99-25376. Human Drugs and Biologics; Determination That Informed Consent Is NOT Feasible or Is Contrary to the Best Interests of Recipients; Revocation of 1990 Interim Final Rule; Establishment of New Interim Final Rule  

  • [Federal Register Volume 64, Number 192 (Tuesday, October 5, 1999)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 54180-54189]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 99-25376]
    
    
    
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    Part V
    
    
    
    
    
    Department of Health and Human Services
    
    
    
    
    
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    Food and Drug Administration
    
    
    
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    21 CFR Parts 50 and 312
    
    
    
    Human Drugs and Biologics; Determination That Informed Consent Is NOT 
    Feasible or Is Contrary to the Best Interests of Recipients; Revocation 
    of 1990 Interim Final Rule; Establishment of New Interim Final Rule
    
    Federal Register / Vol. 64, No. 192 / Tuesday, October 5, 1999 / 
    Rules and Regulations
    
    [[Page 54180]]
    
    
    
    DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
    
    Food and Drug Administration
    
    21 CFR Parts 50 and 312
    
    RIN 0910-AA89
    
    [Docket No. 90N-0302]
    
    
    Human Drugs and Biologics; Determination That Informed Consent Is 
    NOT Feasible or Is Contrary to the Best Interests of Recipients; 
    Revocation of 1990 Interim Final Rule; Establishment of New Interim 
    Final Rule
    
    AGENCY: Food and Drug Administration, HHS.
    
    ACTION: Interim final rule; opportunity for public comment.
    
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    SUMMARY: The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is revoking its 1990 
    interim final regulations that permitted the Commissioner of Food and 
    Drugs (the Commissioner) to determine that obtaining informed consent 
    from military personnel for the use of an investigational drug or 
    biologic is not feasible in certain situations related to military 
    combat. FDA also is issuing a new interim final rule addressing waiver 
    of informed consent in military operations. FDA is taking these actions 
    based on its analysis and consideration of all relevant facts, 
    including its evaluation of the Department of Defense's (DOD) 
    experience during the Persian Gulf War, its evaluation of the comments 
    received by the agency in response to the agency's July 31, 1997, 
    request for comments on whether the agency should revise or revoke the 
    interim regulations, and the enactment of the Strom Thurmond National 
    Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 1999 (the Defense 
    Authorization Act). Under the Defense Authorization Act, the President 
    is authorized to waive the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act's (the 
    act) informed consent requirements in military operations if the 
    President finds that obtaining consent is infeasible or contrary to the 
    best interests of recipients and on an additional ground that obtaining 
    consent is contrary to national security interests. In light of the 
    enactment of the Defense Authorization Act, with an immediate effective 
    date, and because the President could be called upon to make a waiver 
    determination for military personnel engaged in a specific military 
    operation at any time, the agency believes that it is critical to have 
    in place adequate criteria and standards for the President to apply in 
    making an informed consent waiver determination. Therefore, FDA is 
    issuing a new interim final regulation with an immediate effective date 
    to establish criteria and standards for the President to apply in 
    making a determination that informed consent is not feasible or is 
    contrary to the best interests of the individual recipients.
    
    DATES: Effective October 5, 1999. Submit written comments by December 
    20, 1999.
    
    ADDRESSES: Submit written comments to the Dockets Management Branch 
    (HFA-305), Food and Drug Administration, 5630 Fishers Lane, rm. 1061, 
    Rockville, MD 20852.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Bonnie M. Lee, Division of Compliance 
    Policy, Office of Enforcement, Office of Regulatory Affairs (HFC-230), 
    Food and Drug Administration, 5600 Fishers Lane, Rockville, MD 20857, 
    301-827-0415.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    I. Background
    
        FDA is revoking its interim final regulations related to informed 
    consent for human drug and biological products that permitted the 
    Commissioner to determine that obtaining informed consent from military 
    personnel for the use of an investigational drug or biologic is not 
    feasible in certain situations related to military combat. On a case-
    by-case basis, the interim final rule authorized the Commissioner to 
    make such a determination at the written request of the Assistant 
    Secretary of Defense (Health Affairs). Any determination made with 
    respect to the nonfeasibility of obtaining informed consent expired at 
    the end of 1 year, unless renewal was requested, or when DOD informed 
    the Commissioner that the military operation had ended, whichever was 
    earlier.
        In the Federal Register of July 31, 1997 (62 FR 40996), FDA 
    published a document entitled ``Request for Comments'' that discussed 
    the use of investigational drugs and biologicals in military and other 
    emergency settings to treat or prevent toxicity of chemical or 
    biological substances (hereinafter referred to as the July 1997 request 
    for comments). In this document, FDA provided extensive background on 
    the development and implementation of the 1990 interim rule and DOD's 
    experience during the Persian Gulf War. The agency's request for 
    comments included specific questions in the three following subject 
    areas.
        First, the agency asked whether its rule permitting waiver of 
    informed consent in very limited circumstances involving military 
    exigencies should be revoked or amended, and if so, how. In 1990, FDA 
    issued an interim rule (``Informed Consent for Human Drugs and 
    Biologics; Determination that Informed Consent is Not Feasible'' 
    (Sec. 50.23(d) (21 CFR 50.23(d)) (55 FR 52814, December 21, 1990)), 
    allowing the Commissioner to make the determination, in response to 
    product specific requests from DOD, that obtaining informed consent 
    from military personnel for the use of an investigational drug or 
    biological product is not feasible in certain battlefield or combat-
    related situations.
        Second, because information on a product's efficacy in reducing or 
    preventing toxicity of chemical or biological substances is important, 
    the agency also asked when, if ever, it is ethical to expose volunteers 
    to toxic chemical and biological substances to test the efficacy of 
    products that may be used to provide potential protection against those 
    substances.
        Third, because these products are critically important, even if 
    they cannot be ethically tested in humans to demonstrate efficacy, the 
    agency asked what evidence of efficacy, other than that from human 
    trials, would be appropriate to demonstrate the safety and efficacy of 
    products that may provide protection against toxic chemical and 
    biological substances.
        In a related document published elsewhere in this issue of the 
    Federal Register, FDA has addressed the second and third issues in a 
    proposed regulation that discusses the evidence needed to demonstrate 
    efficacy of new drugs for use against lethal or permanently disabling 
    toxic substances when definitive efficacy studies in humans cannot 
    ethically be conducted. The agency believes that, if issued, this 
    proposed rule may make it possible to develop evidence sufficient to 
    support approval of such drugs and thus should help minimize the need 
    to use investigational products in military exigencies.
        With respect to the first question, waiver of informed consent in 
    military operations, FDA's decision to revoke the 1990 interim rule is 
    based on consideration of all relevant facts, including FDA's 
    evaluation of DOD's experience during the Persian Gulf War, FDA's 
    analysis of the comments received in response to the first issue 
    addressed in the July 1997 request for comments on whether the agency 
    should revise or revoke the interim rule (62 FR 40996), and the recent 
    enactment of the Defense Authorization Act.
         Section 731 of the Defense Authorization Act, amending 10 U.S.C.
    
