Consensus Study Report
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International Standard Book Number-13: 978-0-309-71688-8
International Standard Book Number-10: 0-309-71688-8
Digital Object Identifier: https://doi.org/10.17226/27595
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Suggested citation: National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. 2024. Advancing clinical research with pregnant and lactating populations: Overcoming real and perceived liability risks. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. https://doi.org/10.17226/27595.
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COMMITTEE ON DEVELOPING A FRAMEWORK TO ADDRESS LEGAL, ETHICAL, REGULATORY, AND POLICY ISSUES FOR RESEARCH SPECIFIC TO PREGNANT AND LACTATING PERSONS
MARGARET FOSTER RILEY (Chair), Professor of Law, Dorothy Danforth Compton Chair, Miller Center, University of Virginia
IFEYINWA ASIODU, Associate Professor of Family Health Care Nursing, University of California, San Francisco
PAUL BENINGER, Professor of Public Health and Community Medicine, Tufts University
ALEXANDER M. CAPRON, University Professor Emeritus, Scott H. Bice Chair Emeritus in Healthcare Law, Policy and Ethics; Professor Emeritus of Law and Medicine, University of Southern California
PATRICIA DANZON (resigned from committee September 2023), Celia Moh Professor Emeritus of Healthcare Management, University of Pennsylvania
AHIZECHUKWU EKE, Director of Research, Division of Maternal-Fetal Medicine, Johns Hopkins University
MARY F. HEBERT, Professor of Pharmacy, Adjunct Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Washington
LESLIE MELTZER HENRY, Professor of Law, University of Maryland Carey School of Law; Core Faculty, Johns Hopkins Berman Institute of Bioethics
PATRICIA A. KING, Professor Emerita of Law, Georgetown University
BRUCE KUHLIK, Executive Vice President and General Counsel, Merck & Co., Inc. (Retired)
ANNE CC LEE, Associate Professor of Pediatrics, Harvard School of Medicine; Director of Global Newborn Health, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School
ANNA C. MASTROIANNI, Research Professor in Bioethics and Law, Johns Hopkins Berman Institute of Bioethics; Charles I Stone Professor of Law Emeritus, University of Washington
JONELL EFANTIS POTTER, Professor, Clinical Obstetrics, Gynecology and Reproductive Sciences, University of Miami
ENRIQUE SCHISTERMAN, Chair of Biostatistics, Epidemiology and Informatics, University of Pennsylvania
BROWNSYNE TUCKER EDMONDS, Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology; Associate Dean for Health Equity Research, Indiana University School of Medicine
Study Staff
ALEX HELMAN, Study Codirector and Senior Program Officer
ANDREW MARCH, Study Codirector and Program Officer
CAROLYN SHORE, Senior Program Officer
EMILY MCDOWELL, Research Associate
RAYANE SILVA-CURRAN, Senior Program Assistant (from August 14, 2023)
EDEN NELEMAN, Senior Program Assistant (July 1, 2023–August 11, 2023)
MELVIN JOPPY, Senior Program Assistant (until June 30, 2023)
REBECCA MORGAN, Senior Research Librarian
CLARE STROUD, Senior Board Director, Board on Health Sciences Policy
Consultants
KAVITA SHAH ARORA, Greenwall Fellow in Bioethics, National Academy of Medicine
CHERYL M. KILLION, Distinguished Nurse Scholar-in-Residence, National Academy of Medicine
ALLISON M. WHELAN, Assistant Professor, Georgia State University College of Law
MARY JO LAMBERTI, Research Associate Professor, Tufts University
TALEENA N. NADKARNI, Research Assistant, University of Virginia School of Law
AMELIA NELL, Research Assistant, University of Virginia School of Law
ERIN HAMMERS FORSTAG, Science Writer
Reviewers
This Consensus Study Report was reviewed in draft form by individuals chosen for their diverse perspectives and technical expertise. The purpose of this independent review is to provide candid and critical comments that will assist the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine in making each published report as sound as possible and to ensure that it meets the institutional standards for quality, objectivity, evidence, and responsiveness to the study charge. The review comments and draft manuscript remain confidential to protect the integrity of the deliberative process.
