All incidents/events are reported to the IRB. Incidents/events that fall between Severe Unexpected (Possible – Definite relatedness) through Unanticipated Problems must be reported to the IRB immediately.
Expected vs Unexpected:
Expected: Disclosed in Consent Form or part of an underlying disease
Unexpected: More serious than expected or not disclosed in Consent Form
Types of Incident/Adverse Event:
1. Mild Expected
- Transient of minimal symptoms
- No change in activity level
- No therapy, or only symptomatic therapy, required
2. Mild Unexpected
- Transient of minimal symptoms
- No change in activity level
- No therapy, or only symptomatic therapy, required
3. Moderate Expected
- Symptomatic
- Moderate change in activity level
- Specific therapy required
4. Moderate Unexpected
- Symptomatic
- Moderate change in activity level
- Specific therapy required
5. Severe Expected
- Incapacitating = >24 hours of any of the following:
- Loss of work
- Bed rest
- Decreased social activities
6. Severe Unexpected
- Incapacitating = >24 hours of any of the following:
- Loss of work
- Bed rest
- Decreased social activities
7. Serious Expected
- Life threatening or results in death
- Requires in-patient hospitalization
- Results in persistent or significant disability
- Congenital anomaly or birth defect
8. Serious Unexpected
- Life threatening or results in death
- Requires in-patient hospitalization
- Results in persistent or significant disability
- Congenital anomaly or birth defect
9. Unanticipated Problems
- Unintentional change to IRB-approved protocol that involves risk or has potential to recur
- Deviation from the protocol taken without prior IRB review to eliminate apparent immediate hazard
- Publication in the literature, safety monitoring report including Data and Safety Monitoring Reports, interim result or other finding that indicates an unexpected change to the risk/benefit ratio of the research
- Breach of confidentiality
- Any complaint of a subject that indicates an unanticipated risk or that cannot be resolved by the research staff