Title: Research Impropriety
1Research Impropriety
- Alan K. Jacobson, MD
- ACOS/RD
- Loma Linda VAMC
2What have we covered so far?
- Responsible Institutions
- Responsible IRB Committees
- Responsible Investigators
- Responsible Auditing and Monitoring
- So what more could one ask for?
3Murphys Law
- If anything can go wrong,
- it will.
4Major John P. Stapp, M.D.
- Not well known in the compliance literature
- Human Guinea Pig, 1949
- 632 mph, 46.2Gs force
- our good safety record was due to a firm belief
in Murphys Law and in the necessity to try and
circumvent it. - Died age 89 of natural causes
5So who was Murphy?
- Captain Edward A. Murphy
- Edwards AFB
- Engineer on project MX981 - deceleration
- When technician wired a transducer incorrectly -
If there is any way to do it wrong, hell find
it. - Recorded by George E. Nichols, Northrop project
manager, who kept a list of laws.
6Colonel John P. Stapp, M.D.
- a firm belief in Murphys Law and in the
necessity to try and circumvent it. - The Essence of Local Accountability
7Research Impropriety
- Why does it occur?
- What is it?
- How should it be managed?
- Can it be prevented?
- Is there any good news?
8Research Impropriety
- Does medicine have a culture that turns a blind
eye to research misconduct?
Dr. Richard Smith Former Editor, British Medical
Journal
9Research ImproprietyWhy does it occur?
- Why wouldnt it happen? It happens in all other
human activities. - Pressure to publish.
- Inadequate training. Not taught good practice.
Indeed, sometimes taught the opposite. - Does sloppy behaviour spill over to fraud?
- You can get away with it. The system works on
trust.
Dr. Richard Smith Former Editor, British Medical
Journal
10Research Impropriety What is it?Multitude of
Terms
- Research or Scientific
- Impropriety
- Misconduct
- Misbehavior
- Noncompliance
- Fraud
- Sloppy science / research
- Junk science / research
- Egregious abrogation of investigator
responsibilities - Scientists behaving badly
11Scientists Behaving Badly
- Research on Research Integrity (Office of
Research Integrity/NIH) - Brian C. Martinson and colleagues
- 3,600 surveys to NIH funded scientists
- 1,768 (52) usable responses
- of scientists who say that they engaged in the
behaviour listed within the past three years - researchers can no longer afford to ignore a
wide range of questionable behaviour that
threatens the integrity of science.
12Top Ten Scientific MisbehaviorsLikely or Very
Likely to be Sanctionable
1. Falsifying or cooking research data 0.3
2. Ignoring major aspects of human subject requirements 0.3
3. Not properly disclosing involvement in firms whose products are based on ones research 0.3
4. Relationships with students, research subjects or clients that may be interpreted as questionable 1.4
5. Using anothers ideas without permission or due credit 1.4
6. Unauthorized use of confidential information in connection with ones own research 1.7
7. Failing to present data contradicting ones own previous research 6.0
8. Circumventing minor aspects of human subject requirements 7.6
9. Overlooking others flawed data or questionable interpretation of data 12.5
10. Changing the design, methodology or results of a study in response to pressure from a funding source 15.5
Martinson et al, Scientists Behaving Badly,
Nature 2005420739-740
13Scientists Behaving BadlyOther Behaviours
11. Publishing same data or results in two or more publications 4.7
12. Inappropriately assigning authorship credit 10.0
13. Withholding details of methodology or results of a study in papers or proposals 10.8
14. Using inadequate or inappropriate research designs 13.5
15. Dropping observations or data points from analyses based on a gut feeling that they were inaccurate 15.3
16. Inadequate record keeping related to research projects 27.5
Martinson et al, Scientists Behaving Badly,
Nature, 2005
14The Spectrum of Research Impropriety
Fatal / Criminal
Administrivia
administrivia - the tiresome but essential
details that must be taken care of and tasks that
must be performed in running an organization "he
sets policy and leaves all the administrivia to
his assistant TheFreeDictionary
15Nothing New Under the Sun
- Charles Babbage 1791 - 1891
- Primary Legacy - Inventor of Difference Engine
- first advance in computers since abacus - Less renown - author on dishonesty in science
- Trimming - clipping off little bits here and
there - Cooking - selective reporting of a group of
results - Forgery - made up results
16History of Research ImproprietyFailure of an
entire society
17History of Research ImproprietyFailure of
Oversight Committees
1931 Rosenwald Fund cuts support to development
projects. Clark and Vondelehr decide to follow
men left untreated due to lack of funds in order
to show need for treatment program. 1968 Concern
raised about ethics of study by Peter Buxtun and
others. 1969 CDC reaffirms need for study and
gains local medical societies' support (AMA and
NMA chapters officially support continuation of
study). 1972 First news articles condemn
studies. 1972 Study ends and participants
compensated with cash and continued medical
treatment. 1973 Congress holds hearings and law
suit initiated. 1997 On May 16th President
Clinton apologizes on behalf of the Nation.
