TY - JOUR
T1 - Informed consent and assent guide for paediatric clinical trials in Europe
AU - Lepola, Pirkko
AU - Kindred, Maxine
AU - Giannuzzi, Viviana
AU - Glosli, Heidi
AU - Dehlinger-Kremer, Martine
AU - Dalrymple, Harris
AU - Neubauer, David
AU - Boylan, Geraldine B.
AU - Conway, Jean
AU - Dewhurst, Jo
AU - Hoffman, Diane
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Author(s) (or their employer(s)).
PY - 2022/6
Y1 - 2022/6
N2 - Objective: Clinical trial sponsors spend considerable resources preparing informed consent (IC) and assent documentation for multinational paediatric clinical trial applications in Europe due to the limited and dispersed patient populations, the variation of national legal and ethical requirements, and the lack of detailed guidance. The aim of this study was to design new easy-to- use guide publicly available on European Medicines Agency's, Enpr-EMA website for all stakeholders. Methods Current EU legal, ethical and regulatory guidance for paediatric clinical trials were collated, analysed and divided into 30 subject elements in two tables. The European Network of Young Person's Advisory Group reviewed the data and provided specific comments. A three-level recommendation using 'traffic light' symbols was designed for four age groups of children, according to relevance and the requirements. Results: A single guide document includes two tables: (1) general information and (2) trial-specific information. In the age group of 6-9 years old, 92% of the trial-specific subject elements can be or should be included in the IC discussion. Even in the youngest possible age group (2-5 years old children), the number of elements considered was, on average, 52%. Conclusion: The EU Clinical Trial Regulation (2014) does not contain specific requirements exclusively for paediatric clinical trials. This work is the first to extensively collate all the current legal, regulatory and ethical documentation on the IC process, together with input from adolescents. This guide may increase the ethical standards in paediatric clinical trials.
AB - Objective: Clinical trial sponsors spend considerable resources preparing informed consent (IC) and assent documentation for multinational paediatric clinical trial applications in Europe due to the limited and dispersed patient populations, the variation of national legal and ethical requirements, and the lack of detailed guidance. The aim of this study was to design new easy-to- use guide publicly available on European Medicines Agency's, Enpr-EMA website for all stakeholders. Methods Current EU legal, ethical and regulatory guidance for paediatric clinical trials were collated, analysed and divided into 30 subject elements in two tables. The European Network of Young Person's Advisory Group reviewed the data and provided specific comments. A three-level recommendation using 'traffic light' symbols was designed for four age groups of children, according to relevance and the requirements. Results: A single guide document includes two tables: (1) general information and (2) trial-specific information. In the age group of 6-9 years old, 92% of the trial-specific subject elements can be or should be included in the IC discussion. Even in the youngest possible age group (2-5 years old children), the number of elements considered was, on average, 52%. Conclusion: The EU Clinical Trial Regulation (2014) does not contain specific requirements exclusively for paediatric clinical trials. This work is the first to extensively collate all the current legal, regulatory and ethical documentation on the IC process, together with input from adolescents. This guide may increase the ethical standards in paediatric clinical trials.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85130767466
U2 - 10.1136/archdischild-2021-322798
DO - 10.1136/archdischild-2021-322798
M3 - Article
C2 - 34853000
AN - SCOPUS:85130767466
SN - 0003-9888
VL - 107
SP - 582
EP - 590
JO - Archives of Disease in Childhood
JF - Archives of Disease in Childhood
IS - 6
ER -