costs: Institutions, investigators, and research teams face a variety of operational and logistical burdens in pragmatic trials, especially when integrating interventions into routine care and navigating ethics concerns around data governance and data sharing.
  • Engagement: Engagement practices in pragmatic trials have been limited and inconsistent, highlighting “a persistent gap between the ideal of inclusive, sustained collaboration and the realities of constrained resources, power dynamics, and unclear stakeholder roles.”

Read the full article.

The authors point out that most empirical ethics research related to pragmatic trials has been concentrated in the United States and other Western countries and is heavily reliant on surveys and hypothetical scenarios. This limits the generalizability and real-world applicability of current findings. The authors advocate for future research that is geographically inclusive and that employs innovative methodologies, including nested empirical studies within ongoing pragmatic trials, to provide richer, context-sensitive insights.

Mehl completed a postdoctoral fellowship in the ethics and regulatory aspects of pragmatic clinical trials at the Berman Institute for Bioethics at Johns Hopkins University. Coauthor Stephanie Morain is a core faculty member at the Berman Institute and an associate professor of health policy and management at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. Coauthor Jeremy Sugarman is the Harvey M. Meyerhoff Professor of Bioethics and Medicine, professor of medicine, and professor of health policy and management at Johns Hopkins and the deputy director for medicine of the Berman Institute.

Morain and Sugarman are cochairs of the NIH Collaboratory’s Ethics and Regulatory Core.

December 3, 2024: Sharing Results With Research Participants Raises Special Considerations in Pragmatic Trials

Cover image of the journal Clinical TrialsIn a new report from the NIH Pragmatic Trials Collaboratory, a team of bioethicists explores the ethical obligation to share aggregate results from pragmatic clinical trials with research participants. They conclude with recommendations for how to meet this obligation.

The article was published online ahead of print in Clinical Trials.

There is growing appreciation of the importance of sharing aggregate results of clinical trials with research participants. However, this practice has not been examined in the context of pragmatic clinical trials, which have special features that may complicate the ethics and logistics of sharing aggregate results.

The report’s authors summarize the ethical arguments for sharing aggregate results and describe the features of pragmatic trials that may raise logistical and other barriers to disclosure. They also discuss the important role healthcare system partners play in sharing results from pragmatic trials.

The authors offer the following recommendations:

  • Sharing aggregate results with research participants should be the default, and decisions not to share should be justified
  • Planning for sharing aggregate results should begin early in the planning of the trial
  • The healthcare care systems in which the trial is embedded should be key partners in decisions about what and how to share
  • Proactive sharing of results from a pragmatic trial that was conducted under a waiver or alteration of consent, including an explanation for why consent was not obtained in the study, can promote trust in the investigators and their healthcare system partners

Read the full report.

The article was coauthored by members of the NIH Pragmatic Trials Collaboratory’s Ethics and Regulatory Core, including Stephanie Morain, Abigail Brickler, Joseph Ali, Caleigh Propes, and Kayla Mehl of Johns Hopkins University; Pearl O’Rourke, formerly of Partners HealthCare; Kayte Spector-Bagdady of the University of Michigan; Benjamin Wilfond of the Seattle Children’s Hospital; Vasiliki Rahimzadeh of the Baylor College of Medicine; and David Wendler of the NIH Clinical Center.

November 21, 2024: Are Pragmatic Trials Living Up to the Promise of Improving Representativeness?

Headshots of Stephanie Morain, Kayla Mehl, and Caleigh Propes
(Left to right) Authors Stephanie Morain, Kayla Mehl, and Caleigh Propes

In a new commentary, members of the NIH Pragmatic Trials Collaboratory’s Ethics and Regulatory Core explore the potential of pragmatic trials to improve demographic representativeness and health equity in clinical research. The article, “Untapped Potential? Representativeness in Pragmatic Clinical Trials,” was published online ahead of print in JAMA.

Authors Caleigh Propes, Kayla Mehl, and Stephanie Morain review early experiences with pragmatic trials and describe the challenges researchers face in achieving representative enrollment:

  • Pragmatic trials are embedded in unjust healthcare systems
  • Pragmatic trials often rely on electronic health record systems for data collection
  • As in traditional clinical trials, site selection in pragmatic trials tends to be biased toward better-resourced sites and sites with closer ties to established researchers
  • There is a general lack of attention to health equity considerations in trial design

The authors conclude that “further empirical scholarship is needed to assess the extent to which [pragmatic trials] are (or are not) truly representative and to define appropriate enrollment goals.”

Read the full article.

Propes is a doctoral student in bioethics and health policy and management at the Berman Institute of Bioethics, Mehl is a postdoctoral fellow in the ethics and regulatory aspects of pragmatic clinical trials at the Berman Institute, and Morain is a core faculty member at the Berman Institute and an associate professor of health policy and management at the Bloomberg School of Public Health—all at Johns Hopkins University.