What
happens if a child reaches the legal age of consent while enrolled in a study?
The Office for Human Research Protections
(OHRP) notes that informed consent
should be viewed as an ongoing process throughout the
duration of a research project. When a child who was enrolled in research with
parental or guardian permission subsequently reaches the legal age of consent
to the procedures involved in ongoing research, the subject’s participation in
the research is no longer regulated by the requirements of 45 CFR
part 46.408 regarding parental or guardian permission and
subject assent.
Unless the Institutional Review Board (IRB) determines that the
requirements for obtaining informed consent can be waived, the investigators
should seek and obtain the legally effective informed consent, as described
in 45 CFR
46.116, for the now-adult subject for any ongoing interactions or
interventions with the subjects. This is because the prior parental permission
and child assent are not equivalent to legally effective informed consent for
the now-adult subject. However, the IRB could approve a waiver of informed
consent under 45 CFR 46.116(d), if the IRB finds and documents that the
required conditions are met.
Similarly, if the research does not involve any ongoing interactions or
interventions with the subjects, but continues to meet the regulatory
definition of “human subjects research” (for example, it involves the continued
analysis of specimens or data for which the subject’s identity is readily
identifiable to the investigator(s)), then it would be necessary for the
investigator(s) to seek and obtain the legally effective informed consent of
the now-adult subjects. The IRB may consider, if appropriate, a waiver
under 45 CFR 46.116(d) of the requirements for obtaining informed consent in
order for the subjects to continue their participation in the research.
Jimmie Valentine,
Ph.D.
November 22, 2005