Bell Emily, Leger Philip, Sankar Tejas, Racine Eric
*Neuroethics Research Unit, Institut de recherches cliniques de Montréal (IRCM), Montréal, Quebec, Canada; ‡Division of Neurosurgery, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada; §Department of Medicine and Department of Social and Preventive Medicine, Université de Montréal, Montréal, Quebec, Canada; ¶Departments of Neurology and Neurosurgery, Experimental Medicine & Biomedical Ethics Unit, McGill University, Montréal, Quebec, Canada.
Neurosurgery. 2016 Jul;79(1):3-10. doi: 10.1227/NEU.0000000000001207.
Deep brain stimulation (DBS) for psychiatric disorders needs to be investigated in proper research trials. However, there are rare circumstances in which DBS could be offered to psychiatric patients as a form of surgical innovation, therefore potentially blurring the lines between these research trials and health care. In this article, we discuss the conditions under which surgical innovation may be accepted as a practice falling at the frontiers of standard clinical care and research per se. However, recognizing this distinction does not settle all ethical issues. Our article offers ethical guideposts to allow clinicians, surgical teams, institutions, and institutional review boards to deliberate about some of the fundamental issues that should be considered before surgical innovation with psychiatric DBS is undertaken. We provide key guiding questions to sustain this deliberation. Then we review the normative and empirical literature that exists to guide reflection about the ethics of surgical innovation and psychiatric DBS with respect to general ethical questions pertinent to psychiatric DBS, multidisciplinary team perspectives in psychiatric DBS, mechanisms for oversight in psychiatric DBS, and capacity and consent in psychiatric DBS. The considerations presented here are to recognize the very specific nature of surgical innovation and to ensure that surgical innovation in the context of psychiatric DBS remains a limited, special category of activity that does not replace appropriate surgical research or become the standard of care based on limited evidence.
DBS, deep brain stimulationIRB, institutional review boardOCD, obsessive-compulsive disorder.
用于精神疾病的脑深部电刺激(DBS)需要在适当的研究试验中进行调查。然而,在极少数情况下,可以将DBS作为一种手术创新形式提供给精神科患者,因此可能会模糊这些研究试验与医疗保健之间的界限。在本文中,我们讨论了手术创新在何种情况下可被视为属于标准临床护理和研究前沿的一种实践。然而,认识到这种区别并不能解决所有伦理问题。我们的文章提供了伦理指导方针,以使临床医生、手术团队、机构和机构审查委员会能够思考在进行精神科DBS手术创新之前应考虑的一些基本问题。我们提供关键的指导性问题以维持这种思考。然后,我们回顾现有的规范性和实证文献,以指导关于手术创新和精神科DBS伦理的思考,涉及与精神科DBS相关的一般伦理问题、精神科DBS中的多学科团队观点、精神科DBS的监督机制以及精神科DBS中的能力和同意问题。这里提出的考虑因素是为了认识到手术创新的非常特殊的性质,并确保精神科DBS背景下的手术创新仍然是一种有限的、特殊的活动类别,不会取代适当的手术研究或基于有限证据成为护理标准。
DBS,脑深部电刺激;IRB,机构审查委员会;OCD,强迫症