Fed Regist. 1999 Oct 5;64(192):54180-9.
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is revoking its 1990 interim final regulations that permitted the Commissioner of Food and Drugs (the Commissioner) to determine that obtaining informed consent from military personnel for the use of an investigational drug or biologic is not feasible in certain situations related to military combat. FDA also is issuing a new interim final rule addressing waiver of informed consent in military operations. FDA is taking these actions based on its analysis and consideration of all relevant facts, including its evaluation of the Department of Defense's (DOD) experience during the Persian Gulf War, its evaluation of the comments received by the agency in response to the agency's July 31, 1997, request for comments on whether the agency should revise or revoke the interim regulations, and the enactment of the Strom Thurmond National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 1999 (the Defense Authorization Act). Under the Defense Authorization Act, the President is authorized to waive the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act's (the act) informed consent requirements in military operations if the President finds that obtaining consent is infeasible or contrary to the best interests of recipients and on an additional ground that obtaining consent is contrary to national security interests. In light of the enactment of the Defense Authorization Act, with an immediate effective date, and because the President could be called upon to make a waiver determination for military personnel engaged in a specific military operation at any time, the agency believes that it is critical to have in place adequate criteria and standards for the President to apply in making an informed consent waiver determination. Therefore, FDA is issuing a new interim final regulation with an immediate effective date to establish criteria and standards for the President to apply in making a determination that informed consent is not feasible or is contrary to the best interests of the individual recipients.
美国食品药品监督管理局(FDA)正在撤销其1990年的暂行最终法规,该法规允许食品药品专员确定,在与军事战斗相关的某些情况下,从军事人员那里获得使用研究性药物或生物制品的知情同意是不可行的。FDA还发布了一项新的暂行最终规则,涉及军事行动中知情同意的豁免问题。FDA采取这些行动是基于其对所有相关事实的分析和考虑,包括对国防部在海湾战争期间经验的评估、对该机构在1997年7月31日关于是否应修订或撤销暂行法规的征求意见中收到的评论的评估,以及1999财年《斯特罗姆·瑟蒙德国防授权法》(《国防授权法》)的颁布。根据《国防授权法》,如果总统认定获得同意不可行或有悖于接受者的最大利益,并且基于获得同意有悖于国家安全利益这一额外理由,总统被授权在军事行动中豁免《联邦食品、药品和化妆品法》(该法)的知情同意要求。鉴于《国防授权法》已颁布且立即生效,并且由于总统随时可能被要求就参与特定军事行动的军事人员做出豁免决定,该机构认为,为总统在做出知情同意豁免决定时适用而制定适当的标准至关重要。因此,FDA发布一项立即生效的新暂行最终法规,以确立总统在做出知情同意不可行或有悖于个体接受者最大利益的决定时适用的标准。