RESEARCH ETHICS COMMITTEES (RECs) AND MONITORING OF BIOMEDICAL RESEARCH IN PAKISTAN

Main Article Content

Akhtar Sherin

Abstract

Global health is facing enormous challenges and medical research is the only way to cope with these challenges. Worldwide, extensive clinical research is being conducted in all fields of medicineto resolve the health related issues through best available evidence. Any research on health intervention will need clinical trials on human beings. However, human exposure to any prophylactic, diagnostic or therapeutic interventions may lead to potential detrimental effectson human health. This is a serious ethical issue as the health of individuals participating in any research cannot be compromised and every effort should be made to safeguard the health and rights of the participating subjects.The history of ethics violation as well as the efforts to regulate medical research on human being is quite old. However it was in 1947, when Nuremberg(United States) military tribunals pronounced a verdict on the criminal trial of German physicians for violating ethics during research on human participants.The verdict also recommended 10 conditions for medical experiments, laying out basic principles for medical research,commonly known as Nuremberg code.1 Issues like voluntary informed consent, right to withdraw consent; prior research on animals, risk benefit ratio, likelihood of favourable results, premature stopping of trial in case of harmful results and research by the experiencedpersonals were the hallmark of Nuremberg code. This historic documentwas the foundation of declaration of Helsinki, which was adopted by the 18th general assembly of world medical association (WMA) at Helsinki, Finland in 1964 and later on amended several times.2 Declaration of Helsinki has laid down the ethical principles for physicians to conduct medical research on human beings. It emphasized the role of research ethics committee (REC) and it was made obligatory to get the research protocol reviewed and approved by REC before starting the study. In 1967, the first REC in United Kingdom was established when Royal College of Physicians of London recommended to observe ethical supervisionof clinical research in institutions of UK.3 In USA, the controversy of Tuskegee syphilis study (1932-1972)4 led to the national research act of 1974, establishing the national commission for the protectionof human subjects of biomedical and behavioral research.5 This commission published its report, commonly known as Belmont report6 on 30 September 1978. This important document laid down the basic ethical principles (respect for persons, beneficence, and justice) for research involving human beings and also identified primary areas of application of these general principles in the conduct of research (informed consent, assessment of risks and benefits, and selection of subjects). Since then, research on humansis being regulated by the RECs and institutional review boards for bioethics (IRBB) in all major developed countries, across the globe.However, research in developing countries is not being practised as per international ethical standards.7 Local research is not properly monitored for the ethical violations. Due to lack of the research opportunities, researchers of the developing countries are more attracted towards participation in internationalcollaborative trials. The benefits of collaborative clinical trials like the issues of augmented patient enrolment specially in rare diseases, rapid completionof the trial, diversity of the patients recruited and cost effectiveness cannot be denied.8 However, the multinational trials sponsored by the developed countriesrecruiting patients from developing countries are not following the ethical norms as per their own countries and various ethical malpractices have been reported.9,10 The council for the internationalorganization of medical sciences (CIOMS) developed and published ethics guidelines for biomedical research involvinghuman subjects in developing countries.These guidelines, issued in 1982 and updated in 1993 and 2002, were particularly prepared to address the issue and needs of low-resource countries and to regulate multinational/ multi-centred collaborative research.11 These guidelines were reviewed in 2004 by Islamic organizationof medical sciences (IOMS) and Islamic perspective was added to it.12In Pakistan, the situation is not very different from any other developing country. Although a few research ethics committees existed in individual institutions,there was no serious effort at the government level to monitor the clinical research in Pakistan till 2004. Pakistan Medical Research Council (PMRC) constitutedthe National Bioethics Committee(NBC) which was approved by ministryof health, government of Pakistan and notified on January 28, 2004.13 This advisory body was given the mandate to deal with bioethical issue in health services delivery, health research, health education and medical journalism in Pakistanand to serve as “umbrella body” for other institutional ethics review committees. Right from the start, this committee remained dormant and the first meeting of NBC was held after 28 months when the members had almost completed their turn.14 Although, NBC developed local guidelines for reviewing the research projects involving human subjects in Pakistan,15 the overall role of NBC in ethical regulation of clinical research and its role as “umbrella body” is not worth appreciating.Due to mandatory requirement of REC/IRBB approval certificate by many journals for publication of the manuscripts, increased multinational collaborative research participation from Pakistan, boosted awareness regarding bioethics among the researchers and dedicated efforts of various organizations,the number of RECs and IRBBs has risen sharply. However, there is no apical body to register, accredit or monitor the RECs and IRBBs in Pakistan. After the 18th amendment to the constitution of Pakistan, more autonomy has been vested to the provinces but so far there is no provincial authority or monitory body to regulate the clinical research on human beings. The drug regulatory authority of Pakistan (DRAP) has been established in 2012, but its role is limited to drug registration and licensing of drug manufacturing units. There are no legal penalties or sanctions for doing research without ethical approval or for violating the safety protocol, REC decision and recommendations. Research protocols are reviewed and granted approval by RECs but serious flaws and inconsistency in the review process, compromised autonomy of RECs, lack of review and monitoring of the on-going studies for adherence to the approved protocol, dearth of power of independent data monitoring teams for premature termination/suspension of any clinical research due to safety concerns are the critical issues in monitoring biomedical research in Pakistan. Government authorities need to take serious notice of the situation and take extraordinary, appropriate measuresfor establishing the credibility and integrity of the RECs in Pakistan. Failing to do so will lead to relegating RECs/IRBBs in Pakistan to “being no more than rubber stamping committees”.16

Article Details

How to Cite
Sherin, A. “RESEARCH ETHICS COMMITTEES (RECs) AND MONITORING OF BIOMEDICAL RESEARCH IN PAKISTAN”. KHYBER MEDICAL UNIVERSITY JOURNAL, vol. 5, no. 3, Sept. 2013, pp. 121-2, https://www.kmuj.kmu.edu.pk/article/view/11138.
Section
Editorial
Author Biography

Akhtar Sherin, KHYBER MEDICAL UNIVERSITY (KMU) Institute of Medical sciences Kohat, PAKISTAN

Assist Prof Medicine, KIMS

References

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