BACKGROUND: Individual informed consent from all participants is required for most randomized clinical trials (RCTs). However, some exceptions-for example, emergency research-are widely accepted. METHODS: The literature on various approaches to randomization without consent (RWOC) has never been systematically reviewed. Our goal was to provide a survey and narrative synthesis of published proposals for RWOC. We focused on proposals to randomize at least some participants in a study without first obtaining consent to randomization. This definition included studies that omitted informed consent entirely, omitted informed consent for selected patients (e.g., the control group), obtained informed consent to research but not to randomization, or only obtained informed consent to randomization after random assignment had already occurred. It omitted oral and staged consent processes that still obtain consent to randomization from all participants before randomization occurs. RESULTS: We identified ten different proposals for RWOC: two variants of cluster randomization, two variants of the Zelen design, consent to postponed information, two-stage randomized consent, cohort multiple RCT, emergency research, prompted optional randomization trials, and low-risk pragmatic RCTs without consent. CONCLUSION: Of all designs discussed here, only cluster randomized designs and emergency research are routinely used, with the justification that informed consent is infeasible in those settings. Other designs have raised concerns that they do not appropriately respect patient autonomy. Recent proposals have emphasized the importance for RWOC of demonstrating such respect through systematic patient engagement, transparency, and accountability, potentially in the context of learning health care systems.
INTRODUCTIONRandomized controlled trials (RCTs) are the gold standard for clinical research. 1 Informed consent, including disclosure of randomization, is an ethical requirement for most RCTs. 2 This principle, intended to protect participants' autonomy and dignity, is firmly embedded in guidelines and regulations. [3][4][5][6] But, critics have argued that modern consent processes often fail to convey information well, can confuse or distress participants, and may even hinder legitimate research endeavors to the point where patients are paradoxically harmed by the lack of research on the safety and effectiveness of commonly used therapies. 7,8 These arguments have led to calls to relax or eliminate informed consent requirements in certain circumstances. An example is the exception for emergency medicine studies in which it is deemed impossible to obtain informed consent and still test an emergent intervention. 9 More broadly, US Federal regulations allow a waiver of informed consent requirements for clinical research given that four requirements are met: (1) Bthe research involves no more than minimal risk to the subjects,^(2) Bthe waiver or alteration will not adversely affect the rights and welfare of the subjects,^(3) Bthe researc...