NC Medical Board
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5.1.5: Licensee Use of Innovative or New Treatment

Adopted Jan 2020  | Amended May 2024

The Board recognizes that progress in medical science, advances in patient care, and improved outcomes require exploration of innovative treatment and new technology. Likewise, new and innovative treatments are often requested by patients. While the Board supports licensee use of scientifically valid research and innovation, it is the Board’s position that licensees must guard against compromising appropriate care by exaggerating or overpromising benefits of participation in research or use of novel or off-label treatment when there is insufficient data to support claims made for the treatment. If a licensee recommends the off-label use of an FDA-approved product, then the licensee has a responsibility to be well-informed about the product and to base its use on sound medical evidence, including, but not limited to, statistically significant randomized controlled trials published in peer-reviewed journal articles addressing the use, efficacy, and safety of the off-label treatment for the patient’s condition. Other novel treatments, such as therapy modalities designed to treat conditions or behaviors should also be based on sound medical evidence published in peer-reviewed journal articles. 

The Board acknowledges there are a wide variety of circumstances which may lead a licensee to recommend or be asked to provide new or innovative treatment. For example, there may be different considerations when a conventional treatment has failed and a patient wants to individually undertake off-label or novel use of an existing drug or therapy. Licensees must balance respect for patients’ autonomy in seeking treatment options against the need to safeguard patients from the risks of novel, but often unproven (or off-label), treatment. 

Licensees providing innovative or novel treatments should: 

These guidelines are important in maintaining mutual trust between patient and licensee, protecting patient autonomy, and obtaining meaningful informed consent. The Board’s position statement on “The Licensee-Patient Relationship” may also be helpful to licensees as they consider these issues.

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