18History of Research ImproprietyFailure of
Investigator Responsibilities
- Dr. William Summerlin, Oncology (1974)
- Never returned to research
- Dr. John Darsee, Cardiology (1981)
- Left research, barred from federal funds
- Brigham Womens had to return NIH funds
- Eric Poehlman, Aging, (2000-2005)
- Fined 180,000 barred from federal funds
- Currently in federal prison
- Hwang Woo Suk, Stem Cell Research (2005-2006)
- Fired from Seoul University, possible criminal
charges
19Research ImproprietyWhy Should WE Care?
- The Hall Affair
- Sadly, as it unfolded, the Hall affair
illustrated the reality that allegations of
research impropriety affect the careers of both
the accused and the accusers and, in the process,
can divide an institution and damage its
reputation M.B. Van Der Weyden
http//www.mja.com.au/public/issues/180_04_160204/
van10035_fm.html - Imanishi-Kari / Baltimore / OToole
- Post-doc accuser 1986, cleared by MIT, Tufts
NIH investigations, but congressional panel and
secret service investigations resulted in 1994
ORI ruling of 10 years barred from federal funds - 1997 DHHS arbitration panel overturned ORI ruling
20The Cost of Research Impropriety I
- Research Integrity Cost
- Scientific Record
- Public Confidence
- Impropriety of any type in the conduct of
research is abhorrent to the inherent purpose of
all scientific inquiry the discovery and
dissemination of truth.
Research Related Policies and Procedures State
University of New York (SUNY)
21The Cost of Research Impropriety II
- Cost to subjects and patients
- President Lincolns commitment
- to care for him who shall have borne the
battle, and for his widow and his orphan.
22The Cost of Research Impropriety III
- Direct Investigative and Management Cost
- Distraction Cost
- What isnt getting done while resources are
utilized to investigate and manage the
impropriety and its fallout.
23Impact of Research Impropriety
24Research Impropriety
So, What IS it?
25Definition of Research ImproprietyUnder VHA
Handbook 1058.2
- Research impropriety is any ethical lapse or
other impropriety involving or occurring in
connection with research other than research
misconduct as defined in the Federal Policy on
Research Misconduct - VHA Handbook 1058.2 Research Misconduct
26Types of Research Impropriety
Research Impropriety
All Other Research Impropriety
Research Misconduct
27Types of Research Impropriety
Research Impropriety
All Other Research Impropriety
Research Misconduct
28Research MisconductVHA Policy Conforms to
Federal Policy
- Research misconduct is defined as fabrication,
falsification, or plagiarism in proposing,
performing, or reviewing research, or in
reporting research results. - Research misconduct does not include honest error
or differences of opinion. - Federal Register Notice Vol. 65, No. 235, Dec.
