Gilbert Amy Lewis, Knopf Amelia S, Fortenberry J Dennis, Hosek Sybil G, Kapogiannis Bill G, Zimet Gregory D
Children's Health Services Research, Department of Pediatrics, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, Indiana; Regenstrief Institute, Inc., Indianapolis, Indiana.
Indiana University School of Nursing, Indianapolis, Indiana.
J Adolesc Health. 2015 Jul;57(1):113-9. doi: 10.1016/j.jadohealth.2015.03.017.
The Adolescent Medicine Trials Network Protocol 113 (ATN113) is an open-label, multisite demonstration project and Phase II safety study of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) preexposure prophylaxis with 15- to 17-year-old young men who have sex with men that requires adolescent consent for participation. The purpose of this study was to examine factors related to the process by which Institutional Review Boards (IRBs) and researchers made decisions regarding whether to approve and implement ATN113 so as to inform future biomedical HIV prevention research with high-risk adolescent populations.
Participants included 17 researchers at 13 sites in 12 states considering ATN113 implementation. Qualitative descriptive methods were used. Data sources included interviews and documents generated during the initiation process.
A common process for initiating ATN113 emerged, and informants described how they identified and addressed practical, ethical, and legal challenges that arose. Informants described the process as responding to the protocol, preparing for IRB submission, abstaining from or proceeding with submission, responding to IRB concerns, and reacting to the outcomes. A complex array of factors impacting approval and implementation were identified, and ATN113 was ultimately implemented in seven of 13 sites. Informants also reflected on lessons learned that may help inform future biomedical HIV prevention research with high-risk adolescent populations.
The results illustrate factors for consideration in determining whether to implement such trials, demonstrate that such protocols have the potential to be approved, and highlight a need for clearer standards regarding biomedical HIV prevention research with high-risk adolescent populations.
青少年医学试验网络协议113(ATN113)是一项开放标签、多中心示范项目及II期安全性研究,针对与男性发生性行为的15至17岁男性进行人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)暴露前预防,该研究需要青少年同意方可参与。本研究的目的是探讨与机构审查委员会(IRB)和研究人员就是否批准和实施ATN113做出决策的过程相关的因素,以便为未来针对高危青少年人群的生物医学HIV预防研究提供参考。
参与者包括来自12个州13个地点的17名考虑实施ATN113的研究人员。采用定性描述方法。数据来源包括启动过程中产生的访谈和文件。
出现了一个启动ATN113的共同过程,受访者描述了他们如何识别和应对出现的实际、伦理和法律挑战。受访者将该过程描述为对方案做出回应、为提交给IRB做准备、决定是否提交、回应IRB的关切以及对结果做出反应。确定了一系列影响批准和实施的复杂因素,ATN113最终在13个地点中的7个得以实施。受访者还反思了所吸取的经验教训,这些经验教训可能有助于为未来针对高危青少年人群的生物医学HIV预防研究提供参考。
研究结果说明了在决定是否实施此类试验时需要考虑的因素,表明此类方案有获得批准的可能性,并强调对于针对高危青少年人群的生物医学HIV预防研究需要更明确的标准。