We thank the following individuals for their review of this report:
Although the reviewers listed above provided many constructive comments and suggestions, they were not asked to endorse the conclusions or recommendations of this report nor did they see the final draft before its release. The review of this report was overseen by BRUCE N. CALONGE, University of Colorado School of Medicine, and ELLEN W. CLAYTON, Vanderbilt University Medical Center. They were responsible for making certain that an independent examination of this report was carried out in accordance with the standards of the National Academies and that all review comments were carefully considered. Responsibility for the final content rests entirely with the authoring committee and the National Academies.
Acknowledgments
To begin, the committee would like to thank the sponsor of this study. Funds for the committee’s work were provided by the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development at the National Institutes of Health.
Numerous individuals and organizations made important contributions to the study process and this report. The committee wishes to express its gratitude for each of these contributions, although space does not permit identifying them all here.
The committee wishes to express special thanks to Hogan Lovells US LLP and Goodwin Procter LLP for their significant pro bono contributions to this report. At Hogan Lovells, the committee thanks Lauren S. Colton, Katherine Kramer, Megan Dorsh, and Phil Katz for rapidly producing a comprehensive analysis of the case law (Appendix B). The committee appreciates the contributions of Taleena Nadkarni and Amelia Nell for their synthesis and analysis of state statutes with implications for research including pregnant and lactating women (Appendix C available online at https://nap.nationalacademies.org/catalog/27595). The committee thanks Sarah Wicks, Julie Tibbets, Elizabeth Caruso, Emily Tribulski, and Elizabeth Mulkey of Goodwin Procter LLP for their detailed, critical analysis of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration rules, regulations, and guidance pertaining to pregnant and lactating women (Appendix D available online at https://nap.nationalacademies.org/catalog/27595). The committee appreciates the contributions of Allison Whelan for her analysis on the impacts of Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization on
clinical research with pregnant and lactating women (Appendix E available online at https://nap.nationalacademies.org/catalog/27595).
The committee would also like to thank the two National Academy of Medicine fellows, Drs. Kavita Shah Aurora and Cheryl M. Killion, for their contributions throughout its work. The committee would also like to acknowledge Erin Hammers Forstag for her writing contributions.
Contents
The Human Costs of Inadequate Data
Circumstances That Have Led to Inadequate Data to Guide Medical Decision Making
The Social Value of Clinical Research
A Survey of Reported Legal Liability Risk
Law and Liability in Clinical Research
3 STRATEGIES TO REDUCE HARM THROUGH CLINICAL RESEARCH
Reducing Harm Through Federal Protections for Human Subjects
Reducing Harm Through Research Design
4 MITIGATING LIABILITY ASSOCIATED WITH CLINICAL RESEARCH
Mitigating Liability for Industry Sponsors
Mitigating Liability for Institutions, IRBs, and Investigators
Mitigating Liability for Sponsors, Research Institutions, and Investigators
Mitigating Criminal and Civil Liability for Pregnant Research Participants
Factors That Incentivize the Inclusion of Pregnant and Lactating Women
Provide Greater Regulatory Clarity
Provide Incentives, Funding, and Accountability for Research
Improve Existing Data and Safety Monitoring
Boxes, Figure, and Tables
BOXES
1-1 Common Conditions and Treatments in Pregnancy
1-2 Physiological Changes and the Implications for Use of Medications
1-3 Global Efforts for Broader Inclusion of Pregnant and Lactating Women in Research
1-5 Medical Product Development for Conditions Specific to Pregnancy and Lactation
1-6 Relevant Stakeholders and Their Roles
2-1 The Long Shadow of Thalidomide and DES
2-2 Theories of Liability: Terms and Definitions
3-1 Data Safety Monitoring Boards
3-2 FDA’s PDUFA VII Commitments
3-3 Successes of HIV Research in Pregnant and Lactating Women
4-1 National Vaccine Injury Compensation Fund
5-1 NIH Initiatives in Pregnancy and Lactation Research
5-2 Best Pharmaceuticals for Children Act and Pediatric Research Equity Act
Preface
My three children were born between 1990 and 2000. I was extremely fortunate that my overall health was good and that I had few health issues during my pregnancies and later when nursing my children. Even as a healthy pregnant and lactating woman, I had so many questions for my doctors. I wanted to know how certain medications might affect me or my fetus and later my infant. I was frustrated when my doctors could not answer my questions with confidence. I worried.
