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Huge variation in obtaining ethical permission for a non-interventional observational study in Europe

BACKGROUND: Ethical approval (EA) must be obtained before medical research can start. We describe the differences in EA for an pseudonymous, non-interventional, observational European study. METHODS: Sixteen European national coordinators (NCs) of the international study on very old intensive care p...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: de Lange, Dylan W., Guidet, Bertrand, Andersen, Finn H., Artigas, Antonio, Bertolini, Guidio, Moreno, Rui, Christensen, Steffen, Cecconi, Maurizio, Agvald-Ohman, Christina, Gradisek, Primoz, Jung, Christian, Marsh, Brian J., Oeyen, Sandra, Bollen Pinto, Bernardo, Szczeklik, Wojciech, Watson, Ximena, Zafeiridis, Tilemachos, Flaatten, Hans
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6547492/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31159853
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12910-019-0373-y
Descripción
Sumario:BACKGROUND: Ethical approval (EA) must be obtained before medical research can start. We describe the differences in EA for an pseudonymous, non-interventional, observational European study. METHODS: Sixteen European national coordinators (NCs) of the international study on very old intensive care patients answered an online questionnaire concerning their experience getting EA. RESULTS: N = 8/16 of the NCs could apply at one single national ethical committee (EC), while the others had to apply to various regional ECs and/or individual hospital institutional research boards (IRBs). The time between applying for EA and the first decision varied between 7 days and 300 days. In 9/16 informed consent from the patient was not deemed necessary; in 7/16 informed consent was required from the patient or relatives. The upload of coded data to a central database required additional information in 14/16. In 4/16 the NCs had to ask separate approval to keep a subject identification code list to de-pseudonymize the patients if questions would occur. Only 2/16 of the NCs agreed that informed consent was necessary for this observational study. Overall, 6/16 of the NCs were satisfied with the entire process and 8/16 were (very) unsatisfied. 11/16 would welcome a European central EC that would judge observational studies for all European countries. DISCUSSION: Variations in the process and prolonged time needed to get EA for observational studies hampers inclusion of patients in some European countries. This might have a negative influence on the external validity. Further harmonization of ethical approval process across Europe is welcomed for low-risk observational studies. CONCLUSION: Getting ethical approval for low-risk, non-interventional, observational studies varies enormously across European countries.