The coronavirus pandemic has brought public attention to the steps required to produce valid scientific clinical research in drug development. Traditional ethical principles that guide clinical research remain the guiding compass for physicians, patients, public health officials, investigators, drug developers and the public. Accelerating the process of delivering safe and effective treatments and vaccines against COVID-19 is a moral imperative. The apparent clash between the regulated system of phased randomized clinical trials and urgent public health need requires leveraging innovation with ethical scientific rigor. We reflect on the Belmont principles of autonomy, beneficence and justice as the pandemic unfolds, and illustrate the role of innovative clinical trial designs in alleviating pandemic challenges. Our discussion highlights selected types of innovative trial design and correlates them with ethical parameters and public health benefits. Details are provided for platform trials and other innovative designs such as basket and umbrella trials, designs leveraging external data sources, multi-stage seamless trials, preplanned control arm data sharing between larger trials, and higher order systems of linked trials coordinated more broadly between individual trials and phases of development, recently introduced conceptually as “PIPELINEs.”.
CITATION STYLE
McMillan, G., Mayer, C., Tang, R., Liu, Y., LaVange, L., Antonijevic, Z., & Beckman, R. A. (2022). Planning for the Next Pandemic: Ethics and Innovation Today for Improved Clinical Trials Tomorrow. Statistics in Biopharmaceutical Research, 14(1), 22–27. https://doi.org/10.1080/19466315.2021.1918236
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.