Category Archives: Patient-Centered Outcomes Research

PCORI Executive Director Dr. Joe Selby to Speak on Regulatory Issues Concerning Big Data


The meeting of the Secretary’s Advisory Committee for Human Research Protections (SACHRP) scheduled for July 21-22, 2014, will include a session on “Regulatory Issues Concerning Big Data.” Joe Selby, MD, MPH, executive director of the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI), will speak, along with leaders from the NIH and FDA. The session is scheduled for 1:30-3:45 pm on Monday, July 21.

SACHRP provides recommendations on human subjects protection to the Secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and reviews activities of the Office for Human Research Protections (OHRP). Other topics to be covered during the two-day meeting include informed consent comprehension, the return of research results to human subjects, and ethical/regulatory issues in interventional social media research.

The meeting is available to the public and will be videocast live.

View the meeting agenda
View the live webcast (available July 21-22, 2014)

A link to materials from the meeting will be provided in an update to this post when available.


Patient-Generated Data and Comparative Effectiveness Research


July 9, 2014

Researchers at Duke Medicine published an article in the July 2014 issue of Health Affairs that assesses the need for, uses of, and strengths and weaknesses of patient-generated data and reviews efforts to create new streams of patient-generated data for clinical and research use. The authors discuss patient-facing technologies, such as wearable sensors and other devices that collect patient-reported outcomes (PROs), and explore ways that these technologies could potentially help inform decisions made by patients, providers, and policy makers and ultimately improve the quality of patient care.

Click here for the article: Assessing the Value of Patient-Generated Data to Comparative Effectiveness Research.

Amy Abernethy and Tracie Locklear, two of the paper’s authors, are also members of the NIH Collaboratory’s Patient-Reported Outcomes (PRO) Core Working Group. Click here to see their Living Textbook chapter on PROs.


PCORnet: “Not your father’s clinical trial network”


“PCORnet: Turning a Dream Into Reality,” an editorial published online this week in the Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association, details the promises of the National Patient-Centered Clinical Research Network (PCORnet):

“Providing accurate answers based on the highest levels of scientific evidence for the majority of unresolved clinical questions is a revolutionary dream shared by patients, providers, payers, health plans, researchers, and policy makers alike. PCORnet, the National Patient-Centered Clinical Research Network, promises a transformative platform that will turn this revolutionary dream into reality.”

The authors describe PCORnet’s patient-centered vision and how its transformative clinical research will be carried out through a national research network involving both Clinical Data Research Networks and Patient-Powered Research Networks. This “network of networks” is designed to include a large, highly representative population. PCORnet will first work to establish data architecture and standards and address key policy questions, followed by the conduct of its first pragmatic clinical trial slated to begin in September 2015.

Editorial authors include NIH Director Dr. Francis Collins and PCORnet Steering Committee members Kathy L. Hudson, PhD, and Josephine P. Briggs, MD.


Collaboratory Investigators Publish Article on Ethical and Regulatory Complexities for Pragmatic Clinical Trials in JAMA


“Ethics and Regulatory Complexities for Pragmatic Clinical Trials,” a Viewpoint article by Jeremy Sugarman, MD, MPH, MA, and Robert Califf, MD, was published online in JAMA today. In the article, the authors draw on early experiences from two large networks conducting pragmatic clinical trials, the NIH Collaboratory and the National Patient-Centered Clinical Research Network (PCORnet), to describe 10 ethical and regulatory complexities facing this new field of research. Topics covered include informed consent, risk determination, the role of gatekeepers, and institutional review board review and oversight, among others, as well as the ongoing need for further discussion and research as a key part of efforts aimed at creating a learning healthcare system.

Dr. Sugarman is chair of the Regulatory/Ethics Core of the NIH Collaboratory and deputy director for medicine of the Johns Hopkins Berman Institute of Bioethics. Dr. Califf is the principal investigator of the NIH Collaboratory Coordinating Center and director of the Duke Translational Medicine Institute.


