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Site Variability in Regulatory Oversight for an International Study of Pediatric Sepsis

Authors :
Emanuele Rossetti
Janet Hume
Anil Sapru
Lauren Sorce
Denise Goodman
John Pappachan
Mark Coulthard
Katri V Typpo
John Giuliano
Scott Weiss
Juan Pablo García-Iñiguez
Aikaterini Mougkou
Jiri Zurek
Jesus Lopez-Herce
Andreas Schibler
Shira Gertz
Debbie Long
Karthi Nallasamy
Joe Brierley
Mark Peters
Maria Szczepanska
Antonio Rodriguez-Nunez
Javier Urbano
Source :
Pediatric Critical Care Medicine, 19, 4, pp. e180-e188, Pediatric Critical Care Medicine, 19, e180-e188
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Item does not contain fulltext OBJECTIVES: Duplicative institutional review board/research ethics committee review for multicenter studies may impose administrative burdens and inefficiencies affecting study implementation and quality. Understanding variability in site-specific institutional review board/research ethics committee assessment and barriers to using a single review committee (an increasingly proposed solution) can inform a more efficient process. We provide needed data about the regulatory oversight process for the Sepsis PRevalence, OUtcomes, and Therapies multicenter point prevalence study. DESIGN: Survey. SETTING: Sites invited to participate in Sepsis PRevalence, OUtcomes, and Therapies. SUBJECTS: Investigators at sites that expressed interest and/or participated in Sepsis PRevalence, OUtcomes, and Therapies. INTERVENTIONS: None. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: Using an electronic survey, we collected data about 1) logistics of protocol submission, 2) institutional review board/research ethics committee requested modifications, and 3) use of a single institutional review board (for U.S. sites). We collected surveys from 104 of 167 sites (62%). Of the 97 sites that submitted the protocol for institutional review board/research ethics committee review, 34% conducted full board review, 54% expedited review, and 4% considered the study exempt. Time to institutional review board/research ethics committee approval required a median of 34 (range 3-186) days, which took longer at sites that required protocol modifications (median [interquartile range] 50 d [35-131 d] vs 32 d [14-54 d)]; p = 0.02). Enrollment was delayed at eight sites due to prolonged (> 50 d) time to approval. Of 49 U.S. sites, 43% considered using a single institutional review board, but only 18% utilized this option. Time to final approval for U.S. sites using the single institutional review board was 62 days (interquartile range, 34-70 d) compared with 34 days (interquartile range, 15-54 d) for nonsingle institutional review board sites (p = 0.16). CONCLUSIONS: Variability in regulatory oversight was evident for this minimal-risk observational research study, most notably in the category of type of review conducted. Duplicative review prolonged time to protocol approval at some sites. Use of a single institutional review board for U.S. sites was rare and did not improve efficiency of protocol approval. Suggestions for minimizing these challenges are provided.

Details

ISSN :
15297535
Volume :
19
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Pediatric Critical Care Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fab08938e6c81876b6d30da10196e638