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Strategies and Suggestions for Managing the IRB process in VA QUERI implementation studies

Strategies and Suggestions for Managing the IRB process in VA QUERI implementation studies. ReTIDES Project IRB Team: Edmund Chaney, Debbie Mittman, Carol Simons, Barbara Simon, Laura Rabuck, Laura Bonner, Mona Ritchie and Lisa Rubenstein VA R&D COACH Staff: Marisue Cody

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Strategies and Suggestions for Managing the IRB process in VA QUERI implementation studies

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  1. Strategies and Suggestions for Managing the IRB process in VA QUERI implementation studies • ReTIDES Project IRB Team: • Edmund Chaney, Debbie Mittman, Carol Simons, Barbara Simon, Laura Rabuck, Laura Bonner, Mona Ritchie and Lisa Rubenstein • VA R&D COACH Staff: • Marisue Cody • VA HSR&D Cyberseminar • February 2 & 9, 2009

  2. Acknowledgement • Studies on which this presentation is based were quality improvement and action research partnerships with VISN, VAMC, Practice and CO clinical and administrative staff, without whose active leadership and participation nothing would have been accomplished. • Mental Health QUERI, and Sepulveda, Seattle and Little Rock HSR&D COEs likewise provided invaluable support.

  3. Introduction • Ethical Issues and protection of Human Subjects are integral to implementation research • Everyone benefits if management of IRB issues is collaborative rather than adversarial • Building relationships with all involved parties is central to effective management

  4. A Narrative Explication of Risk Management Challenges in Implementation Research • Background and Overview – Ed Chaney • Protocol Development – Mona Ritchie • Site Identification and Assessment – Carol Simons • Establishing Relationships with Site PIs and IRBs – Laura Rabuck • Managing Multiple Sites and Systems – Barbara Simon & Debbie Mittman • Managing High Risk Issues – Laura Bonner • VA Central IRB – Marisue Cody

  5. What are the primary studies on which this narrative is based? • The TIDES family of studies: Translating Initiatives in Depression into Effective Solutions • 2000: TIDES - Can VA implement collaborative care for depression in primary care as part of routine care? • 2004: Regional TIDES - Use TIDES to study implementation issues necessary for national VA rollout

  6. TIDES is An Evidence-Based Quality Improvement Project • Design based on successive Plan-Do-Study-Act Cycles (PDCA) • Starting point for PDSA’s is evidence from the literature • VISN leaders decided on general program features through an expert panel process • Regional and local team-based quality improvement process was flexible and variable

  7. VISN MAP of TIDES and ReTIDES 2 new VAMC’s (90,000 PC Patients) 9 New VAMC’s (90,000 PC Patients) 2 New VAMC’s (40,000 PC Patients) 2 New VAMC’s (40,000 PC Patients) ReTIDES Spread

  8. T I D E S W A V E S C O V E S R I P P L E RET I D E S H I T I D E S QUERI Water PIPELINE Revise Guidelines Depression Care Guidelines Depression Collaborative Care Model PIC, MHAP, MOOD,IMPACT, RESPECT, TEAM Implementation Science Implementation Policy Health Service Research

  9. Research Methods I • TIDES – Quality Improvement • Expert Panel questionnaire • Depression Care Manager QI logs • WAVES – RCT, Site randomization • Patient structured telephone questionnaires • Patient level analysis of administrative data

  10. Research Methods II • COVES – Mixed Method Evaluation • Site level stakeholder interviews • Cost analysis • ReTIDES – Multi-method Implementation • 18 month follow-up of WAVES outcomes • Provider Internet survey • Site level analysis of administrative data • Qualitative system level stakeholder interviews

  11. Method Complexity • Multi-level data collection • Organizational leaders • Clinic managers • Providers • Patients • Administrative record abstraction. • Multi-mode data collection • Qualitative interviews • Quantitative surveys

  12. Protocol Development

  13. Protocol Development Background • Usual challenges of multiple study sites • Unique Challenges (& Resources) • Multiple administrative sites • Multiple related studies

  14. Protocol DevelopmentIndividual Studies • Comparison of application forms & processes across sites • Different protocol submission processes • Conventional approach (entire protocol) • Advantage: single submission • Disadvantage: lack of flexibility • Component approach • Advantage: flexibility in accommodating site differences and detailed description of components • Disadvantage: multiple submissions

  15. Protocol DevelopmentMultiple Administrative Sites • Planning & strategizing • Coordinating protocol development • Tailoring protocols to administrative sites

  16. Protocol DevelopmentInformed Consent Processes • VA Employees • Waiver of documentation • Managers • engage from the top down • inform as you go • Staff • Schedule with permission • Inform and consent

  17. Protocol DevelopmentInformed Consent Processes (cont’d) • Patient recruitment across studies • Study #1: • get permission to call back • Using a brief script for study #2, call and schedule randomly selected subjects • Study #2: • Study information letter confirming appointment • Formal consent process at time of contact

  18. Protocol Development:Building on Previous Studies Following the Funding vs. Following the Research

  19. Site Identification and Assessment

  20. Site factors which impact the IRB working relationship Site IRB Familiarity with Implementation Research (IR) Site specific policies, procedures, forms, customs, and workload Site PI Experience Professional focus (research, clinical, mixed) Comfort level with research and IRB tasks Local resources (time, staffing, etc)

  21. Communication How will ongoing study human subjects issues be decided? How will this be communicated to everyone who needs to know? Identifying key players and having the ability to contact them as needed.

