eCFR — Code of Federal Regulations ELECTRONIC CODE OF FEDERAL REGULATIONS e-CFR data is current as of May 21, 2020 Title 21 → Chapter I → Subchapter A → Part 50 Title 21: Food and Drugs PART...

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Review the DHHS and FDA regulations in the attached materials, and analyze the regulations you regard as material to assessing research involving biobanking, biospecimens, and genetic and genomic research.




eCFR — Code of Federal Regulations ELECTRONIC CODE OF FEDERAL REGULATIONS e-CFR data is current as of May 21, 2020 Title 21 → Chapter I → Subchapter A → Part 50 Title 21: Food and Drugs PART 50—PROTECTION OF HUMAN SUBJECTS Contents Subpart A—General Provisions §50.1 Scope. §50.3 Definitions. Subpart B—Informed Consent of Human Subjects §50.20 General requirements for informed consent. §50.23 Exception from general requirements. §50.24 Exception from informed consent requirements for emergency research. §50.25 Elements of informed consent. §50.27 Documentation of informed consent. Subpart C [Reserved] Subpart D—Additional Safeguards for Children in Clinical Investigations §50.50 IRB duties. §50.51 Clinical investigations not involving greater than minimal risk. §50.52 Clinical investigations involving greater than minimal risk but presenting the prospect of direct benefit to individual subjects. §50.53 Clinical investigations involving greater than minimal risk and no prospect of direct benefit to individual subjects, but likely to yield generalizable knowledge about the subjects' disorder or condition. §50.54 Clinical investigations not otherwise approvable that present an opportunity to understand, prevent, or alleviate a serious problem affecting the health or welfare of children. §50.55 Requirements for permission by parents or guardians and for assent by children. §50.56 Wards. AUTHORITY: 21 U.S.C 321, 343, 346, 346a, 348, 350a, 350b, 352, 353, 355, 360, 360c-360f, 360h-360j, 371, 379e, 381; 42 U.S.C. 216, 241, 262, 263b-263n. SOURCE: 45 FR 36390, May 30, 1980, unless otherwise noted. return arrow Back to Top Subpart A—General Provisions return arrow Back to Top §50.1 Scope. (a) This part applies to all clinical investigations regulated by the Food and Drug Administration under sections 505(i) and 520(g) of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, as well as clinical investigations that support applications for research or marketing permits for products regulated by the Food and Drug Administration, including foods, including dietary supplements, that bear a nutrient content claim or a health claim, infant formulas, food and color additives, drugs for human use, medical devices for human use, biological products for human use, and electronic products. Additional specific obligations and commitments of, and standards of conduct for, persons who sponsor or monitor clinical investigations involving particular test articles may also be found in other parts (e.g., parts 312 and 812). Compliance with these parts is intended to protect the rights and safety of subjects involved in investigations filed with the Food and Drug Administration pursuant to sections 403, 406, 409, 412, 413, 502, 503, 505, 510, 513-516, 518-520, 721, and 801 of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act and sections 351 and 354-360F of the Public Health Service Act. (b) References in this part to regulatory sections of the Code of Federal Regulations are to chapter I of title 21, unless otherwise noted. eCFR — Code of Federal Regulations https://gov.ecfr.io/cgi-bin/text-idx?SID=e06a655844034e62da6... 1 of 12 5/26/20, 1:27 PM [45 FR 36390, May 30, 1980; 46 FR 8979, Jan. 27, 1981, as amended at 63 FR 26697, May 13, 1998; 64 FR 399, Jan. 5, 1999; 66 FR 20597, Apr. 24, 2001] return arrow Back to Top §50.3 Definitions. As used in this part: (a) Act means the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, as amended (secs. 201-902, 52 Stat. 1040 et seq. as amended (21 U.S.C. 321-392)). (b) Application for research or marketing permit includes: (1) A color additive petition, described in part 71. (2) A food additive petition, described in parts 171 and 571. (3) Data and information about a substance submitted as part of the procedures for establishing that the substance is generally recognized as safe for use that results or may reasonably be expected to result, directly or indirectly, in its becoming a component or otherwise affecting the characteristics of any food, described in §§170.30 and 570.30. (4) Data and information about a food additive submitted as part of the procedures for food additives permitted to be used on an interim basis pending additional study, described in §180.1. (5) Data and information about a substance submitted as part of the procedures for establishing a tolerance for unavoidable contaminants in food and food-packaging materials, described in section 406 of the act. (6) An investigational new drug application, described in part 312 of this chapter. (7) A new drug application, described in part 314. (8) Data and information about the bioavailability or bioequivalence of drugs for human use submitted as part of the procedures for issuing, amending, or repealing a bioequivalence requirement, described in part 320. (9) Data and information about an over-the-counter drug for human use submitted as part of the procedures for classifying these drugs as generally recognized as safe and effective and not misbranded, described in part 330. (10) Data and information about a prescription drug for human use submitted as part of the procedures for classifying these drugs as generally recognized as safe and effective and not misbranded, described in this chapter. (11) [Reserved] (12) An application for a biologics license, described