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February 7, 2003 -- New surgical options such
as the artificial heart and deep-brain stimulation can extend life
and quality of life, but often with risk, especially during early
stages of their development. As is the case with new drugs, surgeons
using new medical devices have to follow strict guidelines set by
the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and also get "informed
consent" from patients after they are told about all aspects and risks
of the procedure.
New surgical
procedures that do not involve devices, however, are not regulated
by the FDA or any other entities. When does innovation in surgical
technique (not drugs or devices) cross the line and become a research
experiment? In the June 2001 issue of the Journal of the American
College of Surgeons, researchers at the University of Virginia Health
System reported results from a survey of surgeons that addresses
this unregulated area of medicine. The researchers also received a
$180,000 grant from the Greenwall Foundation in New York to start
a research group that will help determine new guidelines for conduct
of trials and design an educational program to improve adherence to
these policies.
How do
surgeons determine the effectiveness of surgical techniques without
testing them on human subjects? For example, liver transplantation
involving grafts from living donors - originally designed to be a
procedure in children - is a surgical innovation now used for adults
with growing frequency without having been formally researched using
adult subjects, according to the study’s co-authors, Jonathan Moreno,
Ph.D., director of the U.Va. Center
for Biomedical Ethics, and Angelique Reitsma, M.D., research associate
at the center.
Innovations in surgery that begin in the operating room can
turn into an experimental procedure. "Distinguishing between gradual
implementation of minor surgical modifications and more permanent
or extensive alterations of a technique is a challenge," the authors
wrote. "This is especially true when modifications are made on an
as-needed basis, for the benefit of the individual patient. However,
a surgeon may begin to change his or her standard OR technique more
permanently based upon experiences."
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| Angelique Reitsma, M.D., and Jonathan Moreno, Ph.D.,
of U.Va.’s Center for Biomedical Ethics discuss their ongoing
project that examines the ethical aspects of regulation of research
in new surgical techniques. The center recently received a $180,000
grant from the Greenwall Foundation in New York to start a research
group that will help determine guidelines and an education program. |
Experimental trials of surgical techniques present special
problems in setting up double-blind experiments to compare effects
of treatment vs. nontreatment. "The problem in doing a controlled
experiment is that we’re talking actions and procedures, not drugs
and devices, and that makes it harder to quantify and duplicate from
case to case," says Moreno. "We think there’s an answer, but that’s
part of the project."
The researchers
sent a survey to 59 surgeons who had authored articles about new surgical
procedures that appeared in medical journals between 1992 and 2000.
The surgeons were asked if they considered their new procedures to
have been researched in terms of federal definitions based on information
supplied with the questionnaires.
All medical
research institutions that receive federal funding are required by
the National Research Act of 1974 to have institutional review boards
(IRBs). These boards ensure that the institution's medical research
studies with human subjects comply with federal standards for such
experiments. The regulations, enforced by the Office for Human Research
Protections of the Department of Health and Human Services, include
the requirement that clinical study participants be informed of any
safety issues before they consent to become enrolled in the trial.
IRBs also are responsible for monitoring trials at their institutions.
Private research studies conducted without federal funds do not always
have IRB review. And, the authors note in their journal article, "there
are no clear federal regulations pertaining to innovative surgical
procedures." Self-imposed guidelines from the American College of
Surgeons, they note, "remain open to individual interpretation and
are not restrictive in character."
"It is
presumably wrong to put somebody into an experiment without receiving
their consent," Moreno says. "Our concern is whether research in surgery
has been out of this loop of IRB review and how to make the rules
suitable for the setting of surgery."
Reitsma
said that some survey respondents expressed annoyance at the prospect
of increased regulation, as well as doubt that federal regulators
would know enough to make decisions affecting innovative surgery.
But others thought guidelines, especially if partly developed by a
peer-review process led by a professional society would actually help
protect surgeons and patients.
"Innovative surgery is done especially with desperate patients,
who surgeons want to help," Reitsma says. "They might say, we've never
done this before, we think this might help, let's go ahead and do
it. But if you subject ten patients to that new procedure specifically
to determine its yet unknown efficacy, it becomes a research experiment,
especially if you write about it and send it to a journal. Surgical
innovation starts with a desire to help patients, but somewhere along
the line it may become research when it didn't start out that way."
Such research would then justify IRB review and sometimes informed
consent of patients, who have now become research subjects.
The U.Va. bioethicists are working with the Ethics Committee of the
American College of Surgeons as well as the Center for Survey Research
at U.Va.’s Curry School of Education. They also have organized a research
group that includes surgeons, other health care experts, lawyers,
ethicists and others. "The first study was just a pilot," says Moreno.
"Now we’re going to reach out to thousands of surgeons." The research
group holds its first meeting in February 2003.
For
more information on this article please contact Jeffery Lindholm,
(434) 924-5875
or University News Services at (434) 924-7116
For
more information on the study:
Jonathan Moreno, Ph.D.
Director, Center for Biomedical Ethics
434-924-8274
E-mail: jdm8n@virginia.edu
Angelique Reitsma, M.D.
Center for Biomedical Ethics
434-243-9338
E-mail: ar6j@virginia.edu
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