| Literature DB >> 32272961 |
Alexander C Fanaroff1, Ghazala Haque2, Betsy Thomas2, Allegra E Stone2, Lynn M Perkins2, Matthew Wilson2, W Schuyler Jones2,3, Chiara Melloni2,3, Kenneth W Mahaffey4, Karen P Alexander2,3, Renato D Lopes5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The primary goal of phase 2 and 3 clinical trials is to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of therapeutic interventions, and efficient and reproducible ascertainment of important clinical events, either as clinical outcome events (COEs) or adverse events (AEs), is critical. Clinical outcomes require consistency and clinical judgment, so these events are often adjudicated centrally by clinical events classification (CEC) physician reviewers using standardized definitions. In contrast, AEs are reported by sites to the trial coordinating center based on common reporting criteria set by regulatory authorities and trial sponsors. These different requirements have led to the development of separate tracks for COE and AE review. MAIN BODY: Potential COEs that fail to meet standardized definitions for CEC adjudication - i.e. negatively adjudicated events (NAE) - may meet criteria for AEs. Trial oversight practices require the sponsor to process AEs regardless of how the AEs are submitted; therefore, review of NAEs may be necessary to ensure that important AEs do not go unreported. The Duke Clinical Research Institute (DCRI) developed and implemented a process for scrutinizing NAEs to detect potential missed serious AEs. Initial experience with this process across two trials suggests that approximately 0.2% of NAEs are serious unexpected AEs that were not otherwise reported and another 1.5% are serious expected AEs.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32272961 PMCID: PMC7147037 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-020-04254-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Fig. 1Potential concealment of AEs by NAEs. Negatively adjudicated events may conceal potentially reportable AEs if the event leads to hospitalization, death, or severe illness and is not attributable to the disease process the trial intervention is seeking to prevent. AE, adverse event; NAE, negatively adjudicated event
Adverse event definitions and reporting requirements
| Event type | FDA definition | FDA reporting requirement |
|---|---|---|
| Adverse event (AE) | Any untoward medical occurrence associated with the use of a drug in humans, whether or not considered drug related | No specific reporting requirement |
| Serious adverse event (SAE) | AE that results in one of the following outcomes: death, threat to life, hospitalization or prolongation of an existing hospitalization, persistent incapacity or substantial disruption of the ability to conduct normal life functions, congenital anomaly, or important medical event (serious jeopardy of patient well-being requiring medical or surgical treatment in the judgment of the investigator) | When aggregate analysis of specific events observed in a clinical trial indicates that those events occur more frequently in the drug treatment group than in a concurrent or historical control group |
| Suspected unexpected serious adverse reaction (SUSAR) | SAEs that are unexpected prior to study conduct and likely to be caused by the investigational product | Each SUSAR must be reported within 15 days of the sponsor discovering it, and within 7 days if the event was life-threatening or fatal |
Fig. 2Pathway for NAE review. Area outlined in red dashed box represents DCRI system for managing NAEs; without implementation of this system, NAEs receive no further consideration and some AEs/SAEs could be missed. AE, adverse event; DCRI, Duke Clinical Research Institute; NAE, negatively adjudicated event; SAE, serious adverse event
Results of NAE review in 2 completed clinical trials
| Event category | Number of events (% of NAEs) | |
|---|---|---|
| Trial A ( | Trial B ( | |
| Same causal pathwaya | 1168 (65.8%) | 490 (40.6%) |
| Not same causal pathwaya | 606 (34.2%) | 718 (59.4%) |
| AE/SAE already reported | 118 (6.7%) | 517 (42.8%) |
| Alternative COE | 369 (20.8%) | 71 (5.9%) |
| Potential new AE | 119 (6.7%) | 130 (10.8%) |
| New AE reported | 2 (0.1%) | 20 (1.7%) |
| SUSAR | 0 (0.0%) | 2 (0.2%) |
a Causal pathway designation determined by CEC adjudicator based on whether the NAE was caused by the same or similar pathophysiologic process as the site-reported potential clinical outcome event (i.e. myocardial infarction and unstable angina), or whether it was caused by an alternative pathophysiologic process. AE adverse event, COE clinical outcome event, NAE negatively adjudicated event, SAE serious adverse event, SUSAR suspected unexpected serious adverse reaction