in part 601 of this chapter. (13) Data and information about a biological product submitted as part of the procedures for determining that licensed biological products are safe and effective and not misbranded, described in part 601. (14) Data and information about an in vitro diagnostic product submitted as part of the procedures for establishing, amending, or repealing a standard for these products, described in part 809. (15) An Application for an Investigational Device Exemption, described in part 812. (16) Data and information about a medical device submitted as part of the procedures for classifying these devices, described in section 513. (17) Data and information about a medical device submitted as part of the procedures for establishing, amending, or repealing a standard for these devices, described in section 514. (18) An application for premarket approval of a medical device, described in section 515. (19) A product development protocol for a medical device, described in section 515. (20) Data and information about an electronic product submitted as part of the procedures for establishing, amending, or repealing a standard for these products, described in section 358 of the Public Health Service Act. (21) Data and information about an electronic product submitted as part of the procedures for obtaining a variance from any electronic product performance standard, as described in §1010.4. (22) Data and information about an electronic product submitted as part of the procedures for granting, amending, or eCFR — Code of Federal Regulations https://gov.ecfr.io/cgi-bin/text-idx?SID=e06a655844034e62da6... 2 of 12 5/26/20, 1:27 PM extending an exemption from a radiation safety performance standard, as described in §1010.5. (23) Data and information about a clinical study of an infant formula when submitted as part of an infant formula notification under section 412(c) of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act. (24) Data and information submitted in a petition for a nutrient content claim, described in §101.69 of this chapter, or for a health claim, described in §101.70 of this chapter. (25) Data and information from investigations involving children submitted in a new dietary ingredient notification, described in §190.6 of this chapter. (c) Clinical investigation means any experiment that involves a test article and one or more human subjects and that either is subject to requirements for prior submission to the Food and Drug Administration under section 505(i) or 520(g) of the act, or is not subject to requirements for prior submission to the Food and Drug Administration under these sections of the act, but the results of which are intended to be submitted later to, or held for inspection by, the Food and Drug Administration as part of an application for a research or marketing permit. The term does not include experiments that are subject to the provisions of part 58 of this chapter, regarding nonclinical laboratory studies. (d) Investigator means an individual who actually conducts a clinical investigation, i.e., under whose immediate direction the test article is administered or dispensed to, or used involving, a subject, or, in the event of an investigation conducted by a team of individuals, is the responsible leader of that team. (e) Sponsor means a person who initiates a clinical investigation, but who does not actually conduct the investigation, i.e., the test article is administered or dispensed to or used involving, a subject under the immediate direction of another individual. A person other than an individual (e.g., corporation or agency) that uses one or more of its own employees to conduct a clinical investigation it has initiated is considered to be a sponsor (not a sponsor-investigator), and the employees are considered to be investigators. (f) Sponsor-investigator means an individual who both initiates and actually conducts, alone or with others, a clinical investigation, i.e., under whose immediate direction the test article is administered or dispensed to, or used involving, a subject. The term does not include any person other than an individual, e.g., corporation or agency. (g) Human subject means an individual who is or becomes a participant in research, either as a recipient of the test article or as a control. A subject may be either a healthy human or a patient. (h) Institution means any public or private entity or agency (including Federal, State, and other agencies). The word facility as used in section 520(g) of the act is deemed to be synonymous with the term institution for purposes of this part. (i) Institutional review board (IRB) means any board, committee, or other group formally designated by an institution to review biomedical research involving humans as subjects, to approve the initiation of and conduct periodic review of such research. The term has the same meaning as the phrase institutional review committee as used in section 520(g) of the act. (j) Test article means any drug (including a biological product for human use), medical device for human use, human food additive, color additive, electronic product, or any other article subject to regulation under the act or under sections 351 and 354-360F of the Public Health Service Act (42 U.S.C. 262 and 263b-263n). (k) Minimal risk means that the probability and magnitude of harm or discomfort anticipated in the research are not greater in and of themselves than those ordinarily encountered in daily life or during the performance of routine physical or psychological examinations or tests. (l) Legally authorized representative means an
Answered Same DayMar 19, 2022

Answer To: eCFR — Code of Federal Regulations ELECTRONIC CODE OF FEDERAL REGULATIONS e-CFR data is current as...

