Criteria for Expedited Review
- 1. Clinical studies of drugs and medical devices only when condition
(a) or (b) is met.
a) Research on drugs for which an investigational new drug application
(21 CFR Part 312) is not required. (Note: Research on marketed
drugs that significantly increases the risks or decreases the
acceptability of the risks associated with the use of the product
is not eligible for expedited review.)
b) Research on medical devices for which (i) an investigational
device exemption application (21 CFR Part 812) is not required;
or (ii) the medical device is cleared/approved for marketing and
the medical device is being used in accordance with its cleared/approved
labeling.
- 2. Collection of blood samples by finger stick, heel stick,
ear stick, or venipuncture as follows:
a) From healthy, nonpregnant adults who weigh at least 110 pounds.
For these subjects, the amounts drawn may not exceed 550 ml in
an 8 week period and collection may not occur more frequently
than 2 times per week; or
b) from other adults and children, considering the age, weight,
and health of the subjects, the collection procedure, the amount
of blood to be collected, the frequency with which it will be
collected. For these subjects, the amount drawn may not exceed
the lesser of 50 ml or 3 ml per kg in an 8 week period and collection
may not occur more frequently than 2 times per week.
- 3. Prospective collection of biological specimens for research
purposes by noninvasive means.
Examples: (a) hair and nail clippings in a nondisfiguring
manner; (b)deciduous teeth at time of exfoliation or if routine
patient care indicates a need for extraction; (c) permanent teeth
if routine patient care indicates a need for extraction; (d) excreta
and external secretions (including sweat); (e) uncannulated saliva
collected either in an unstimulated fashion or stimulated by chewing
gumbase or wax or by applying a dilute citric solution to the
tongue; (f) placenta removed at delivery; (g) amniotic fluid obtained
at the time of rupture of the membrane prior to or during labor;
(h) supra- and subgingival dental plaque and calculus, provided
the collection procedure is not more invasive than routine prophylatic
scaling of the teeth and the process is accomplished in accordance
with accepted prophylactic techniques; (i) mucosal and skin cells
collected by buccal scraping or swab, skin swab, or mouth washings;
(j) sputum collected after saline mist nebulization.
- 4. Collection of data through noninvasive procedures (not involving
general anesthesia or sedation) routinely employed in clinical
practice, excluding procedures involving x-rays or microwaves.
Where medical devices are employed, they must be cleared/approved
for marketing. (Studies intended to evaluate the safety and effectiveness
of the medical device are not generally eligible for expedited
review, including studies of cleared medical devices for new indications.)
Examples: (a) physical sensors that are applied either
to the surface of the body or at a distance and do not involve
input of significant amounts of energy into the subject or an
invasion of the subject's privacy; (b) weighing or testing sensory
acuity; (c) magnetic resonance imaging; (d) electrocardiography,
electroencephalography, thermography, detection of naturally occurring
radioactivity, electroretinography, ultrasound, diagnostic infrared
imaging, doppler blood flow, and echocardiography; (e) moderate
exercise, muscular strength testing, body composition assessment,
and flexibility testing where appropriate given the age, weight,
and health of the individual.
- 5. Research involving materials (data, documents, records, or
specimens) that have been collected or will be collected solely
for nonresearch purposes (such as medical treatment or diagnosis).
- 6. Collection of data from voice, video, digital, or image recordings
made for research purposes.
- 7. Research on individual or group characteristics or behavior
(including, but not limited to, research on perception, cognition,
motivation, identity, language, communication, cultural beliefs
or practices, and social behavior) or research employing survey,
interview, oral history, focus group, program evaluation, human
factors evaluation, or quality assurance methodologies.
- 8. Continuing review of research previously approved by the
convened IRB as follows:
a) Where (i) the research is permanently closed to the enrollment
of new subjects; (ii) all subjects have completed all research-related
interventions; and (iii) the research remains active only for
long-term follow-up of subjects; or
b) Where no subjects have been enrolled and no additional risks
have been identified; or
c) Where the remaining research activities are limited to data
analysis.
- 9. Continuing review of research, not conducted under an investigational
new drug application or investigational device exemption where
categories two (2) through eight (8) do not apply but the IRB
has determined and documented at a convened meeting that the research
involves no greater than minimal risk and no additional risks
have been identified.
NOTE: These categories represent minimal requirements of
review by 45 CFR 46. The OU-NC Institutional Review Board reserves
the right to require a more stringent review of any study as deemed
appropriate.
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