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    1107(f), became effective on October 17, 1998. Under 10 U.S.C. 1107(f), 
    the Commissioner of Food and Drugs no longer has the authority to make 
    waiver of informed consent decisions in military operations because 10 
    U.S.C. 1107(f)(1) explicitly vests the authority to waive the act's 
    informed consent requirement in the President. Section 1107(f)(1) of 
    Title 10 provides for such waiver in the case of the administration of 
    an investigational new drug or drug unapproved for its applied use to a 
    member of the armed forces in connection with the member's 
    participation in a particular military operation. Section 1107(f)(1) of 
    Title 10 authorizes the President to waive informed consent if the 
    President finds that obtaining informed consent is: (1) Not feasible; 
    (2) contrary to the best interests of the member; or (3) not in the 
    interests of national security. The first two grounds (lack of 
    feasibility or contrary to the best interests of recipients) are 
    specified in section 505(i) of the act (21 U.S.C. 355(i)).
         Section 1107(f)(2) of Title 10 provides that, in making a 
    determination to waive informed consent on the grounds that it is not 
    feasible or contrary to the best interests of the armed services 
    member, the President shall apply the standards and criteria that are 
    set forth in the relevant FDA regulations for a waiver of the prior 
    consent requirement on that ground.
         Because section 1107(f)(1) of Title 10 refers to waiver of 
    informed consent in connection with military operations, the relevant 
    FDA regulations referenced in section 1107(f)(2) of Title 10 would be 
    any regulations dealing with waivers in this context. As discussed 
    previously, FDA originally issued such regulations as an interim final 
    rule in 1990 (55 FR 52814, December 21, 1990), at Sec. 50.23(d)(1) 
    through (d)(4). These regulations consisted of procedures to be 
    followed by the Assistant Secretary of Defense (Health Affairs) and the 
    Commissioner of Food and Drugs (Sec. 50.23(d)(1)); standards and 
    criteria for granting such waivers (Sec. 50.23(d)(1) and (d)(2)); a 
    discretionary provision for consultation with advisory committees 
    (Sec. 50.23(d)(3)) and time limits for such waivers (Sec. 50.23(d)(4)). 
    These regulations conflict with section 1107(f)(1) of Title 10 in that 
    they vest FDA's Commissioner with the authority to make such waiver 
    decisions.
         As reflected in a number of the comments FDA received on the 1990 
    interim rule, many people addressed the issue of whether waiver of 
    informed consent in military operations involving military personnel is 
    ever acceptable, and if so, when. In the Defense Authorization Act, 
    Congress has addressed that issue by explicitly providing for waiver of 
    the informed consent requirement by the President in certain 
    situations. In light of the immediate effective date of the Defense 
    Authorization Act, the agency believes that it is critical to have in 
    place adequate criteria and standards for the President to apply in 
    making an informed consent waiver determination.
         Based on the extensive examination of issues associated with the 
    existing interim final rule during the last 8 years, the agency has 
    developed a new rule consistent with the Defense Authorization Act that 
    contains new strengthened criteria and standards that the President can 
    use in making informed consent waiver determinations. The agency 
    believes that it is in the public interest to have these new criteria 
    and standards in place and available for use should the President be 
    called upon to make a waiver determination while, at the same time, it 
    solicits public comments on these criteria and standards. These new 
    criteria and standards are discussed in greater detail later in this 
    document.
    
    II. Comments Received on Whether to Revoke or Amend the 1990 
    Interim Rule
    
        The agency received 134 comments on whether it should revoke or 
    amend the 1990 interim rule: Of these, 119 comments expressed 
    opposition to the interim rule and recommended that it be permanently 
    revoked, 7 comments recommended changes to the interim rule, 2 comments 
    supported retention of the interim rule, and 6 comments misunderstood 
    the scope of the interim rule and provided comments on a different 
    regulation.
    
    A. Summary of Comments Recommending That the Interim Rule Be Revoked
    
        The 119 comments that recommended the revocation of the interim 
    rule were signed by 160 individuals including veterans, veterans' 
    relatives, active military personnel, active military families, 
    ethicists, physicians, other health care providers, and private 
    citizens, as well as from an advocacy group for ailing Persian Gulf 
    Veterans, an organization representing grassroots veterans' 
    organizations in America and England, and a nonprofit public interest 
    organization.
        Most of these comments opposed the agency's continued use of the 
    interim rule after the experience of the Persian Gulf War. Many thought 
    it should never have been used. Specifically, 114 comments stated that 
    informed consent was absolutely essential and that military personnel, 
    like other nonmilitary citizens, should receive adequate information 
    about an investigational product before its use and have the right to 
    refuse to receive it. Seventeen comments stressed the need for followup 
    of possible adverse reactions to investigational products, and 15 
    comments indicated that DOD could not fulfill its responsibilities even 
    if FDA required adequate followup and other requirements as part of a 
    new regulation. Five comments stated that DOD had shown itself to be 
    incapable of adequate oversight and recordkeeping and three comments 
    noted that the interim rule had not been implemented by DOD as had been 
    intended. Several comments suggested that if the rule were to be used 
    again, there must be an independent board of medical and ethical 
    experts, there must be an institutional review board independent of 
    DOD, and there must be proper monitoring that could only be done by 
    non-DOD personnel.
         As described earlier in this document, The Defense Authorization 
    Act answers the controversial question of whether waiver of informed 
    consent in military operations is ever appropriate. In passing this 
    legislation, Congress has concluded that the President may waive the 
    informed consent requirement for military personnel engaged in a 
    particular military operation in certain situations. The comments on 
    the 1990 interim rule pointed out significant areas that needed to be 
    strengthened, including: Provision of adequate information about an 
    investigational product before its use; adequate followup to assess 
    whether there are adverse health consequences that result from the use 
    of the investigational product; adequate oversight, accountability, and 
    recordkeeping when investigational agents are used; and involvement of 
    non-DOD personnel in decisions to use investigational products without 
    informed consent. All of these areas have been addressed in the new 
    interim rule that establishes the criteria and standards for the 
    President to use in making an informed consent waiver determination.
    
    B. Summary of Comments Recommending Changes to the Interim Rule
    
        Seven comments recommended changes to the interim rule. Three of 
    these comments recommended that the rule be suspended and reconsidered 
    only if their modifications were adopted and adhered to by DOD.
         Two comments recommended that a process be established for the 
    President
    