The Diane Rehm Show Features PCORnet


On Thursday, April 17, The Diane Rehm Show, a nationally syndicated news and call-in program carried on National Public Radio, aired a program titled The Promise and Perils of a New Project to Share Individual Patient Records. Susan Page of USA Today led the discussion on PCORnet: the National Patient-Centered Clinical Research Network, which is supported by the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI). Dr. Joe Selby, the executive director of PCORI, describes how PCORnet will take advantage of the incredible quantity of clinical information in electronic health records to conduct much-needed research on the relative effectiveness of different medical devices, drugs, and other medical therapies. Click here for a transcript of this program, or listen to the full episode below:

Listen now: The Promise and Perils of a New Project to Share Patient Records


Grand Rounds (4-18-2014): Data Quality and Transparency Standards

Update:

Archived video and slides from the April 18 Grand Rounds are now available on the NIH Collaboratory Grand Rounds webpage.


This Friday’s NIH Collaboratory and PCORnet Grand Rounds (“Building PCOR Value and Integrity With Data Quality and Transparency Standards: An Introduction and Request for Input”) will be presented by Michael G. Kahn, MD, PhD, professor of epidemiology in the Department of Pediatrics at the University of Colorado Denver. Dr. Kahn is co-director of the Colorado Clinical and Translational Sciences Institute (CCTSI), Translational Informatics Core director for the CCTSI, and director of clinical informatics in the Department of Quality & Patient Safety at The Children’s Hospital.

The Grand Rounds presentation will take place from 1:00-2:00 PM Eastern time on Friday, April 18. Details are available here. Archived video and slides from the presentation will be available early the following week; links to archived material will be provided in an update to this post.


Grand Rounds (4-11-2014): A PCORnet Update

Update:

Archived video and slides from the April 11 Grand Rounds are now available on the NIH Collaboratory Grand Rounds webpage.


Today’s NIH Collaboratory and PCORnet Grand Rounds (“A PCORnet Update”) will be presented by Richard Platt, MD, MSc, professor and chair of the Department of Population Medicine at Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute. Dr. Platt is co-principal investigator of the Coordinating Center for the NIH Collaboratory, principal investigator of the Coordinating Center for PCORnet, and principal investigator of the FDA’s Mini-Sentinel program.

The Grand Rounds presentation will take place from 1:00-2:00 PM Eastern time on Friday, April 11. Details are available here. Archived video and slides from the presentation will be available early the following week; links to archived material will be provided in an update to this post.


PCORI Featured in Health Affairs Blog


Joe Selby, MD, MPH, executive director of the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI), discusses the promise of PCORI’s research efforts in a recent guest blog post for healthcare policy journal Health Affairs. In his post, Selby explains that PCORI’s mandate is not just to fund comparative effectiveness research (CER) studies that compare multiple therapeutic options, but also to share the results in ways that are meaningful to patients, physicians, and other stakeholders.

Although many of PCORI’s resources are dedicated to supporting CER in reaPatient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI) logol-world settings, patient engagement in research is also a cornerstone of PCORI’s efforts. Of the $464 million invested, 62% has been focused on CER, with the rest spread across infrastructure (18%), methods (11%) and communication and dissemination research (8%). PCORI expects to commit $1 billion over the next 2 years to expand their work. As part of their mission, they also hope to improve research methods and build the national capacity for CER.


Grand Rounds (3-21-2014): The Use of Social Media in Clinical Research

Update:

Archived video and slides  from the March 21 Grand Rounds are now available on the NIH Collaboratory Grand Rounds webpage.


On Friday, March 21, the NIH Collaboratory and PCORnet Grand Rounds featured a presentation on “The Use of Social Media in Clinical Research” by Stephanie Startz, Associate Director of Digital Strategy for the Michael J. Fox Foundation. The Fox Foundation is a patient-focused nonprofit organization dedicated to finding a cure for Parkinson disease.

In December 2013, the Fox Foundation hosted a Twitter chat (#FoxChat) about challenges in clinical trial recruitment. The foundation’s blog notes that the discussion involved more than 90 participants and more than 600 tweets, making it one of Twitter’s hottest topics during that time. The Twitter chat, a full transcript of which is available online, engaged a diverse audience that included researchers, nonprofit organizations, patients, and patient advocacy groups, demonstrating that the Twitter chat format has the potential to elicit dialogue among these groups.

