Maryland Code § HG-21-2B-01

Section HG-21-2B-01
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(a) In this subtitle the following words have the meanings indicated.
(b) "Carrier" has the meaning stated in § 15-10A-01(c) of the Insurance
Article.
(c) "Eligible facility" means an institution operating under a federalwide
assurance for the protection of human subjects in accordance with 42 U.S.C. § 289(a)
and 28 C.F.R. Part 46.
(d) "Eligible patient" means an individual who:

(1) Has a life-threatening or severely debilitating illness, attested to
by the individual's treating physician;
(2) Has considered all other treatment options currently approved by
the United States Food and Drug Administration;
(3) Has received a recommendation from the individual's physician
for an individualized investigational treatment based on analysis of the individual's
genomic sequence, human chromosomes, deoxyribonucleic acid, ribonucleic acid,
genes, gene products, including enzymes and other types of proteins, or metabolites;
(4) (i) Has given informed consent for the use of the
individualized investigational treatment; or
(ii) If the individual is a minor or lacks the mental capacity to
provide informed consent, has a parent or legal guardian who has given informed
consent on the individual's behalf for the use of the individualized investigational
treatment; and
(5) Has documentation from the individual's physician that the
individual meets the requirements of items (1) through (4) of this subsection.
(e) "Health occupations board" means a board established under the Health
Occupations Article that issues licenses to practice a health occupation in the State.
(f) (1) "Individualized investigational treatment" means a drug,
biological product, or device that is unique to and produced exclusively for use by an
individual based on the genetic profile of the individual.
(2) "Individualized investigational treatment" includes
individualized gene therapy, antisense oligonucleotides, and individualized
neoantigen vaccines.
(g) "Informed consent" means a written document prepared using the
informed consent form developed by the Office of the Attorney General in accordance
with § 21-2B-02(b)(1) of this subtitle that:
(1) Is signed by the patient or a parent or legal guardian of the
patient;
(2) Is attested to by the patient's treating physician and a witness;
and
(3) At a minimum:

(i) Explains the currently approved products and treatments
for the life-threatening or severely debilitating illness from which the patient suffers,
including alternative procedures or courses of treatment, if known to the treating
physician, that might be advantageous to the patient;
(ii) Attests to the fact that the patient concurs with the
patient's treating physician in believing that all currently approved and
conventionally recognized treatments are unlikely to prolong the patient's life;
(iii) Identifies clearly the specific proposed individualized
investigational treatment that the patient is seeking to use;
(iv) Informs the provider and eligible patient of any known,
anticipated, or reasonably foreseeable side effects, risks, or reported patient
discomfort that is likely related to the treatment;
(v) Describes the best and worst potential outcomes of using
the individualized investigational treatment with a realistic description of the most
likely outcome, including the possibility that new, unanticipated, different, or worse
symptoms might result and that death could be hastened by the proposed treatment,
based on the treating physician's knowledge of the proposed treatment in conjunction
with an awareness of the patient's condition;
(vi) Makes clear that the patient's carrier and health care
provider are not obligated to pay for any care or treatments that are necessary as a
result of the use of the individualized investigational treatment except as required by
federal or State law or contract;
(vii) Makes clear that the patient's eligibility for hospice care
may be withdrawn if the patient begins curative treatment with the individualized
investigational treatment and that hospice care may be reinstated if this treatment
ends and the patient meets hospice eligibility requirements;
(viii) States that the patient understands that the patient may
be liable for all expenses relating to the use of the individualized investigational
treatment and that this liability extends to the patient's estate, but not the heirs or
legatees of the patient; and
(ix) Includes a statement describing the extent to which
confidentiality of records that identify the patient will be maintained.
(h) "Life-threatening" has the meaning stated in 21 C.F.R. § 312.81.

(i) "Severely debilitating" has the meaning stated in 21 C.F.R. § 312.81.

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