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    to authorize the use of investigational products without informed 
    consent in military conflicts.
         The Defense Authorization Act establishes the President as the 
    sole authority for making a waiver of informed consent determination 
    for military personnel involved in a particular military operation. 
    Thus, the process recommended by these comments has already been 
    established through legislation. FDA will be involved in this process 
    through its traditional role of reviewing specific protocols under its 
    investigational new drug (IND) regulations.
        One comment recommended that the rule be amended to require: (1) 
    That reasonable efforts be made to inform individuals in advance that 
    investigational products are to be used, (2) that the extent and 
    appropriateness of the information provided be determined by the 
    Commissioner of FDA, (3) that all individuals exposed to 
    investigational products be informed no later than 1 year after their 
    use, and (4) that there be established a publicly accessible site for 
    continuous access to the most updated scientific information on these 
    products.
         The agency agrees with this comment and has incorporated the 
    suggested requirements into the new interim rule. The interim rule 
    requires that each member involved in the military operation be given, 
    prior to the administration of the investigational new drug, a specific 
    written information sheet. That information sheet is to include 
    information (in addition to information required by 10 U.S.C. 1107(d)) 
    concerning the investigational new drug, the risks and benefits of its 
    use, potential side effects, and other pertinent information about the 
    appropriate use of the product. Under 10 U.S.C. 1107(d), the 
    information sheet is required to contain the following: (1) Clear 
    notice that the drug being administered is an investigational new drug 
    or a drug unapproved for its applied use; (2) the reasons why the 
    investigational new drug or drug unapproved for its applied use is 
    being administered; (3) information regarding the possible side effects 
    of the investigational new drug or drug unapproved for its applied use, 
    including any known side effects possible as a result of the 
    interaction of such drug with other drugs or treatments being 
    administered to the members receiving such drug; and (4) such other 
    information that, as a condition of authorizing the use of the 
    investigational new drug or drug unapproved for its applied use, the 
    Secretary of Health and Human Services may require to be disclosed. FDA 
    intends to review the information sheet as part of its review of the 
    use of the investigational product under an IND in order to determine 
    its adequacy. The interim rule also requires DOD to provide public 
    notice in the Federal Register describing each waiver of informed 
    consent determination, a summary of the most updated scientific 
    information on the products used, as well as other pertinent 
    information.
        One comment from an individual who was employed at the U.S. Army 
    Medical Materiel Development Activity, Ft. Detrick, MD, during the Gulf 
    War, and who served for 22 years as an Army officer, stated that ``[a]s 
    the largest training organization in the United States, perhaps in the 
    world, DoD clearly has the capacity and resources to provide adequate 
    information to each service member before he or she takes or uses an 
    investigational product.'' Based on this reasoning, the Army officer 
    suggested that the rule be amended and that DOD could, and should, 
    institute training programs early in each service member's military 
    career. Specifically, this comment recommended that FDA demand adequate 
    training as part of the informed consent process and require that DOD 
    develop and validate training guidelines for the use of investigational 
    products that might be used under a waiver during all phases of product 
    development.
         The agency agrees with this comment. The interim rule now requires 
    DOD to provide training to the appropriate medical personnel and 
    potential recipients on the specific investigational new drug to be 
    administered prior to its use.
        Two comments stressed that FDA should regard itself as acting on 
    behalf of the troops, not on behalf of the military or the DOD. These 
    comments recommended that the interim rule be suspended or revoked 
    until the agency critically reviewed requests from DOD to waive 
    informed consent that contained the following documentation: (1) 
    Documentation from DOD that identified the threat, its nature, and its 
    likelihood; (2) documentation from DOD that administration of the 
    proposed treatment is likely to be effective against that threat; (3) 
    documentation from DOD that detailed concurrent conditions (such as 
    environmental and occupational conditions, treatment regimens that may 
    be employed by troops serving in the forces to be treated) that could 
    alter the effects of the proposed treatment; (4) documentation from DOD 
    that demonstrated that military medical services are capable of 
    delivering qualified personnel and adequate supplies of necessary 
    medical material to the specific theater of operations; (5) 
    documentation from DOD that establishes that the recordkeeping systems 
    are capable of tracking the proposed treatment from supplier to point 
    of administration; and (6) documentation that demonstrates that there 
    are medical followup plans for troops receiving the proposed treatment. 
    These comments stated that this documentation should be made public and 
    public comment should be sought regarding the performance of both DOD 
    and FDA. These comments stated that if these requirements could be met, 
    adequate information would need to be provided to the troops by 
    individuals with whom they have daily contact.
         The agency agrees with the suggestions for documentation contained 
    in these comments and has incorporated them into the new interim rule. 
    Under the new interim rule, each member involved in the military 
    operation will be given, prior to the administration of the 
    investigational new drug, a specific written information sheet. This 
    information sheet is required, under 10 U.S.C. 1107(d), to contain 
    specific information. The interim rule incorporates this requirement by 
    reference and requires the disclosure of risks and benefits of the use 
    of the investigational product, potential side effects, and other 
    pertinent information about the appropriate use of the product.
    
    C. Comments in Support of Retaining the Interim Rule
    
        The agency received two comments in support of retaining the 
    interim rule as written--one from DOD and the other from a physician 
    from academia. This latter comment stated that:
        [t]he organization and activities of the DOD are not meant to be 
    either democratic or reliant upon informed consent. However, the 
    goal of DOD activities in combat situations is victory, and with 
    that end in sight, it is reasonable to expect that the condition of 
    the troops is considered carefully by DOD leadership. Decisions 
    pertinent to the use of investigational drugs without informed 
    consent will most likely represent the best interests of military 
    personnel and the nation.
        DOD's comments in support of maintaining the interim rule were 
    similar to those expressed by DOD in requesting the interim rule 
    initially (see the Assistant Secretary of Defense (Health Affairs) 
    letter of October 30, 1990, to the Assistant Secretary for Health, HHS, 
    quoted in the preamble to the interim rule (55 FR 52814), and in its 
    September 13, 1996, response to the
    
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    May 7, 1996, petition to FDA requesting that the Commissioner repeal 
    the interim rule (see summary in the July 1997 request for comments (62 
    FR 40996 at 41000)).
         As previously stated, Congress now has passed legislation 
    providing for waiver of the informed consent requirement by the 
    President in certain military situations, thus, recognizing the need 
    for waiver in limited situations. The agency, however, believes that 
    the criteria and standards contained in the 1990 interim rule are not 
    sufficient and has therefore established new criteria and standards for 
    the President to apply in making an informed consent waiver 
    determination.
    
    D. Other Comments on the Interim Rule
    
        A comment from Chairman Arlen Specter and Ranking Minority Member 
    John D. Rockefeller IV, Senate Committee on Veterans' Affairs, stated 
    that whether the rule should be revoked or not ``* * * is a complex 
    decision that needs to be carefully considered, with input from health 
    care professionals, ethicists, active duty military personnel, 
    veterans, and the general public.'' They urged FDA, if it decided not 
    to revoke the rule, to ensure that a process is instituted to provide 
    maximum protection to ``* * * the health and well-being of military 
    personnel prior to, during, and subsequent to a combat situation.'' 
    They stressed the importance of establishing a process prior to any 
    combat situation that would: (1) Lay out how decisions would be reached 
    in a timely manner; (2) require institutional review boards (IRB's) 
    used during this process to consist of at least three persons 
    independent of DOD because the IRB will be making decisions that result 
    in the loss of rights of a large group of individuals and objectivity 
    is essential; (3) require health surveillance data from well-designed 
    data collection forms be used to assess the potential health 
    consequences of the use of products and to modify decisions as 
    information is gained; and (4) require compliance with mechanisms for 
    review and sanctions be put in place.
         The agency agrees that the decisions associated with the interim 
    rule have been complex and there is a need to institute a process that 
    will provide maximum protection to military personnel. The Defense 
    Authorization Act vests authority in the President to make a waiver of 
    informed consent determination, and it vests in the President the 
    process by which such decisions shall be made. FDA believes that this 
    process, which includes use of the criteria and standards in the new 
    interim final rule, will provide the protection of the health and well-
    being of military personnel urged by the comments. As suggested by this 
    comment, the new interim rule requires the IRB to include at least 
    three nonaffiliated members who are not employees or officers of the 
    Federal Government.
         In response to the suggestion that the rule require health 
    surveillance to assess the potential health consequences of the use of 
    the product and to modify decisions as information is gained, the new 
    interim rule contains two provisions. One requires DOD to provide 
    adequate followup to assess whether there are beneficial or adverse 
    health consequences that result from the use of the investigational 
    product. The second requires DOD to report to FDA and to the President 
    any changed circumstances relating to the standards and criteria 
    contained in the rule or that otherwise might affect the determination 
    to use an investigational new drug without informed consent.
         In response to the comment's recommendation that the process 
    require compliance with mechanisms for review and sanctions, the agency 
    notes that the Defense Authorization Act requires the Secretary of 
    Defense, if the President grants the requested waiver, to submit to the 
    chairman and ranking minority member of each congressional defense 
    committee a notification of the waiver, together with the written 
    determination of the President and the Secretary of Defense's 
    justification for the request for the waiver of informed consent (see 
    10 U.S.C. 1107(f)(3)(B)). The new interim rule builds in accountability 
    and compliance by requiring the Secretary of Defense to certify and 
    document to the President that the standards and criteria in the rule 
    have been met, including the criteria that use of the investigational 
    drug without informed consent otherwise conforms with applicable law. 
    Further, the new interim rule notes that ``[n]othing in these criteria 
    or standards is intended to preempt or limit FDA's and DOD's authority 
    or obligations under applicable statutes and regulations.'' The agency 
    notes that the mechanisms for review and sanctions under the IND 
    regulations apply to the DOD and its employees involved in the use of 
    products subject to FDA regulation.
         In response to the comment's suggestion that the process include 
    public disclosure, the new interim rule requires DOD to provide public 
    notice in the Federal Register as soon as practicable and consistent 
    with classification requirements describing each waiver of informed 
    consent determination, a summary of the most updated scientific 
    information on the products used, and other pertinent information.
        The agency has concluded that the issues associated with the 1990 
    interim rule are very complex and difficult, as recognized by Senators 
    Specter and Rockefeller. As described in detail in FDA's July 1997 
    request for comments, there has been extensive examination of issues 
    associated with the 1990 interim rule during the last 8 years. In 
    addition to FDA's July 1997 request for comments, the issues have been 
    examined in comments submitted to the agency in the 30-day comment 
    period following the rule's publication in the Federal Register on 
    December 21, 1990; in litigation (Doe v. Sullivan, 756 F. Supp. 12, 14 
    (D.D.C. 1991)); in a May 6, 1994, United States Senate Committee on 
    Veterans' Affairs hearing on ``Is Military Research Hazardous to 
    Veterans' Health? Lessons From World War II, the Persian Gulf, and 
    Today;'' reviews conducted by the Presidential Advisory Committee on 
    Gulf War Veterans' Illnesses; and in the Public Citizen, the National 
    Veterans Legal Services Program, and the National Gulf War Resource 
    Center, Inc., May 7, 1996, petition to FDA requesting that the 
    Commissioner repeal the interim rule.
        The agency believes that exceptions from the informed consent 
    requirement should apply rarely and only when sufficient additional 
    protections are provided to the military personnel affected.
    
