Center for Medical Ethics and Health Policy Staff Publications

Publication Date

1-1-2022

Journal

Brain Stimulation

DOI

10.1016/j.brs.2022.07.051

PMID

35926784

PMCID

PMC9588741

PubMedCentral® Posted Date

10-24-2022

PubMedCentral® Full Text Version

Author MSS

Published Open-Access

yes

Keywords

Neuroethics, Neurotechnology, Ethics, Post-trial, Deep brain stimulation, Continued access, Neuroethics, Neurotechnology, Post-trial

Abstract

Background: Clinical trial participants who benefit from experimental neural devices for the treatment of debilitating and otherwise treatment-resistant conditions are generally not ensured continued access to effective therapy or maintenance of devices at the conclusion of trials.

Objective/hypothesis: Post-trial obligations have been extensively examined in the context of drug trials, but there has been little empirical examination of stakeholder perspectives regarding these obligations in the rapidly growing field of neural device research.

Methods: This study examined the perspectives of 44 stakeholders (i.e., 23 researchers and 21 patient-participants) involved in implantable neural device trials.

Results: Researchers were concerned about current post-trial management, identified barriers like cost, and suggested ways to improve the system. Many patient-participants were unaware of whether they would have post-trial access, but most thought they should keep devices if beneficial, and agreed with researchers that more should be done to help them keep and maintain these neural devices.

Conclusion: To our knowledge, this is the first in-depth examination of researcher perspectives regarding continued access to experimental neural devices and only the second such examination of patient-participant perspectives. These data can help inform future ethical and policy decisions about post-trial access to implantable neurotechnology.

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