| Literature DB >> 22719228 |
Trudie Lang1, Sisira Siribaddana.
Abstract
Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22719228 PMCID: PMC3373653 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1001228
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Med ISSN: 1549-1277 Impact factor: 11.069
Areas of clinical trial conduct where overly cautious application of guidelines (“guideline application creep”) might be problematic.
| Areas of Clinical Trial Conduct | Issues, Risks, or Cautions | Advisory Notes |
| Clinical trial monitoring | It is essential that steps are put in place to ensure that clinical trials collect quality data and are run to high ethical standards. | Trial monitoring should depend upon the risk and complexity of the trial and not be a “one-size-fits-all” application of the common perception of “full” clinical trial monitoring. |
| In some situations (often external sponsored trials) monitoring is disproportionately zealous relative to the nature of the trial and is unnecessarily burdensome on the trial site. | The aim of a monitoring or quality management plan should be to ensure the question is being answered accurately and the rights and safety of the patients are protected. All approaches can be assessed against this pragmatic purpose. | |
| In other circumstances (often academic trials) there is not enough monitoring to ensure the data is being captured accurately and that the participants' rights and safety are being protected. | ||
| There are many misconceptions about what is needed and these fuel the above two issues of over- and under-monitoring. | In low-income countries and other resource-limited settings highly effective alternatives to commercial monitoring are a very good solution. Examples include training in-house monitoring and reciprocal monitoring between research sites. | |
| Data safety boards | Sponsors and review boards are requesting DSMBs for all clinical trials. | DSMBs are very important in many trials, such as blinded trials where the question may be answered before the end of the trial, or if there is any risk from an intervention. |
| Putting a DSMB in place where they are not needed increases the cost of the trial and takes the time of DSMB members where their expertise is in short supply, especially in developing countries. | Some trials do not need a DSMB, such as very fast or open trials, or trials with a low risk intervention. | |
| In developing countries there is a lack of researchers with the appropriate skills and experience to be members of these committees, which is even more reason to carefully consider whether they are needed. | ||
| Clinical trial laboratories | Some sponsors are insisting on laboratory accreditation and this is driving the belief from investigators that there are some very arduous and expensive requirements for clinical trial laboratories. | Laboratory measurements taken for use in clinical trial need to be accurate and reliable. Simple measures and processes can assure this. |
| Insisting on accreditation could push regulators in regions to take the position that this is the norm and necessary and insist on accredited laboratories for all trials. | Whilst positive for those that have it, accreditation is not necessary and working toward Good Clinical Trial Laboratory Practices is readily and inexpensively achievable. | |
| This will further inhibit locally led research and increase the costs for everyone. | In developing countries laboratories are working together to achieve international clinical trial standard laboratory practices. This is easily done by laboratories sharing quality standards, templates, and operating procedures. | |
| Assent from children | In many countries seeking assent from children to take part in clinical trials is a legal requirement. | There is a need from multi-region social science and ethnographic research into the appropriateness and effectiveness of seeking assent from children to take part in clinical research. |
| This may not be appropriate or meaningful where autonomy for children is not normal; it is especially important to consider this in developing countries. | Investigators should undergo community engagement to assess what is locally appropriate and acceptable. Then sponsors and regulators should respect these findings. | |
| Clinical trial training | It is important that all those working on a clinical trial are appropriately trained so that they understand the protocol and the trial procedures to ensure consistency, compliance with the protocol, and high standards | There are no specific requirements or qualifications for investigators or indeed clinical trial trainers. |
| Some sponsors and regulatory agencies insist on specific training or accredited trainers. | Sponsors of trials need to ensure that investigators have the appropriate experience and qualifications, but there are no minimum requirements. | |
| Similar to the situation with the laboratories, there are no specific requirements for training or trainers. Misconceptions about this are discouraging locally led trials and raising the expectations of review committees. | Clinical trial training should be given by those with the appropriate experience and training. This does not need to be someone external to the research site or an outside contractor. | |
| Good Clinical Practice training is important for everyone involved in a trial. Again this can be provided within research sites by an experienced clinical trialist and does not need to involve expensive organisations. There are also plenty of high-quality free online courses available. | ||
| Trial networks in many low-income countries collaborate to share training between their research sites; this is a very effective and a credible mechanism for increasing capacity. |
DSMB, data safety and monitoring board.