    III. Revocation of the 1990 Interim Rule
    
        The agency recognizes that there may be future military combat 
    situations where U.S. military personnel are at risk of exposure to 
    chemical and biological weapons and that DOD has a critical and 
    legitimate interest in protecting military personnel from such chemical 
    and biological agents. This was the basis for FDA's 1990 interim rule 
    issued in anticipation of the Persian Gulf War that gave DOD the 
    authority to use specified investigational products to provide 
    potential protection against chemical and biological warfare agents 
    without obtaining informed consent from individual service personnel.
    
    A. DOD's Experience in Implementing the Rule During the Persian Gulf 
    War
    
        DOD's experience during the Gulf War with pyridostigmine bromide 
    and the botulinum toxoid vaccine was described in detail in the July 
    1997 request for comments (62 FR 40996 at 40998 through 41000). A brief 
    summary of this experience follows.
    
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        In December 1990, DOD submitted protocols under IND's and requests 
    for waiver of informed consent for: (1) Pyridostigmine bromide 30-
    milligram tablets, a potentially useful pretreatment against soman, a 
    nerve gas; and (2) the botulinum toxoid vaccine, potentially protective 
    against toxins produced by Clostridium botulinum (the bacterium that 
    produces the toxin that causes botulism). The Commissioner approved 
    both of DOD's waiver requests and each product was administered to some 
    of the military personnel who participated in Operation Desert Storm. 
    FDA's agreement to waive the informed consent requirement was based, in 
    large part, on DOD's agreement to provide and disseminate specified 
    information on these products to military personnel and upon adherence 
    to labeling and other prescribed requirements for the use of 
    investigational products.
        Concurrent with the agency's request for comments on the interim 
    rule, FDA was also evaluating DOD's experience in implementing IND's, 
    as well as waivers under the interim rule, during the Gulf War in order 
    to obtain specific factual information and to assess DOD's compliance 
    with FDA requirements. In the agency's ongoing evaluation of the use of 
    investigational products in the Persian Gulf, the agency identified 
    significant deviations from Federal regulations published in Title 21, 
    Code of Federal Regulations (CFR), parts 50 and 312 (21 CFR parts 50 
    and 312). These deviations were set forth in a July 22, 1997, and a 
    December 2, 1997, letter from the Lead Deputy Commissioner of the Food 
    and Drug Administration to the Acting Deputy Secretary of Defense for 
    Health Affairs (Refs. 1 through 3). The noted deviations, and the 
    relevant observations that formed the basis for the conclusion that 
    deviations had occurred, are summarized in the following paragraphs.
    1. Pyridostigmine Bromide
         There was a failure to meet the conditions set by the Commissioner 
    for granting a waiver from the informed consent requirements under the 
    1990 interim rule for pyridostigmine bromide. FDA's agreement to waive 
    the informed consent requirement at the time of the Gulf War was based, 
    in large part, on DOD's agreement to provide and disseminate 
    information on pyridostigmine to all military personnel. Based on DOD 
    statements to FDA as well as FDA's own evaluation, FDA has concluded 
    that the information sheet on pyridostigmine was not provided and 
    disseminated to military personnel in the Gulf as required by the 
    Commissioner's letter granting the waiver under the interim rule. 
    Because inadequate information was provided to the soldiers, at least 
    some soldiers either took the wrong amount of pyridostigmine or 
    disregarded orders to take it completely.
         There was a failure to collect, review, and make reports of 
    adverse experiences attributed to the use of pyridostigmine bromide in 
    a timely manner. Although the agency waived the requirements of 
    Sec. 312.32 in regard to the 3- and 10-day time limits for the 
    reporting of adverse experiences, the agency expected DOD to make a 
    reasonable effort to collect, review, and make reports of adverse 
    clinical consequences attributed to the use of the product in as timely 
    a manner as conditions permitted.
         There was a failure to label pyridostigmine bromide with 
    investigational labeling as required by FDA regulations. FDA had 
    agreed, as requested by DOD, to waive the provisions of Sec. 312.6 in 
    order to allow DOD to employ the phrase ``For military use and 
    evaluation'' in place of the statement ordinarily mandated for use on 
    the immediate package of an investigational drug product, which reads 
    ``Caution: New Drug--Limited by Federal (or United States) Law to 
    Investigational Use''. FDA's waiver of the standard statement was on 
    condition that all of the product distributed to service members would 
    carry the new ``military use'' labeling. Based on information provided 
    to the agency, FDA believes that the pyridostigmine bromide distributed 
    to military personnel in the Persian Gulf was not labeled as required 
    by the conditions of the waiver.
    2. Botulinum Toxoid Vaccine
         There was a failure to ensure that the investigation was conducted 
    in accordance with the general investigational plan for the botulinum 
    toxoid vaccine during the Gulf War. The protocol for the botulinum 
    toxoid vaccine stated that each botulinum toxoid vaccine dose was to be 
    recorded in the individual's permanent immunization record. This was 
    not done.
         There was also a failure to maintain adequate records showing the 
    receipt, shipment, and disposition of the investigational product 
    botulinum toxoid vaccine as required by Secs. 312.57 and 312.59.
         On January 8, 1991, FDA granted DOD's request for a waiver of 
    informed consent under the interim final rule for use of the botulinum 
    toxoid vaccine during the Gulf War. However, following the cessation of 
    combat activities DOD advised FDA in a March 15, 1991, letter that the 
    military command in the theater of operations in the Persian Gulf 
    decided to administer the botulinum toxoid vaccine on ``a voluntary 
    basis.'' This letter did not state whether informed consent was 
    obtained.
        The military command's decision to allow administration of the 
    vaccine on a voluntary basis indicates that the criteria for granting a 
    waiver under the interim rule was no longer met; specifically that ``* 
    * * preservation of the health of the individual and the safety of 
    other personnel require that a particular treatment [botulinum toxoid 
    vaccine] be provided to a specified group of military personnel, 
    without regard to what might be an individual's personal preference for 
    no treatment or for some alternative treatment.'' If the criteria for 
    waiver were not met, DOD was required to obtain and document the 
    informed consent of military personnel receiving the vaccine in 
    accordance with Secs. 50.25 and 50.27. Without signed consent forms to 
    document that informed consent was obtained, and based on testimony 
    from Persian Gulf War veterans that information on the vaccine was not 
    uniformly given to military personnel, the agency has concluded that 
    informed consent was not routinely obtained from military personnel who 
    received the botulinum toxoid vaccine in accordance with FDA 
    regulations.
         Experience with the use of the waiver provision of the 1990 
    interim rule suggests two conclusions: (1) To the extent possible, 
    military personnel should receive treatments whose safety and 
    effectiveness have been fully evaluated; (2) where it is necessary to 
    utilize investigational agents and to waive informed consent, new 
    standards and criteria for doing so should be developed that will 
    better ensure protection of the troops receiving the investigational 
    product.
    