Between the time my first child was born in 1990 and the third was born in 2000, the clinical research landscape changed dramatically. In 1990, most research participants in the United States were White men. By 2000, the human subjects research laws and regulations were changed to encourage the participation of women, including women of childbearing potential, and efforts had been made to improve the ethnic diversity of research participants. Soon after, legislation was passed to promote clinical research with pediatric populations to study medications that were used by children. There is still much work to be done to improve the diversity of our research populations, but as a society, we have made progress gathering and acknowledging the value of collecting evidence about how medical treatments may affect women, children, and people of different races and ethnicities.
One thing has not changed: there is still a dearth of data about the appropriate dosage, efficacy, and safety of most medical interventions used by pregnant and lactating women. This stood out during our experience with the COVID-19 pandemic. Despite broad liability protections for
medical product manufacturers, health care providers, and others, pregnant and lactating women were not included in the preauthorization clinical trials for vaccines. Although their exclusion from research has since been remedied, for months these populations were without evidence of their safety and efficacy and ultimately reducing vaccine uptake in these populations. If my daughter were to become pregnant now, she would likely have the same kind of unanswered questions for her doctors that I had when I was pregnant with her.
Despite a national and international consensus that avoiding research involving pregnant and lactating women is causing real harm, concerns about potential liability continue to thwart efforts to expand that research. No one has deeply studied the assumptions and realities behind those concerns about liability. This committee has done a thorough examination of the forces—legal, financial, and cultural—that disincentivize research with pregnant and lactating women. The committee provides evidence that conducting clinical studies with pregnant and lactating populations is not currently fraught with liability and how such research can—and must—be done safely and well.
Our committee is indebted to the work of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Task Force on Research Specific to Pregnant Women and Lactating Women (PRGLAC Task Force), which provided foundational knowledge for this committee to build from and which recommended that such a committee as ours be established. I am also grateful to the many experts who shared their knowledge of the complex legal and clinical landscapes in our public meetings and to the outstanding people who created our four commissioned papers. I am particularly grateful to the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine staff, led by Alex Helman and Andrew March, who provided guidance and expertise as well as thousands of hours of supporting research and editing.
Finally, I am grateful to have worked with an amazing group of committed experts on this consensus committee, many of whom have devoted their entire careers to improving health for pregnant and lactating women. Everyone generously volunteered countless hours and gave up more than one holiday to create a report that aims to finally answer these concerns about liability. In the process, we had hours of robust conversation and had friendly but probing disagreements. We taught each other concepts of regulatory science, medicine, business, law, and ethics. And in the end, we found agreement and solutions, all in a mission to support the millions of pregnant and lactating women who, in a very real sense, represent the future of this country.
Many of the people on this committee and those who have supported its work have been waiting for decades to see pregnant and lactating
women appropriately supported through clinical research. The United States’ current record on maternal and newborn health is weak and unworthy of a country that is capable of scientific and medical wonders. It is my hope that as you read the report, you will sense the urgency of its key messages and find a way to act on them, whatever your role may be in the clinical research enterprise. Our recommendations are comprehensive, but they are far from daunting. I hope that in the coming decade, if my children and their partners choose to join the millions of pregnant and lactating women each year in the United States, that they will do so with confidence that the medical treatments they may need are as safe and effective as possible.
Margaret Foster Riley, Chair
Committee on Developing a Framework to Address Legal, Ethical, Regulatory, and Policy Issues for Research Specific to Pregnant and Lactating Persons
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