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Research With Pregnant Women Permissible Regulations, Cautious Practice: A US Perspective Anna C. Mastroianni, JD, MPH Professor of Law, University of Washington School of Law Associate Director, Institute for Public Health Genetics Seattle, USA Leslie Meltzer Henry, JD, PhD Professor of Law, University of Maryland Carey School of Law Core Faculty, Johns Hopkins Berman Institute of Bioethics Baltimore, USA Orientation • United States permits pregnant women’s participation in research under conditions specified in regulations and official guidances • Facilitated through local IRB review with national oversight • “Subpart B” [Additional Protections for Pregnant Women, Human Fetuses and Neonates Involved in Research] regulations set up ethical framework, with extensive reach and international influence • Permissibility stymied by regulatory and other legal obstacles www.pregnancyethics.org The Reach of Subpart B NIH-Funded Research Research Funded by U.S. Agency that Follows Subpart B Conducted Inside or Outside of the United States Conducted Inside or Outside of the United States SUBPART B APPLIES Any Funder Any Funder Research Conducted at an FWA Institution Inside or Outside of the United States Research Team Member Affiliated with FWA Institution Inside or Outside of the United States www.pregnancyethics.org US Regulatory Approach to Common Ethical Issues Presumption of Inclusion “Pregnant women or fetuses may be involved in research if all of the following conditions are met…” (2001) Contrast ICH “ In general, pregnant women should be excluded …where drug not intended for use in pregnancy” Population Classified as Vulnerable “IRB…should be particularly cognizant of the special problems of research involving vulnerable populations, such as…pregnant women…..” Contrast ICH: “special population” with “unique risk/benefit considerations “ or “modification of use of the dose or schedule of a drug “ and “attention… to informed consent.” www.pregnancyethics.org US Regulatory Approach to Common Ethical Issues Benefit-Risk Prospect of direct benefit to woman or fetus “risk to the fetus is caused solely by interventions or procedures that hold out the prospect of direct benefit for the woman or the fetus” No prospect of direct benefit to woman or fetus Where “no such prospect of benefit, the risk to the fetus is not greater than minimal” and research purpose is “development of important biomedical knowledge which cannot be obtained by any other means” www.pregnancyethics.org Additional Mechanism for Approving Research with Pregnant Women • Standard: “reasonable opportunity to further the understanding, prevention, or alleviation of a serious problem affecting the health or welfare of pregnant women [or] fetuses …” • Process: Decision by Secretary of Health and Human Services, after consultation with expert panel, public comment, and public meeting www.pregnancyethics.org US Regulatory Approach to Common Ethical Issues: Paternal Consent • Inform of “reasonably foreseeable impact of the research on the fetus” • Additional consent of father required if research holds out prospect of direct benefit solely to the fetus • Exceptions: unavailability, incompetence, temporary incapacity, pregnancy resulted from rape or incest. www.pregnancyethics.org Default Approach De Facto Exclusion of Pregnant Women Many researchers and institutional review boards (IRBs) continue to regard pregnancy as a near-automatic cause for exclusion, regardless of the costs of exclusion or the magnitude or likelihood of the risks of participation. A. Lyerly, M. Little & R. Faden. The second wave: toward responsible inclusion of pregnant women in research. Real-Life Implications • Fewer than 20 FDA-approved drugs are approved for use during pregnancy • Mean time for determining risk of medication in pregnancy: 27 years postdrug approval www.pregnancyethics.org Legal Obstacles Lawyers are active and influential participants in decisionmaking throughout the research process • Regulatory Ambiguity and Inconsistency • Legal Risk Management • Litigation Climate and “Long Tail” Liability Concerns • Insurance Availability • Compensation Availability • Venue-Specific Laws • International Complexity • Fetal Protection Laws www.pregnancyethics.org Acknowledgments www.pregnancyethics.org