    B. Future Use of FDA-Regulated Products by DOD
    
        FDA has concluded that there are important ways for the agency to 
    contribute to DOD's mandate to protect military personnel that are 
    consistent with FDA's mission and regulations. FDA's existing 
    mechanisms for providing access to investigational products under an 
    IND will continue to be available to any entity that complies with the 
    agency's specified requirements. Both DOD and FDA recognize, however, 
    that some of the IND requirements may not be feasible in certain combat 
    situations. Based on the lessons from use of investigational agents 
    during the Gulf War, the agency
    
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    believes that DOD's needs can best be met through DOD's support of drug 
    development efforts leading to approval of products found to be safe 
    and effective.
        FDA shares DOD's goal of getting the best products to military 
    personnel. Thus, FDA is committed to working with DOD to resolve the 
    safety and effectiveness questions that may allow FDA to approve the 
    drug and biological products for use in military operations and during 
    military exigencies. In order to provide pharmaceutical agents that are 
    safe and effective in protecting military personnel, the agency 
    believes that DOD must focus its efforts on drug development. The 
    agency notes that under existing regulations it can expedite access to 
    new drugs by accelerating approval (subpart H of 21 CFR part 314 and 
    subpart E of 21 CFR part 601). In addition, consistent with the recent 
    changes to the act on fast track products made in the Food and Drug 
    Administration Modernization Act of 1997, FDA is committed to 
    facilitating development and expediting the review of drugs for serious 
    and life-threatening conditions that address unmet needs (section 506 
    of the act (21 U.S.C. 356)). Moreover, FDA is proposing an additional 
    mechanism for product approval that is described elsewhere in this 
    issue of the Federal Register and that relates to the evidence needed 
    to demonstrate safety and efficacy for drug and biological products for 
    use against lethal or toxic substances when efficacy studies in humans 
    cannot ethically be conducted.
        In order to minimize the need to use investigational products 
    during military exigencies, DOD and FDA have formed a working group for 
    the purpose of assisting DOD in its drug development efforts related to 
    these products. DOD has agreed to identify those products that may 
    provide protection to military members, develop appropriate drug 
    development plans for each product, and establish a timeframe for 
    completion.
         FDA recognizes, however, that in rare instances investigational 
    products may need to be used by DOD in deployment situations. The 
    enactment of the Defense Authorization Act reflects this fact and calls 
    for the implementation of a process that will help ensure that when 
    informed consent is waived it will be done under standards and criteria 
    that will help protect the troops receiving the investigational 
    product. Accordingly, FDA has issued this new interim rule.
    
     IV. Establishment of New Standards and Criteria
    
     A. Description of New Interim Rule
    
         As described earlier, under 10 U.S.C. 1107(f), the President may 
    waive the prior consent requirement for the administration of an 
    investigational new drug to a member of the armed forces in connection 
    with the member's participation in a particular military operation. The 
    statute specifies that only the President may waive informed consent 
    and that the President may grant such a waiver only if the President 
    determines in writing that obtaining consent: Is not feasible, is 
    contrary to the best interests of the military member, or is not in the 
    interests of national security. The statute further provides that in 
    making this determination based on the grounds that it is infeasible or 
    contrary to the best interests of the military member, the President 
    shall apply the standards and criteria that are set forth in the 
    relevant FDA regulations for a waiver of the prior informed consent 
    requirements. This interim rule contains those standards and criteria. 
    The statute is silent about the standards and criteria that the 
    President is to apply in making a determination that obtaining consent 
    is not in the interests of national security.
         The Defense Authorization Act authorizes the Secretary of Defense 
    to request an informed consent waiver determination from the President. 
    The interim rule requires the Secretary of Defense to certify and 
    document to the President that the standards and criteria in the 
    interim rule have been met.
         Section 50.23(d)(1)(i) through (d)(1)(iv) contain the fundamental 
    information necessary to make an informed assessment of risks and 
    benefits. Under these paragraphs, the Secretary of Defense must certify 
    and document that: (1) The extent and strength of evidence of the 
    safety and effectiveness of the investigational new drug in relation to 
    the medical risk that could be encountered during the military 
    operation supports the drug's administration under an IND; (2) the 
    military operation presents a substantial risk that military personnel 
    may be subject to a chemical, biological, nuclear, or other exposure 
    likely to produce death or serious or life-threatening injury or 
    illness; (3) there is no available satisfactory alternative therapeutic 
    or preventive treatment in relation to the intended use of the 
    investigational new drug; and (4) conditioning use of the 
    investigational new drug on the voluntary participation of each member 
    could significantly risk the safety and health of any individual member 
    who would decline its use, the safety of other military personnel, and 
    threaten the accomplishment of the military mission.
         The requirements for IRB review of protocols for military use of 
    investigational drugs without informed consent have been strengthened 
    and further specified. Following the Gulf War, the agency became aware 
    that a military IRB, upon initial review of the proposed use of the 
    botulinum toxoid vaccine in anticipation of the Gulf War, had 
    recommended that the vaccine be provided with informed consent (Ref. 
    4). The proposed use was subsequently reviewed by a different military 
    IRB that approved its use without informed consent. It is not clear 
    whether the conclusions of the initial IRB were shared with the 
    subsequent IRB. In order to ensure adequate and meaningful IRB review, 
    Sec. 50.23(d)(1)(v) requires the duly constituted IRB to be responsible 
    for the review of the study and requires that the IRB review and 
    approve the investigational new drug protocol and the administration of 
    the investigational new drug without informed consent as a prerequisite 
    for the study to proceed. It also requires DOD's request for a waiver 
    to include the documentation of minutes of IRB meetings at which the 
    protocol was reviewed. This documentation of minutes is required by 21 
    CFR 56.115(a)(2).
         Section 50.23(d)(2) describes additional requirements that pertain 
    to this IRB that are not contained in FDA's IRB regulations part 56 (21 
    CFR part 56). The IRB must include at least 3 nonaffiliated members who 
    are not employees or officers of the Federal Government (other than for 
    purposes of membership on the IRB). The quorum required for a convened 
    meeting must include a majority of the members including at least one 
    member whose primary concerns are in nonscientific areas, and, if 
    feasible, a majority of the nonaffiliated members. The minutes of IRB 
    meetings at which the protocol is reviewed are to be provided to the 
    Secretary of Defense for further review.
         Section 50.23(d)(3) describes additional review requirements that 
    pertain to this IRB. For the study to be able to proceed, the IRB must 
    review and approve the contents of the required written information 
    sheet on the investigational product; the adequacy of the plan to 
    disseminate information, including the information sheet and other 
    information (e.g., in forms other than written), to potential 
    recipients; the adequacy of the information and the plans for its 
    dissemination to health care providers, including potential side
    