Vidya answered on Mar 20 2022
96 Votes
THE REGULATIONS THAT REGARD AS MATERIAL TO ASSESSING RESEARCH INVOLVING BIOBANKING, BIOSPECIMENS, AND GENETIC AND GENOMIC RESEARCH
Introduction
In United States, biorepositories might have to agree with the Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS), Food and Drug Administration (FDA), and HIPAA guidelines, as well as moral necessities (Gliklich R,
et al., 2005).
To start with, comparative with protection and DHHS, HIPAA guidelines characterize research, at 45 CFR 46.102(d), considered as a deliberate examination, which includes research advancement, assessment and testing also, intended for creating or adding to the information that is generalizable. The HHS guidelines characterize the human subjects, at 45 CFR 46.102(f), as a living person about whom an agent directing examination gets information through intercession or collaboration with the individual, or recognizable private data. Private data should be exclusively recognizable (i.e., character of the subject may promptly be discovered by the agent or related to the data) for getting the data to be viewed as examination including human subjects (Genetic Alliance Registry and Biobank).
The OHRP or Office for Human Research Protections by and large believes private data or specimens needs to be separately recognizable, as characterized at 45 CFR 46.102(f), when they can be connected to explicit people by investigator(s) in either straightforwardly or in a roundabout way through coding frameworks. Then again, OHRP considers private data or specimens not to be independently recognizable when they can't be connected to explicit people by investigator(s) either straightforwardly or in a roundabout way through coding frameworks. For instance, OHRP doesn't consider research including just private data coded or the specimens to include human subjects, as characterized under 45 CFR 46.102(f), on the off chance that the private data or the specimens were not gathered explicitly for presently proposed research work/project by a cooperation or intercession with living people; and the investigator(s) can't promptly learn the personality of the individual(s) to whom the coded private data or examples relate. This could be accomplished by the examiners and holder of critical going into an understanding restricting arrival of the way in to the agents under such conditions, until all the people are expired (Genetic Alliance Registry and Biobank).
Under the HIPAA of 1996, the Privacy Rule is a Federal guideline (45 CFR section 160 and subparts An and E of section 164). Privacy Rule grants the covered substances under this Rule to verify that all the wellbeing data is de-recognized regardless of whether the wellbeing data has been doled out, and holds, a code or different method for record ID, given that the code isn't gotten from or connected with the data about the individual; the code couldn't be meant distinguish the individual; and covered elements under Privacy Rule doesn't utilize or reveal the code for different purposes or unveil the instrument for re-ID (Gliklich R, et al., 2005).
The confidentiality of the patient to be maintained is of specific worry for the biorepositories, particularly as nowadays more researches focus to incorporate DNA and RNA sequencing. Despite the fact that such information would be de-distinguished by guidelines, re-ID of examination members might be conceivable and has been accounted for in the logical writing (User's Guide - Chapter 16). Few of the exploration projects find extra ways to illuminate members when the...
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