6, 2000
29Research MisconductDefinitions
- Fabrication (1058.2 - 5c)
- Making up data or results and recording or
reporting them - Falsification (1058.2 - 5d)
- Manipulating research materials, equipment, or
processes, or changing or omitting data or
results such that the research is not accurately
represented in the research record - Plagiarism (1058.2 - 5i)
- Appropriation of another persons ideas,
processes, results, or words without giving
appropriate credit
30Research MisconductDefinitions
- Research Integrity Officer (1058.2 - 5l)
- The RIO is the appointed official at each VA
facility who is responsible for receiving and
coordinating reviews of formal allegations of
research misconduct. - Role further defined in 1058.2 - 7
- Liaison with ORO 1058.2 - 7b(1)
31Responsibilities of Federal Agencies and Research
Institutions
- The Federal Policy on Research Misconduct applies
to all federally-funded research and proposals
submitted to Federal agencies for research
funding. - Federal agencies have ultimate oversight
authority for Federally funded research, but
research institutions bear primary responsibility
for prevention and detection of research
misconduct and for the inquiry, investigation,
and adjudication of research misconduct alleged
to have occurred in association with their own
institution. - Federal Register Notice Vol. 65, No. 235,
Dec. 6, 2000
32Research MisconductDefinitions II
- Federal and VHA definitions are extremely precise
- Research Misconduct is specifically restricted to
FFP - Non-federal institutions, i.e. affiliated
universities, may have variable policy
definitions, even though they are required to
follow federal policy on federally funded projects
33Research MisconductHow Should Allegations be
Handled?
- VA Handbook 1058.2 identifies individuals
responsible for investigating allegations of
misconduct and provides guidance for procedures
and roles. - Responsible authorities must determine whether
the conduct was deliberate, or honest error. - Investigations must be conducted confidentially
and with discretion to protect both informant and
accused parties.
34Research MisconductManagement
- VERY detailed process
- In summary, if a question of Research Impropriety
arises and there is any hint that it may be
related to FFP - DO NOT START LOCAL INVESTIGATION
! - If any question of FFP - notify RIO and have RIO
coordinate with Peter Poon in ORO - The evaluation will likely be done locally, but
due to the complexity of the process it should be
coordinated with ORO.
35Research MisconductManagement
- Defined Phases
- Allegation
- Inquiry
- Investigation
- Adjudication
- Departmental Review
- Appeals
36Research MisconductCorrective Actions -
Considerations
- The extent of the misconduct (amount, duration,
scope) - Degree to which the misconduct was knowing,
intentional or reckless - Presence or absence of a pattern of misconduct
- The consequences or possible consequences of the
misconduct - The respondents position and responsibility for
the project - Cooperation of the respondent during Inquiry and
Investigation - Likelihood of rehabilitation
- Presence of similar cases - commensurate action
- Any other extenuating or aggravating
circumstances
37Research MisconductExamples of Corrective
Actions
- Government-wide debarment (in development)
- Removal from a particular project,
suspend/terminate award - Restitution of funds or civil penalties
- Prohibition from receiving VA research funds for
a period - Correction or retraction of published article
- Monitoring or supervision of future work
- Required certification of data
- Required certification of sources (references and
contributors) - Remedial education or mentoring
38Types of Research Impropriety
Research Impropriety
All Other Research Impropriety
Research Misconduct
39All Other Research Impropriety
- All Other Research Impropriety is
asill-defined as Research Misconduct is
rigorously defined
40The Spectrum of Research Impropriety
Fatal / Criminal
Administrivia
administrivia - the tiresome but essential
details that must be taken care of and tasks that
must be performed in running an organization "he
sets policy and leaves all the administrivia to
his assistant TheFreeDictionary
41All Other Research ImproprietyDefinitions /
Examples
- Examples of research impropriety include, but
are not limited to, conflicts of interest,
misallocation of funds, sexual harassment,
discrimination, and breaches of human subjects
protections and animal welfare requirements. - VHA Handbook 1058.2 Research Misconduct
42All Other Research Impropriety Examples
- Failing to retain significant research data for a
reasonable period - Maintaining inadequate research records,
especially for results that are published or are
relied on by others - Conferring or requesting authorship on the basis
of a specialized service or contribution that is
not significantly related to the research
reported in the paper - Refusing to give peers reasonable access to
unique research materials or data that support