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    effects, contraindications, potential interactions, and other pertinent 
    considerations; and an informed consent form, as required by part 50, 
    in those circumstances in which DOD determines that informed consent 
    may be obtained from some or all personnel involved. In addition, 
    Sec. 50.23(d)(4) requires DOD to submit to FDA summaries of IRB 
    meetings at which the proposed protocol has been reviewed.
         In order to help ensure that the President is provided all 
    relevant information related to the effects of the investigational 
    drug, Sec. 50.23(d)(1)(vi) requires the Secretary of Defense to certify 
    and document in his or her request for a waiver determination under 
    Sec. 50.23(d)(1) that DOD has explained: (1) The context in which the 
    investigational drug will be administered; (2) the nature of the 
    disease or condition for which the preventive or therapeutic treatment 
    is intended; and (3) to the extent there are existing data or 
    information available, information on conditions that could alter the 
    effects of the investigational drug.
         In order to help ensure better recordkeeping than occurred during 
    the Gulf War, Sec. 50.23(d)(1)(vii), (d)(1)(ix), and (d)(1)(x) require 
    the Secretary of Defense to document and certify that DOD's 
    recordkeeping system is capable of tracking, and will be used to track 
    the proposed treatment from the supplier to the individual recipient; 
    that medical records of members involved in the military operation will 
    accurately document the receipt by members of the notification required 
    by Sec. 50.23(d)(1)(viii) as well as any investigational new drugs in 
    accordance with FDA regulations.
         In order to help ensure that each military member is provided 
    adequate information on the investigational product, 
    Sec. 50.23(d)(1)(viii) requires the Secretary of Defense to document 
    and certify that each member involved in the military operation will be 
    given, prior to the administration of the investigational new drug, a 
    specific written information sheet containing specified information. 
    Section 50.23(d)(1)(xiv) requires the Secretary of Defense to document 
    and certify that DOD will provide training to the appropriate medical 
    personnel and potential recipients on the specific investigational new 
    drug to be administered prior to its use.
         In response to comments that DOD must provide adequate followup to 
    determine whether there are adverse consequences to the use of 
    investigational products, Sec. 50.23(d)(1)(xi) requires the Secretary 
    of Defense to document and certify that DOD will provide adequate 
    followup to assess whether there are beneficial or adverse health 
    consequences that result from the use of the investigational product.
         Because the agency believes that exceptions to the informed 
    consent requirement should be made rarely and in narrow circumstances 
    and that it is preferable to establish the safety and efficacy of 
    products before their general use in large populations, 
    Sec. 50.23(d)(1)(xii) requires the Secretary of Defense to certify and 
    document that DOD is pursuing drug development for the investigational 
    drug (that could be used in a deployment situation), including a time 
    line for such development, and marketing approval with due diligence. 
    The rule contains two provisions to help ensure that informed consent 
    waiver determinations continue to meet the standards and criteria of 
    this rule after an initial waiver has been granted by the President. 
    Section 50.23(d)(1)(xv) requires the Secretary of Defense to certify 
    and document that DOD has stated and justified the time period for 
    which the waiver is needed, not to exceed 1 year. For a waiver to 
    exceed 1 year, this paragraph requires such a waiver to be separately 
    renewed under the standards and criteria contained in Sec. 50.23(d). 
    Section 50.23(d)(1)(xvi) places a continuing obligation on DOD to 
    report to the FDA and to the President any changed circumstances 
    relating to these standards and criteria or that otherwise might affect 
    the determination to use an investigational new drug without informed 
    consent.
         Section 50.23(d)(1)(xiii) has been included in order to ensure 
    that FDA has completed its review of the investigational new drug 
    protocol and concluded that it may proceed subject to a decision by the 
    President on the informed consent waiver request. FDA will provide a 
    written notification to DOD after it has completed its review of the 
    investigational new drug protocol. This notification may either grant 
    permission for the protocol to proceed subject to the President's 
    decision on the informed consent waiver request or it may place the 
    study on clinical hold. DOD should not proceed with a protocol under 
    this rule until it has received notification from FDA that the protocol 
    may proceed. As discussed later in this document, the agency has 
    adopted a change in part 312 to help ensure that the IND review process 
    is efficiently applied to the use of investigational products under 
    this rule.
         In response to a number of comments, discussed previously, that 
    encouraged public access to information about products for which an 
    informed consent waiver is granted, the agency has included 
    Sec. 50.23(d)(1)(xvii) in the rule. This paragraph requires DOD to 
    provide public notice as soon as practicable and consistent with 
    classification requirements through notice in the Federal Register 
    describing each waiver of informed consent determination, a summary of 
    the most updated scientific information on the products used, and other 
    pertinent information.
         Finally, in order to help ensure that DOD adheres to applicable 
    statutes and laws, Sec. 50.23(d)(1)(xviii) requires the Secretary of 
    Defense to document and certify that the use of the investigational 
    drug without informed consent otherwise conforms with applicable law. 
    Section 50.23(d)(5) states that ``[n]othing in these criteria or 
    standards is intended to preempt or limit FDA's and DOD's authority or 
    obligations under applicable statutes and regulations.''
    
     B. Description of Conforming Amendments
    
         This interim rule necessitates a change to the regulations for 
    human drugs so that those regulations are consistent with this rule. 
    The agency is amending Sec. 312.42 to explicitly state that an 
    investigation may be placed on clinical hold pending a determination by 
    the President to waive the prior consent requirement for the 
    administration of an investigational new drug. If the agency invokes 
    this reason for a clinical hold, it will mean that the agency has 
    completed its review of the protocol and has concluded that the study 
    may proceed; however, subjects may not be enrolled in the study until a 
    positive decision on the informed consent waiver request has been made 
    by the President and FDA has provided written notification to DOD that 
    the clinical hold has been removed.
    
    V. Request for Comments
    
        Interested persons may, on or before December 20, 1999, submit to 
    the Dockets Management Branch (address above) written comments 
    regarding this rule. Two copies of any comments are to be submitted, 
    except that individuals may submit one copy. Comments are to be 
    identified with the docket number found in brackets in the heading of 
    this document. Received comments may be seen in the office above 
    between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m., Monday through Friday.
         FDA is revoking the December 21, 1990, interim rule and issuing a 
    new interim rule in its place effective on date of publication in the 
    Federal Register. FDA is proceeding without notice and comment 
    rulemaking because of the
    
