| Literature DB >> 31660239 |
M E B Holbein1, Barbara N Hammack2, Ann J Melvin3, Tamsin A Knox4.
Abstract
Every research study that includes volunteer participants requires safety assurances in proportion to the risks of the study. Investigator-initiated clinical research can present unique regulatory challenges particularly for studies with a risk profile that warrants more oversight than minimal risk but less than for large, commercial, or high-risk research. The use of an independent safety officer (ISO) offers a middle way of right-sizing oversight to match the risk. ISOs are clinicians or researchers with relevant expertise who are independent of the investigator and the research study. Their relationship to the study is defined by a formal charter which is aligned with the protocol and Data and Safety Monitoring Plan to address the oversight process, responsibilities of the ISO, and clearly describe the variables to be monitored. The ISO responsibilities include reviewing safety data, adverse events, recruitment, demographics, study progress, data quality, protocol changes, and any new scientific information that pertains to the trial. Finally, the ISO reports in their review on any significant findings may propose modifications to the study or a need to stop the trial. © The Association for Clinical and Translational Science 2019.Entities:
Keywords: Safety; clinical trials as topic; conflict of interest; humans; monitoring; risk; safety officer; trial oversight
Year: 2019 PMID: 31660239 PMCID: PMC6799057 DOI: 10.1017/cts.2019.393
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Transl Sci ISSN: 2059-8661
Characteristics of research typically monitored by an ISO
| Trial characteristic | Examples |
|---|---|
| Type | Investigator-initiated single site |
| Population | Vulnerable population (children, pregnant women, prisoners, and people with dementia or psychiatric conditions) |
| Design | Interventional (e.g. behavioral, use of drugs outside FDA-approved labeling, use of placebo) |
| Investigator | Junior investigator |
ISO, independent safety officer.
Key elements of an ISO charter
|
Unique study identification (title, document identifiers, and IRB number) Trial overview – study design and protocol summary Responsibilities and functions of the ISO
a. Review criteria for safety b. Detail the data variables to be provided by the investigator and reviewed by the ISO c. Specify the frequency of monitoring d. Overview of the process for review of AEs ISO meetings
a. Meeting attendees b. Frequency of scheduled meetings c. Meeting format Study stopping criteria ISO reports Amendments to the ISO charter Attachments (including data tables, confidentiality statement, and COI statement) |
ISO, independent safety officer; IRB, institutional review board; COI, conflict of interest; AEs, adverse events.
Documents needed by the ISO prior to trial initiation
|
Regulatory Binder for trial documents (protocol, informed consent documents, statistical analysis plan, Charter Data and safety monitoring plan Signed COI statement Signed confidentiality agreement Letter to grant agency confirming the ISO position, if needed Projected meeting dates for the first year Data collection tools |
IND, Investigational New Drug application; IDE, Investigational Device Exemption application; ISO, independent safety officer; COI, conflict of interest.