Do regulatory systems for testing treatments get it right?
Although the level of regulation can be reassuring, current regulatory systems impose very onerous burdens on anyone wishing to study a poorly evaluated treatment rather than offer it to patients in normal clinical practice.
In many countries, the sheer complexity of the system – involving laws, agencies, codes of practice, and so on – is overwhelming and time-consuming. Researchers may need to get multiple approvals from different places, and sometimes have to face resultant contradictory requirements.
And for researchers planning clinical trials, it can take several years to get from a trial idea to recruiting the first patient, and even then recruitment to trials can be slowed by regulatory requirements.
But while researchers try to get studies through the system, people suffer unnecessarily and lives are being lost.
In practice, what this means is that clinicians can give unproven treatments to patients, as long as patients consent, if therapies are given within the context of ‘routine’ clinical practice. By contrast, conducting any study of the same treatments to evaluate them properly would involve going through the protracted regulatory process.
However, there is one encouraging note. Research regulators are beginning to acknowledge that the ‘one-size-fits-all’ approach to research ethics review may be unnecessarily burdensome. [1] In the UK, for example, procedures for ‘proportionate review’ are now being evaluated to see whether a simplified and swifter review process can be safely used for research studies that do not raise any material ethical issues.
Next: Information and consent