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    significant need to have regulations in place that are consistent with 
    recently enacted legislation addressing waiver of informed consent in 
    military operations and that provide adequate standards and criteria 
    for such waiver determinations. As described in more detail in the 
    following paragraphs, FDA finds, in accordance with section 553(b) of 
    the Administrative Procedure Act, that it would be impracticable and 
    contrary to the public interest to provide for notice and comment prior 
    to the revocation of the December 1990 rule and the issuance of the new 
    interim rule.
         The statutory provision in the Defense Authorization Act that 
    vests authority for waiver decisions in the President overrides the 
    1990 rule vesting authority for such waiver decisions in the 
    Commissioner. Thus, it invalidates those parts of the 1990 regulation 
    that are inconsistent with the Defense Authorization Act. The new 
    interim rule corrects this inconsistency by acknowledging the existence 
    of the Defense Authorization Act and its grant of waiver authority to 
    the President. To require notice and comment to make this correction is 
    unnecessary in that the new rule codifies in regulation a clear 
    statutory mandate.
         Since the issuance of the 1990 interim rule, there has been 
    extensive public discussion regarding the rule on numerous occasions 
    (see discussion in section II of this document). After considering all 
    the relevant facts, including the comments received on the July 1997 
    request for comments, and FDA's evaluation of DOD's experience during 
    the Persian Gulf War in implementing the 1990 rule, FDA has concluded 
    that the rule did not work as intended. In light of the enactment of 
    the Defense Authorization Act, with an immediate effective date and 
    because the President could be called upon to make a waiver 
    determination for military personnel engaged in a specific military 
    operation at any time, the agency believes that it is critical to have 
    in place adequate criteria and standards for the President to apply in 
    making an informed consent waiver determination. Modifying the 1990 
    rule to conform to the statute, without adding the additional 
    protections provided in this new rule is contrary to the public 
    interest because it would leave in place, during the comment period, 
    procedures now considered insufficient. As discussed previously, FDA 
    has developed new strengthened criteria and standards that the 
    President can use in making informed consent waiver determinations. 
    Accordingly, the agency believes it is in the public interest to have 
    these new criteria and standards in place while, at the same time, it 
    solicits public comment.
         It is, therefore, in the public interest, to establish quickly, 
    through this new interim final rule, stringent criteria and standards 
    for the President's application. Following the comment period, the 
    agency intends promptly to publish a final rule.
    
    VI. Environmental Impact
    
        The agency has determined under 21 CFR 25.30(h) that this action is 
    of a type that does not individually or cumulatively have a significant 
    effect on the human environment. Therefore, neither an environmental 
    assessment nor an environmental impact statement is required.
    
    VII. Executive Order 12612: Federalism
    
        Executive Order 12612 requires Federal agencies to carefully 
    examine regulatory actions to determine if they would have a 
    significant effect on federalism. Using the criteria and principles set 
    forth in the order, FDA has considered the impact of the interim rule 
    on the States, on their relationship with the Federal Government, and 
    on the distribution of power and responsibilities among the various 
    levels of Government. FDA concludes that this rule is consistent with 
    the principles set forth in Executive Order 12612.
        Executive Order 12612 states that agencies formulating and 
    implementing policies are to be guided by certain federalism 
    principles. Section 2 of Executive Order 12612 enumerates fundamental 
    federalism principles. Section 3 of Executive Order 12612 states that, 
    in addition to these fundamental principles, executive departments and 
    agencies shall adhere, to the extent permitted by law, to certain 
    listed criteria when formulating and implementing policies that have 
    federalism implications. Section 4 of Executive Order 12612 lists 
    special requirements for preemption.
        Section 4 of Executive Order 12612 states that an executive 
    department or agency foreseeing the possibility of a conflict between 
    State law and federally protected interests within its area of 
    regulatory responsibility is to consult with States in an effort to 
    avoid such conflict. Section 4 of Executive Order 12612 also states 
    that an executive department or agency proposing to act through 
    rulemaking to preempt State law is to provide all affected States 
    notice and opportunity for appropriate participation in the 
    proceedings. As required by the Executive Order in section 4(d) and 
    (e), States have, through this notice of proposed rulemaking, an 
    opportunity to raise the possibility of conflicts and to participate in 
    the proceedings. Consistent with Executive Order 12612, FDA requests 
    information and comments from interested parties, including but not 
    limited to State and local authorities, on these issues of federalism.
    
    VIII. Analysis of Impacts
    
        FDA has examined the impacts of the rule under Executive Order 
    12866 and the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601-612). Executive 
    Order 12866 directs agencies to assess all costs and benefits of 
    available regulatory alternatives and, when regulation is necessary, to 
    select regulatory approaches that maximize net benefits (including 
    potential economic, environmental, public health and safety, and other 
    advantages; distributive impacts; and equity). If a rule would have a 
    significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities, 
    the Regulatory Flexibility Act requires agencies to analyze regulatory 
    options that would minimize these impacts. Title II of the Unfunded 
    Mandates Reform Act (Public Law 104-4) (in section 202) requires that 
    agencies prepare an assessment of anticipated costs and benefits before 
    proposing any rule that may result in an expenditure in any 1 year by 
    State, local, and tribal governments, in the aggregate, or by the 
    private sector, of $100 million or more (adjusted annually for 
    inflation).
         The agency believes that the revised rule is consistent with the 
    regulatory philosophy and principles identified in the Executive Order 
    and in these two statutes. The agency has determined that this rule is 
    a ``significant regulatory action'' as defined in section 3(f)(4) of 
    Executive Order 12866 because it raises novel policy issues. To the 
    extent that any of the standards and criteria entail costs to the DOD, 
    these standards and obligations are already assumed by DOD; they are 
    enunciated here to stress their importance to safeguarding the health 
    and welfare of military personnel to minimize the need to use this 
    rule. With respect to the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 605(b)), 
    any economic cost of the rule would be incurred only by DOD, which is 
    not a small entity. Therefore, the agency certifies that the rule will 
    not have significant economic impact on a substantial number of small 
    entities. Under the Regulatory Flexibility Act, therefore, no further 
    analysis is required. Similarly, because the rule does not impose any 
    mandates on State, local, or tribal governments, or the private sector 
    that will result in a 1-year expenditure of $100 million or more,
    
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    FDA is not required to perform a cost-benefit analysis under the 
    Unfunded Mandates Reform Act.
    
    IX. Paperwork
    
        This interim final rule contains no collections of information 
    subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995.
    
    X. References
    
        The following references have been placed on display in the Dockets 
    Management Branch (address above) and may be seen by interested persons 
    between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m., Monday through Friday.
        1. Letter from the Lead Deputy Commissioner, FDA, to the Acting 
    Deputy Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs, July 22, 1997.
        2. Letter from the Army Surgeon General to the Lead Deputy 
    Commissioner, FDA, responding to the July 22, 1997, letter, October 
    23, 1997.
        3. Letter from the Lead Deputy Commissioner, FDA, to the Acting 
    Deputy Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs, December 22, 1997.
        4. Memorandum for record, minutes of the October 4, 1990, 
    ninety-third meeting of the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of 
    Infectious Diseases Human Use Committee, October 5, 1990.
    
     List of Subjects
    
     21 CFR Part 50
    
        Human research subjects, Prisoners, Reporting and recordkeeping 
    requirements, Safety.
    
     21 CFR Part 312
    
         Drugs, Exports, Imports, Investigations, Labeling, Medical 
    research, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Safety.
        Therefore, under the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act and under 
    authority delegated to the Commissioner of Food and Drugs, 21 CFR parts 
    50 and 312 are amended as follows:
    
    PART 50--PROTECTION OF HUMAN SUBJECTS
    
        1. The authority citation for 21 CFR part 50 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 21 U.S.C. 321, 346, 346a, 348, 352, 353, 355, 360, 
    360c-360f, 360h-360j, 371, 379e, 381; 42 U.S.C. 216, 241, 262, 263b-
    263n.
    
        2. Section 50.23 is amended by revising paragraph (d) to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 50.23   Exception from general requirements.
    
