library


 NAVREF Response to the April One 
OGC Advisory

April 6, 2005

The National Association of Veterans’ Research and Education Foundations (NAVREF) is very concerned that OGC is unaware of the full implications of the April 1 OGC advisory regarding “Intellectual Property and Non-Profit Research Corps.”  Our concerns and recommendations are detailed below. 

NAVREF requests immediate withdrawal of the April 1 OGC advisory regarding “Intellectual Property and Non-Profit Research Corps” pending development of reasonable accommodations in clinical research agreements (CRAs) and implementation of viable alternatives to CRAs.  Our reasons for this request are as follows:

1.  The advisory leaves NPCs with no means to negotiate research agreements with sponsors for the foreseeable future.  If unable to initiate new industry sponsored studies for even just a short time, NPCs will have to sharply curtail or even eliminate entirely the broad support they provide for facility research programs and VA principal investigators.  Additionally, veterans will lose access to state-of-the-art treatments offered to participants in NPC-administered clinical studies and the additional care provided to study participants.  This is particularly tragic for veterans with conditions for which there is only an experimental treatment.

Absent the requested withdrawal of the advisory, NPCs will soon have to 1) begin terminating research personnel, including clinicians hired to support research programs, compliance officers, animal facility workers, research administrative staff, and research pharmacists, etc.; 2) terminate or go into default on contractual commitments for equipment such as laboratory and office machines, research support services and facility renovations, etc.; and 3) stop paying for travel, education and supplies as well as a myriad of other support they provide for VA investigators and staff.  One NPC currently underwrites the entire cost of the facility IRB out of clinical study income and another is poised to start building a new research facility under a revocable license.  Both are in very real jeopardy as a result of the advisory as is significant NPC support for mandatory compliance activities.

2.  “Conditional gift agreements” are outdated and are not an acceptable alternative to clinical research agreements.  The June 1 advisory recommendation to use "conditional gift agreements" appears to be a reference to the obsolete 1994 version of the NPC manual chapter which contained a sample "gift agreement."  However, that mechanism was quickly found to be inadequate for NPC use and unacceptable to sponsors.  In any case, the sample referenced the need for a separate agreement which was the clinical research agreements already commonly in use at that time.  The gift agreement concept was eliminated when the handbook was updated by OGC in 2001 and it is not specified in the current handbook.

3.  At this time, CRADAs are not a viable replacement for clinical research agreements. As pointed out in the advisory itself, CRADAs cannot be accommodated under the CTAA arrangement in place at most VA facilities. During the very recent March 29, 2005, VA NPC Oversight Board meeting involving the General Counsel and the Acting Under Secretary for Health, it was noted that VA has not yet initiated a process or communications necessary to begin amending the CTAAs and that university cooperation may not be universal.  As a result, it will undoubtedly be many months before CRADAs are even a possibility.

Further, the office responsible for reviewing CRADAs apparently was not a part of the decision making process involved in the advisory and appears to be unprepared to respond to the projected volume resulting from the advice to pursue them - NPCs currently initiate administration of an estimated 150 clinical studies per month - and the complexity of the submissions.  We understand that few VA attorneys and VA research offices have experience with CRADAs and of course, nor do NPC personnel.  Moreover, VA’s model CRADA is not conducive to industry sponsored Phase III studies.

4.  We are dismayed that OGC takes the position that NPC clinical research agreements appear to bind VA, much less that they do so inappropriately.  Dr. Perlin’s June 24, 2004, memo to NPC executive directors even encourages NPCs to use the sample clauses offered on the NAVREF web site.  Over the past 15 years, OGC has been offered numerous opportunities to review and provide input on sample clinical research agreement clauses developed in cooperation with VA attorneys.  The most recent formal opportunity was in 2003, prior to a two-day workshop on appropriate negotiation of terms that was conducted primarily by VA attorneys.  Additionally, the samples are updated whenever needed to reflect changes in the clinical research regulatory environment and VA policies.

NPC clinical research agreements largely reiterate positions supported by VA itself.  That is, CRA clauses are largely informational to ensure that sponsors understand VA positions and to prevent misperceptions on the part of sponsors.

Also, CRAs are consistent with commitments that are components of the normal R&D Committee review and approval process, including service chief approval of commitments of VA personnel time and resources.  By statute, all NPC-administered studies must have R&D Committee approval.  If the R&D Committee does not approve the study and commitment of VA resources, the NPC cannot execute the agreement and the study will not be conducted at that VAMC.

VA is responsible for the conduct of the research, and VA policies - not CRA assurances - govern study protocols, informed consent, publication rights, VA disclosures to third parties, privacy and confidentiality.  CRA assurances regarding these matters, if any, are intended to be consistent with VA policies and desires.  Further, VA is not bound by terms or assurances in CRAs.  Neither VA nor PIs are parties to these agreements.  Should there be a failure to abide by the agreement terms, the sponsor will look to the NPC, not VA, for corrective action. 

If OGC had brought its concerns to NAVREF and its own OGC Corporations Panel, we are confident that revisions in sample clauses could have been made to address OGC’s concerns and still retain CRAs as an appropriate means to establish relationships with study sponsors.  NAVREF has been entirely open about the recommendations it makes to its members and engages VA personnel in their development whenever possible.  It is disturbing that OGC did not previously voice its concerns to NAVREF or as we understand, even to the VA attorneys specifically tasked to provide expert advice and assistance.  Nor does OGC appear to have made an effort to engage stakeholders or panel members, those with an understanding of these complex relationships and the value such studies bring to veterans and VA research, in developing reasonable accommodations pending amendment of the CTAAs and implementation of workable CRADA processes.

In conclusion, we feel release of the advisory was premature in the absence of appropriate and timely alternatives to CRAs and that the advisory is seriously detrimental to the VA research program.  Again, we strongly recommend an immediate retraction of the advisory and reinstatement of VA attorney assistance in negotiating appropriate CRA terms.  NAVREF is more than willing to cooperate in development of revised sample clauses toward this end.

Thank you for considering our views.  Additionally, NAVREF board members and I are available to discuss these matters at any time. 

 

 

Home | About NAVREF | Professional Development | Library | Advocacy | Legal Resources | For Clinical Research Sponsors

last updated: 01/04/10

 

©2010, National Association of Veterans' Research and Education Foundation.  All rights reserved.