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Ensuring
Safety in PHN Studies
A
is planned to study a medicine or treatment to improve human
health and medical practice. Studies can help healthcare workers
know whether to use (or not to use) the treatment being studied.
The purpose of the Pediatric Heart Network (PHN) is to develop
studies to improve health in people with
or .
Studies also help doctors and nurses make better decisions
in using certain medicines and treatments. It is very important
to the PHN nurses and doctors to keep patients safe in clinical
studies.
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Study Design
Pediatric heart
researchers suggest studies that they feel will answer important
questions about how best to treat patients. Researchers will
write a
which is like the instructions in a cookbook. A protocol describes:
- The problem
to be studied;
- What will be
learned from the study;
- Who may enter
and what will happen during the study;
- How safety
will be maintained;
- How success
or failure will be measured
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Studies are reviewed for safety
by many groups
There are several
steps a study has to go through before it can be started and
patients can be enrolled:
- The protocol
is reviewed and discussed in detail by members of the PHN.
The members have a wide variety of training and experience
in nursing, medicine, statistics, special technologies and
managing clinical trials. Changes are made to create the
best and safest study possible.
- The study protocol
is then sent to a specially qualified, independent group
appointed by the National
Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
.
This group is called a Protocol Review Committee or PRC.
It is their job to review the study protocol and make suggestions
about how to carry out the study and to recommend changes
to the protocol.
- Once additional
changes have been made, the protocol is sent to a second
independent review committee called the
.
The DSMB may also suggest possible changes to the protocol
or consent form focusing mostly on the safety of the study
subjects.
- The protocol
and
that has been reviewed by the PHN members, the PRC and the
DSMB, will then go to a review board at each hospital that
will enroll patients in the study. These boards are called
different names such as .
These boards are chosen by a hospital to review and approve
the start of a study and to review the study at regular
times. The primary purpose is to assure that the patients
who participate in studies are protected. The IRB may also
ask that changes be made before allowing the research team
to begin the study at their hospital or clinic.
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Special training on patient safety
is required
Each member of
the research team must complete special training on how to
protect subjects in clinical trials. Additional specific training
is given to the research team on how to safely conduct each
PHN study. No one may contact a patient or family or participate
in these studies unless there is proof that this training
has been taken.
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Dealing with adverse events
Each
must collect and report all
to their IRB or REB, the Pediatric Heart Network and the NHLBI
in a short timeframe. Not all adverse events will occur because
of the study but may occur as a result of the condition of
the study participant. Adverse events are followed closely
by the doctors and nurses doing the study and they will decide
what to do as soon as the adverse event is known. Serious
adverse events are reviewed by the DSMB chairperson, a medical
monitor, and the NHLBI staff within a few days of the report.
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Ongoing review for safety
It is the job
of the DSMB and IRB or REB to review the study on a regular
basis to make sure that participants are safe and that the
study data is reliable. The DSMB will meet as often as necessary
to:
- Assess how well
each hospital is performing
- Review adverse
events
- Suggest ending
the study early if results show that the treatment is effective
or not or because of safety concerns
All of the steps
described above are taken to protect people who are enrolled
in PHN studies.
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