  22. Collaboration • Discuss in advance who is doing what • This involves • Clarifying roles • Deciding how tasks will be shared or delegated. • Determine how (non-fiscal) research support should be centralized, local or mixed, etc.

  23. Information Good Intel – the more you know about what to expect from working with an IRB the better you can prepare

  24. Informants • Current or potential site PIs • Local IRB staff • Colleagues at site

  25. Electronic data sources • ART Reporter (aka ART Criteria Searches) • It is a VA Intranet site • Search for studies by site • May tell you how familiar the site IRB is with IR • (http://art.puget-sound.med.va.gov/reporter.cfm) • IRB Websites • Forms & manuals • IRB expectations • This information may give you some sense of how much time and effort an application to their site may require

  26. Establishing Relationships with Site Principal Investigators

  27. Multiple Local Site PIs • Herding cats! • Challenges in 4 main areas • Process aids developed in response to challenges

  28. Multiple Local Site PI Challenges • Recruitment • Finding interested & capable researchers at local sites • Research experience & availability • With their local IRB • Within existing commitments • Ethics certification • Variability in annual deadlines • Level of involvement • Sometimes connected to availability

  29. Multiple Local Site PI Process Aids • Project Implementation Charter & Site Memorandum of Agreement • Site PI Orientation Checklist • IRB Relational Database • Meetings/workgroups/manuscripts

  30. Managing Multiple Sites & Systems

  31. Managing Multiple Sites & Systems: Multidimensional goals • Maintain accountability across systems/sites • Build and maintain trust relationships with multiple IRBs • Support on-going site PI communication and facilitate compliance • Foster adherence to site-specific protocols and approvals • Minimize participant and institutional risk

  32. Managing Multiple Sites & Systems Goal: Maintain accountability across systems & sites • Centralize IRB documents & management at a single site Tools: • IRB relational database • Data management software for tracking and monitoring compliance across sites • IRB working group • Served as forum for assessing ethical approaches to protocol submissions and risks • Used reports derived from database to assess and monitor compliance

  33. Screen Shot of Relational IRB Tracking Database (Access)

  34. Managing Multiple Sites & Systems Goal:Build and maintain trust relationships with multiple IRBs • Gather information to aid compliance, rapport, efficient submission and to improve likelihood of approval Tools: • IRB Contact Questionnaire for individual IRBs • Enter information in relational database (multiple uses) • Use IRB working group as forum for assessing strategies

  35. Managing Multiple Sites & Systems Goal:Support on-going site PI communication and facilitate compliance Tool: Relational database • stores contact information, certification status • facilitates feedback on submission deadlines, IRB/R&D meeting dates

  36. Managing Multiple Sites & Systems Goal:Adherence to site-specific protocols and approval type • Identify protocol and approval differences across sites Tool: Relational database • records differences and generates reports Tool: IRB working group • uses reports to assess, track and monitor adherence across sites

  37. Managing Multiple Sites & Systems Goal:Minimize risk to participants & institutions • Gathered information to identify AE/SAE differences in definitions and reporting requirements across IRBs • Created table to enable systematic assessment of differences Tool: IRB relational database • Tracked compliance with reporting requirements

  38. Managing Multiple Sites & Systems • How were overall management goals met? • Centralized records at coordinating site • Created a dedicated staff position for IRB compliance activities • Tasked IRB working group with responsibility for managing IRB process across sites • Developed a relational database to track submissions, approvals, other functions

  39. Managing High Risk Issues

  40. High-risk patients in the context of implementation studies • High-risk veterans require special planning throughout protocol development • TIDES studied veterans • With depression • Not receiving mental health care at time of study enrollment • Therefore, at high risk of suicide

  41. Multi-step approach to assessment and safetyplanning • Trained non-clinician research staff detect risk • Clinical staff perform in-depth assessment as needed (Campbell et al., 2008; Bonner et al., 2008) • Local resources are utilized as required • Requires intensive communication among site and research personnel at all levels

  42. Dialogue with IRB regarding impact on high-risk populations • Highest risk comes from participants’ pre-existing issues, not from the intervention • Consideration of ethical issues of not allowing high-risk groups to participate in research

  43. Creation of a multi-site, multi-level risk management team • Sites have varied resources • PI time/other commitments • Extant policies • Mental health coverage/clinical backup • Local community EMS • Research team creates comprehensive policy • Works with sites to customize for local conditions • May benefit sites by initiating a detailed examination of pre-existing policies

  44. Risk management

  45. Update on VA Central IRB

  46. Information Resources • COACH • http://www.research.va.gov/programs/PRIDE • Implementation Science QUERI Human Subjects Issues article and appendices • http://www.implementationscience.com/content/3/1/10 • Organizations such as Public Responsibility in Medicine and Research • http://www.primr.org/

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