Research Policy Handbook

5.6

Guidelines for Studies Involving Human Volunteers Receiving Potentially Addicting Drugs

Policy Authority

Administrative Panel on the Use of Human Subjects in Medical Research

Policy Contact

Now in Policy Details

Presents guidelines for participation by human participants in studies involving potentially addicting drugs; discusses informed consent, and conditions for exclusion of participants.

1. Introduction

In developing and testing new drugs with therapeutic potential, it is necessary to conduct studies on human participants. This includes drugs which are known to have significant potential for addiction in some individuals such as opiate analgesics. In order minimize potential risk to human participants, this policy reviews special features of studies involving human volunteers receiving potentially addicting drugs.

2. Informed Consent

Human research participants who may receive drugs with significant potential for addiction (e.g., opiates, cocaine, alcohol, etc.) in a study must be informed that the drug(s) they may (or will) receive are known to have a significant potential for addiction in some individuals. If the magnitude of the risk of addiction in relevant populations is known it should be specified.

3. Exclusion of Participants with a History of Addiction

With some exceptions, potential participants who have a known history of addiction should be excluded from studies of drugs with a significant potential for addiction. The informed consent should indicate that potential participants should not participate in the study if they have any history of addiction to a drug or to alcohol. Participants should be asked to check off a box on the consent form to indicate that they do not have such a history.

Furthermore, investigators may wish to incorporate a confidential pre-screening questionnaire about prior drug use history in such studies. Investigators may also choose to perform urine drug screening of participants. If pre-screening questionnaires or urine testing is utilized, participants should be informed as to how the confidentiality of these data will be maintained, and to whom they may be released.

The exceptions to this exclusion policy are those protocols which require the participation of addicted persons to answer a scientific question (e.g., the effect of moderate doses of alcohol on a biologic variable which might predict subsequent relapse or give insight into the etiology of the disorder.) The justification for experimental ingestion or intoxication must be included in the application.

4. Exclusion of Participants with Direct Access to the Class of Addicting Drug Under Study

Potential participants who have direct physical access to and routine handling of addicting drugs in the regular course of their work duties should be excluded from studies of drugs with a significant potential for addiction and to which the participant has access.

It is known clinically that addiction to certain types of medications is an occupational hazard of certain groups of health care workers. Although the prevalence within each group is not well-established, it is a well-described hazard for personnel who meet the following functional definition: personnel with direct physical access to and routine handling of addicting drugs in the regular course of their work duties. In particular, there is a risk for addiction to opiates, sedative-hypnotics, and cocaine. The health care workers in this group may vary depending on the drug involved and on the practice setting of the worker. However, typically the group with regular access includes: anesthesiologists; emergency room physicians; ward, operating room, post-anesthesia care unit, emergency room, and intensive care unit nurses; pharmacists. The exclusion stated above applies to those who meet the functional definition above, and not specifically to any general title or job description.

It is also known that health care workers who are addicted to medications can often effectively hide the signs and symptoms of their addiction. This exclusion guideline would therefore operate to prevent the harm that would result if an addicted participant was inadvertently included in a study of the drug to which the participant is addicted.

Health care workers who would be excluded under this policy make up a small component of the available participant pool for the testing of new therapeutic drugs. Thus, their participation is not required to ensure proper testing and validation of the safety of new or existing addicting drugs. Therefore, any risk of addiction in this group, no matter how small, cannot ordinarily be justified by the scientific benefit to be gained by their participation in studies of addicting drugs. It is generally expected that potential participants who are health care workers who have direct physical access to and/or routine handling of addicting drugs in the regular course of their clinical duties will be excluded from studies in which an addicting drug to which they have access will be administered. If an investigator believes that inclusion of such personnel is necessary for the scientific goal of the study, a special application that justifies inclusion of these personnel must be made in the submission to the IRB.

The informed consent should indicate that potential participants who meet the functional definition should not participate in the study, and participants should be asked to check off a box indicating that they do not meet this functional definition.