The ethics of pain
clinical trials on persons lacking judgment ability: much to improve. - Bellieni
CV, Rocchi R, Buonocore G., Pain Med. 2012 Mar;13(3):427-33. doi:
10.1111/j.1526-4637.2011.01325.x. Epub 2012 Feb 7.
Source
Department of Pediatrics, Obstetrics and
Reproduction Medicine, University of Siena, Siena, Italy. cvbellieni@gmail.com
Abstract
People lacking judgmental ability (newborn
infants [NIs] and persons with mental impairment [PMI]) are reported to receive
less analgesic treatments than people who can give adequate informed consent.
We performed the present study to assess whether this also happens in clinical
trials that should statutorily guarantee basic patients' rights. We examined
those trials in which patients undergo painful minor procedures (PMP) because
these procedures are frequent and severely stressful for NI and PMI.
MATERIALS AND METHODS:
We performed a Medline search to retrieve the
studies published in 2009 and 2010, in which NI and PMI underwent PMP.
RESULTS:
We retrieved 46 studies that exposed NI to PMP;
only in 14.2% of the studies, a validated analgesic treatment was administered
to the control group. We retrieved only one article where PMP was performed in
PMI for clinical reasons (venipuncture); in 13 more studies, pain was
experimentally provoked by noxious stimuli such as heat, electricity, or arm
mobilization. All these studies were not performed to evaluate a possible
analgesic strategy but to assess PMI's pain responsiveness and no analgesia was
used.
CONCLUSION:
PMI and NI enrolled in clinical trials as
controls rarely receive analgesia; and few studies exist to find out analgesic
treatments shaped on PMI's exigencies. These data raise concern about the
actual guarantees for persons lacking judgmental ability enrolled in
potentially painful trials. We also recommend more effort to find out analgesic
treatments tailored to the specific exigencies of PMI.
Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
PMID:
22313615
[PubMed - in process]
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