| Literature DB >> 28271595 |
Gerasimos S Filippatos1, Pieter de Graeff2,3, Jeroen J Bax4, John-Joseph Borg5, John G F Cleland6, Henry J Dargie7, Marcus Flather8, Ian Ford9, Tim Friede10,11, Barry Greenberg12, Cécile Henon-Goburdhun13, Richard Holcomb14, Bradley Horst15, John Lekakis1, Guenther Mueller-Velten16, Athanasios G Papavassiliou17,18, Krishna Prasad19,20, Giuseppe M C Rosano21,22, Thomas Severin16, Warren Sherman23, Wendy Gattis Stough24, Karl Swedberg25,26, Luigi Tavazzi27, Dimitris Tousoulis28, Panagiotis Vardas29, Frank Ruschitzka30, Stefan D Anker31.
Abstract
Data Monitoring Committees (DMCs) play a crucial role in the conducting of clinical trials to ensure the safety of study participants and to maintain a trial's scientific integrity. Generally accepted standards exist for DMC composition and operational conduct. However, some relevant issues are not specifically addressed in current guidance documents, resulting in uncertainties regarding optimal approaches for communication between the DMC, steering committee, and sponsors, release of information, and liability protection for DMC members. The Heart Failure Association (HFA) of the European Society of Cardiology (ESC), in collaboration with the Clinical Trials Unit of the European Heart Agency (EHA) of the ESC convened a meeting of international experts in DMCs for cardiovascular and cardiometabolic clinical trials to identify specific issues and develop steps to resolve challenges faced by DMCs.The main recommendations from the meeting relate to methodological consistency, independence, managing conflicts of interest, liability protection, and training of future DMC members. This paper summarizes the key outcomes from this expert meeting, and describes the core set of activities that might be further developed and ultimately implemented by the ESC, HFA, and other interested ESC constituent bodies. The HFA will continue to work with stakeholders in cardiovascular and cardiometabolic clinical research to promote these goals.Entities:
Keywords: Cardiovascular diseases; Clinical trials; Clinical trials as topic; Data Monitoring Committees; Data safety monitoring board
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28271595 DOI: 10.1002/ejhf.761
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Heart Fail ISSN: 1388-9842 Impact factor: 15.534