    * * * * *
         (d)(1) Under 10 U.S.C. 1107(f) the President may waive the prior 
    consent requirement for the administration of an investigational new 
    drug to a member of the armed forces in connection with the member's 
    participation in a particular military operation. The statute specifies 
    that only the President may waive informed consent in this connection 
    and the President may grant such a waiver only if the President 
    determines in writing that obtaining consent: Is not feasible; is 
    contrary to the best interests of the military member; or is not in the 
    interests of national security. The statute further provides that in 
    making a determination to waive prior informed consent on the ground 
    that it is not feasible or the ground that it is contrary to the best 
    interests of the military members involved, the President shall apply 
    the standards and criteria that are set forth in the relevant FDA 
    regulations for a waiver of the prior informed consent requirements of 
    section 505(i)(4) of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (21 
    U.S.C. 355(i)(4)). Before such a determination may be made that 
    obtaining informed consent from military personnel prior to the use of 
    an investigational drug (including an antibiotic or biological product) 
    in a specific protocol under an investigational new drug application 
    (IND) sponsored by the Department of Defense (DOD) and limited to 
    specific military personnel involved in a particular military operation 
    is not feasible or is contrary to the best interests of the military 
    members involved the Secretary of Defense must first request such a 
    determination from the President, and certify and document to the 
    President that the following standards and criteria contained in 
    paragraphs (d)(1) through (d)(4) of this section have been met.
         (i) The extent and strength of evidence of the safety and 
    effectiveness of the investigational new drug in relation to the 
    medical risk that could be encountered during the military operation 
    supports the drug's administration under an IND.
         (ii) The military operation presents a substantial risk that 
    military personnel may be subject to a chemical, biological, nuclear, 
    or other exposure likely to produce death or serious or life-
    threatening injury or illness.
         (iii) There is no available satisfactory alternative therapeutic 
    or preventive treatment in relation to the intended use of the 
    investigational new drug.
         (iv) Conditioning use of the investigational new drug on the 
    voluntary participation of each member could significantly risk the 
    safety and health of any individual member who would decline its use, 
    the safety of other military personnel, and the accomplishment of the 
    military mission.
         (v) A duly constituted institutional review board (IRB) 
    established and operated in accordance with the requirements of 
    paragraphs (d)(2) and (d)(3) of this section, responsible for review of 
    the study, has reviewed and approved the investigational new drug 
    protocol and the administration of the investigational new drug without 
    informed consent. DOD's request is to include the documentation 
    required by Sec. 56.115(a)(2) of this chapter.
         (vi) DOD has explained:
         (A) The context in which the investigational drug will be 
    administered, e.g., the setting or whether it will be self-administered 
    or it will be administered by a health professional;
         (B) The nature of the disease or condition for which the 
    preventive or therapeutic treatment is intended; and
         (C) To the extent there are existing data or information 
    available, information on conditions that could alter the effects of 
    the investigational drug.
         (vii) DOD's recordkeeping system is capable of tracking and will 
    be used to track the proposed treatment from supplier to the individual 
    recipient.
         (viii) Each member involved in the military operation will be 
    given, prior to the administration of the investigational new drug, a 
    specific written information sheet (including information required by 
    10 U.S.C. 1107(d)) concerning the investigational new drug, the risks 
    and benefits of its use, potential side effects, and other pertinent 
    information about the appropriate use of the product.
         (ix) Medical records of members involved in the military operation 
    will accurately document the receipt by members of the notification 
    required by paragraph (d)(1)(viii) of this section.
         (x) Medical records of members involved in the military operation 
    will accurately document the receipt by members of any investigational 
    new drugs in accordance with FDA regulations including part 312 of this 
    chapter.
         (xi) DOD will provide adequate followup to assess whether there 
    are beneficial or adverse health consequences that result from the use 
    of the investigational product.
         (xii) DOD is pursuing drug development, including a time line, and 
    marketing approval with due diligence.
         (xiii) FDA has concluded that the investigational new drug 
    protocol may proceed subject to a decision by the President on the 
    informed consent waiver request.
         (xiv) DOD will provide training to the appropriate medical 
    personnel and potential recipients on the specific
    
    [[Page 54189]]
    
    investigational new drug to be administered prior to its use.
         (xv) DOD has stated and justified the time period for which the 
    waiver is needed, not to exceed one year, unless separately renewed 
    under these standards and criteria.
         (xvi) DOD shall have a continuing obligation to report to the FDA 
    and to the President any changed circumstances relating to these 
    standards and criteria (including the time period referred to in 
    paragraph (d)(1)(xv) of this section) or that otherwise might affect 
    the determination to use an investigational new drug without informed 
    consent.
         (xvii) DOD is to provide public notice as soon as practicable and 
    consistent with classification requirements through notice in the 
    Federal Register describing each waiver of informed consent 
    determination, a summary of the most updated scientific information on 
    the products used, and other pertinent information.
         (xviii) Use of the investigational drug without informed consent 
    otherwise conforms with applicable law.
         (2) The duly constituted institutional review board, described in 
    paragraph (d)(1)(v) of this section, must include at least 3 
    nonaffiliated members who shall not be employees or officers of the 
    Federal Government (other than for purposes of membership on the IRB) 
    and shall be required to obtain any necessary security clearances. This 
    IRB shall review the proposed IND protocol at a convened meeting at 
    which a majority of the members are present including at least one 
    member whose primary concerns are in nonscientific areas and, if 
    feasible, including a majority of the nonaffiliated members. The 
    information required by Sec. 56.115(a)(2) of this chapter is to be 
    provided to the Secretary of Defense for further review.
         (3) The duly constituted institutional review board, described in 
    paragraph (d)(1)(v) of this section, must review and approve:
         (i) The required information sheet;
         (ii) The adequacy of the plan to disseminate information, 
    including distribution of the information sheet to potential 
    recipients, on the investigational product (e.g., in forms other than 
    written);
         (iii) The adequacy of the information and plans for its 
    dissemination to health care providers, including potential side 
    effects, contraindications, potential interactions, and other pertinent 
    considerations; and
         (iv) An informed consent form as required by part 50 of this 
    chapter, in those circumstances in which DOD determines that informed 
    consent may be obtained from some or all personnel involved.
         (4) DOD is to submit to FDA summaries of institutional review 
    board meetings at which the proposed protocol has been reviewed.
         (5) Nothing in these criteria or standards is intended to preempt 
    or limit FDA's and DOD's authority or obligations under applicable 
    statutes and regulations.
    
    PART 312--INVESTIGATIONAL NEW DRUG APPLICATION
    
        3. The authority citation for 21 CFR part 312 is revised to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 21 U.S.C. 321, 331, 351, 352, 353, 355, 371; 42 
    U.S.C. 262.
    
        4. Section 312.42 is amended by adding paragraph (b)(6) to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 312.42   Clinical holds and requests for modification.
    
    * * * * *
         (b) * * *
         (6) Clinical hold of any investigation involving an exception from 
    informed consent under Sec. 50.23(d) of this chapter. FDA may place a 
    proposed or ongoing investigation involving an exception from informed 
    consent under Sec. 50.23(d) of this chapter on clinical hold if it is 
    determined that:
         (i) Any of the conditions in paragraphs (b)(1) or (b)(2) of this 
    section apply; or
         (ii) A determination by the President to waive the prior consent 
    requirement for the administration of an investigational new drug has 
    not been made.
    * * * * *
    
        Dated: May 25, 1999.
    Jane E. Henney,
    Commissioner of Food and Drugs.
    Donna E. Shalala,
    Secretary of Health and Human Services.
    [FR Doc. 99-25376 Filed 10-4-99; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4160-01-F
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
10/5/1999
Published:
10/05/1999
Department:
Food and Drug Administration
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Interim final rule; opportunity for public comment.
Document Number:
99-25376
Dates:
Effective October 5, 1999. Submit written comments by December 20, 1999.
Pages:
54180-54189 (10 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Docket No. 90N-0302
RINs:
0910-AA89: Determination That Informed Consent Is Infeasible or Is Contrary to the Best Interest of Recipients
RIN Links:
https://www.federalregister.gov/regulations/0910-AA89/determination-that-informed-consent-is-infeasible-or-is-contrary-to-the-best-interest-of-recipients
PDF File:
99-25376.pdf
CFR: (2)
21 CFR 50.23
21 CFR 312.42