Ms Startz described the Fox Foundation’s other social media efforts on Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, etc, which have been successful in engaging the patient community and encouraging participation in clinical research. For example, a 3-day campaign on Facebook led to more than 1800 visitors to the Fox Trial Finder website. Advice for engaging patients via social media included being social by sharing stories and videos (not just requests for action), avoiding jargon, and responding to users. The Fox Foundation shares firsthand patient experiences, gives updates on trials, and thanks participants using social media. The Grand Rounds discussion covered issues of privacy and the extent to which social media could potentially play a role in involving patients in research design, not just research participation.


Changes to Informed Consent in the Era of Learning Healthcare Systems


In 2007, a seminal report from the Institute of Medicine (IOM) threw a sharp spotlight on a series of problems facing the broader U.S. healthcare system:

Evidence on what is effective, and under what Cover page of IOM report - The Learning Healthcare Systemcircumstances, is often lacking, poorly communicated to decision makers, or inadequately applied, and despite significant expenditures on health care for Americans, these investments have not translated to better health.

—The Learning Healthcare System (IOM Workshop Summary), 2007

The IOM report called for a new approach to closing the existing gaps in patient care, one that would create a system in which patient care, quality improvement efforts, and clinical research would exist as integrated components within a virtuous cycle of feedback—the “learning healthcare system.” (The original report, plus a series of related reports [PDF], can be read for free online at the National Academies Press website.)

In the years since The Learning Healthcare System was first published, researchers, healthcare providers, health systems, and governmental and regulatory agencies have all struggled with the monumental task of building such a system. One aspect that has presented a particularly complex set of challenges centers on the issue of informed consent. The principle of informed consent—the idea that all patients have the right to make a fully informed decision, free from coercion or other undue pressure, about whether or not to participate in research—is a foundational tenet of clinical research ethics. However, some of the tools that are widely considered to be critical to the success of achieving a workable learning healthcare system, such comparative effectiveness studies and cluster-randomized trials, are difficult or even impossible to conduct under existing models of individual informed consent.

Recent efforts from the Ottawa Consensus Statement Group and a series of articles published in an issue of the Hastings Center Report have explored explored informed consent in such circumstances. These are now joined by a pair of articles published in the February 20, 2014 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine. In the first, Faden and colleagues outline a case for streamlining or even dispensing with individual informed consent in certain kinds of randomized comparative-effectiveness or quality improvement studies that present a minimal risk of harm to patients [1]. The authors also describe the larger framework that would provide transparent and accountable oversight of such studies, as well as overseeing the integration of findings from such research into the patient-care process.

The second article, by Kim and Miller, presents a different vision for informed consent,  the “Integrated Consent Model” [2]. Unlike Faden and colleagues, the authors argue for preserving the element of informed consent for all randomized pragmatic research, even in circumstances considered to pose minimal risk to patients. Kim and Miller suggest that such a model, in which the prospect of participating in research is offered as part of the general clinical discussion about treatment options and documented by the physician, will satisfy ethical imperatives for informing patients while remaining sufficiently streamlined to meet the demands of pragmatic clinical research. They also argue that an “integrated consent” approach could be accommodated under existing regulations.

Regardless of whether either or both of these perspectives can be incorporated into the emerging learning healthcare system, the larger questions surrounding informed consent are  garnering significant interest, as evidenced by the response to the Department of Health and Human Service’s 2011 call for public comment on a proposal to modify rules governing clinical research. And with the proliferation of new technologies and trial designs that use data extracted directly from patient’s electronic health records (such as the demonstration projects coordinated through the NIH Collaboratory) and the emergence of innovative networks devoted to pragmatic patient-centered research, the need for a solution both protects patients and enables vitally needed research will only continue to grow.

For additional perspective on the recent publications in the New England Journal of Medicine, see "Research Permissions–Angels on the Head of a Pin, or the Key Issue to Decipher?" by NIH Collaboratory PI Dr. Rob Califf.

References


1. Faden RR, Beauchamp TL, Kass NE. Informed consent, comparative effectiveness, and learning health care. N Engl J Med 2014;340:766-768. 10.1056/NEJMhle1313674.

2. Kim SYH, Miller FG. Informed consent for pragmatic trials — The integrated consent model. N Engl J Med 2014; 370:769-772. doi: 10.1056/NEJMhle1312508.