published papers - Responsible Science
Ensuring the Integrity of the Research Process,
National Academy of
Sciences/Institute of Medicine Report, 1992
43All Other Research Impropriety Examples
- Using inappropriate statistical or other methods
of measurement to enhance the significance of
research findings - Inadequately supervising research subordinates or
exploiting them and - Misrepresenting speculations as fact or releasing
preliminary data to allow peers to judge the
validity of the results or to reproduce the
experiments. -
- Responsible Science Ensuring the Integrity
of the Research Process, National Academy of
Sciences/Institute of Medicine Report, 1992
44All Other Research Impropriety Examples
- Engaging in inappropriate authorship practices on
a publication and failing to acknowledge that
data used in a grant application were developed
by another scientist - Inappropriate data analysis and use of faulty
statistical methodology - Failure to document and incorporate subjects
feedback in findings - Misuse or misallocation of funds for unauthorized
purposes - Financial conflict of interest of self or close
relatives (e.g., spouse) - Time and effort reporting errors or omissions or
over-commitment - Inappropriate staff assignments
- Neglect of research-related administrative tasks
45All Other Research ImproprietyCompromise of
Research Subject Protections
- Inadequate adverse event reporting
- Privacy violations
- Breach of patient confidentiality
- Failure to inform subjects of new information
- Failure to warn subjects of possible side effects
- Failure to ensure that subjects understand
informed consent - Failure to conduct adequate literature review
prior to starting clinical trials
46All-Other Research Impropriety
- Authorship (other than plagiarism which is
research misconduct) - Conflict-of-interest
- Noncompliance
- Oversight / Supervision
- Sloppy Science
47Adherence to Editorial Guidelines
- International Committee of Medical Journal
Editors (ICMJE) guidelines for - - Authorship and Contributorship
- - Peer Review
- - Conflicts of interest
- - Privacy and Confidentiality
- - Protection of Human Subjects
- - Corrections, Retractions, Expressions of
Concern
48Conflict of Interest
49All Other Research ImproprietyManagement
- Research Issue or Personnel Issue
- No proscribed initial investigatory process
- What to report to ORO
- September 2005 Guidance Document
- VHA Handbook 1058.1
- VHA Handbook 1058.2
50ORO ReportingSeptember 2005 Guidance Document
- What to Report to ORO
- Protection of Human Subjects in VA Research
- Laboratory Animal Welfare in VA Research
- Safety and Security in VA Research
- Misconduct in VA Research
51ORO Reporting - Human Subjects I
- Any adverse event in a human subject, or an
imminent threat of an adverse event, that results
in a substantive action by the IRB under 1058.1 - Any unexpected death of a human subject under
1058.1 - Any unanticipated problem involving risks to
subjects or others that results in a substantive
action by the IRB - Any for-cause suspension or termination of VA
human subject research by the IRB, the VA
facility, or a VA affiliate institution - Any serious or continuing noncompliance with
federal regulations or VHA policies for the
protection of human subjects, including - 38 CFR Part 16
- 45 CFR Part 46
- 21 CFR Parts 50, 56, 312 or 812
- VHA Handbook 1200.5
52ORO Reporting Human Subjects II
- Any serious or continuing noncompliance with
federal regulations or VHA policies for the
protection of human subjects, including - 45 CFR Part 46 (Protection of Human Subjects in
Federal Research) - Based on Belmont Report, became law in 1981
- Subpart A - Basic HHS Policy for Protection of
Human Research Subjects - Subpart B - Additional protections - pregnant
women, fetuses, neonates - Subpart C - Protections for Prisoners
- Subpart D - Protections for Children
- 38 CFR Part 16 (Protection of Human Subjects in
VA Research) 1991 - VA promulgation of The Common Rule, identical to
subpart A, 45 CFR 46 - FDA 21 CFR
- Part 50 (common rule)
- Part 56 (IRBs),
- Part 312312 (IND)
- 812 (IDE)
- VHA Handbook 1200.5
- Requirements for the Protection of Human Subjects
in Research
53ORO Reporting - Human Subjects III
- Any serious or continuing noncompliance with IRB
requirements or determinations - Any findings of noncompliance in human research
protections from ORD or other VA office - Any findings of noncompliance in human subject
protections from external oversight agencies such
as OHRP, FDA, - Any change in the facilitys accreditation status
from a VA-recognized accreditation organization
for human research protections - Any change in the facilitys FWA or designated
IRBs as filed with OHRP - Any significant change in the facilitys MOU with
an affiliate institution or other VA facility
regarding the designation of IRB(s) or other
human research protection function
54All Other Research ImproprietyManagement
- Research Issue or Personnel Issue
- If it is a Personnel Issue
- Is it a conduct issue?
- Is it a performance issue?
55All Other Research ImproprietyCorrective
Action / Consequences
- Examples from Research Misconduct
- The extent of the misconduct (amount, duration,
scope) - Degree to which the misconduct was knowing,
intentional or reckless - Presence or absence of a pattern of misconduct
- The consequences or possible consequences of the
misconduct - The respondents position and responsibility for
the project - Cooperation of the respondent during Inquiry and
Investigation - Likelihood of rehabilitation
- Presence of similar cases - commensurate action
- Any other extenuating or aggravating circumstances
56Research Impropriety ManagementWhen Scientists
Do Bad Things
- Does it involve FFP?
- Is it reportable to ORO?
- Is it a Personnel Issue?
- Otherwise
57Research ImproprietyCan it be Prevented?
- Educate - Training
- GCP, HRP, HIPAA, Privacy
- Verify - Monitoring and Audits
- Routine
- For-cause
- Provide a compliant environment
- Accreditation
- AAHRPP
- Exemplary Leadership
- Culture of Responsible Research
- Culture of Compliance
58Research ImproprietyCan it be Prevented?
- Organizational Options - VHA
- Institutional Options - individual facilities
- Division / Research Group Options
- Individual Investigator Options
59Finding the Balance
- Effective assurance of responsible conduct of
research
- Suffocating oversight and bureaucracy
60Research ImproprietyCan it be Prevented?
61Research ImproprietyCan it be Prevented?
- Steinberg Tips
- Make your position clear - Impropriety will not
be tolerated and will be caught - Avoid hyperbole and jokes about getting the data
no matter what - Dont improve the current study - let staff
know that the current protocol is the only one
approved - Promote Research Integrity
- Verify, Verify, Verify
62Research ImproprietyCan it be Prevented?
- ORI Introduction to Responsible Conduct of
Research - Nicholas Steneck, PhD
- This booklet introduces the reader to the nine
RCR core instructional areas in four sections
that follows research from inception to planning,
conducting, reporting, and reviewing research.
The publication features case studies, text-box
inserts, discussion questions, and electronic and
printed resources.
63Colonel John P. Stapp, M.D.
- a firm belief in Murphys Law and in the
necessity to try and circumvent it. - The Essence of Local Accountability
64Research ImproprietyThe Good News
- Documented Research Impropriety is relatively
rare - ORI statistics
65Useful Resources
- VA Office of Research Development (ORD)
- Program for Research Development Education
(PRIDE) - http//www1.va.gov/resdev/programs/pride/
- K. Lynn Cates, MD, (202) 254-0282,
lynn.cates_at_va.gov - Marisue Cody, PhD, (202) 254-0271,
marisue.cody_at_va.gov - VA Office of Research Oversight (ORO)
- http//www1.va.gov/oro/
- Research Misconduct Peter Poon, JD, MA
- (202) 565-8107, peter.poon_at_va.gov
- HHS Office of Research Integrity (ORI)
- http//ori.hhs.gov/
- HHS Office for Human Research Protection (OHRP)
- www.hhs.gov/ohrp