Safety Reporting

Topics Included: Safety

Timely and accurate safety reporting is critically important in clinical research.

CTTI’s work will help you improve the quality and efficiency of safety reporting, reduce irrelevant reports, and increase adherence to FDA requirements for clinical trials conducted under an investigational new drug application (IND). Three sets of recommendations are available to help you to:

Resources

Safety

Safety Reporting

CTTI’s work will help you improve the quality and efficiency of safety reporting, reduce irrelevant reports, and increase adherence to FDA requirements for clinical trials conducted under an investigational new...

Safety

Data Monitoring Committees

Data monitoring committees (DMCs) work closely with investigators and sponsors to monitor trial conduct and safety, assess risks and benefits, and make recommendations to protect the participants of clinical trials.

Safety

Pregnancy Testing

Pregnant women have traditionally been excluded from clinical research – however, until now, there were no guidelines for planning for pregnancy testing in clinical trials.

Safety | CTTI News

IMPACT-AFib Shares Successes and Lessons Learned from Use of Single IRB

IMPACT-AFib (IMplementation of a randomized controlled trial to imProve treatment with oral AntiCoagulanTs in patients with Atrial Fibrillation) is a nationwide pragmatic clinical trial launched in 2017 by collaborators including CTTI....

Safety | CTTI News

CTTI Unveils New Resources to Facilitate Implementation of Single IRB for Multicenter Trials

CTTI has announced new resources to facilitate the implementation of single IRB (sIRB) in multicenter trials. The tools walk research institutions, sponsors, and IRBs through considerations for determining engagement, and...

Safety | Publications

Resources to assist in the transition to a single IRB model for multisite clinical trials

Resources to assist in the transition to a single IRB model for multisite clinical trials

Safety | CTTI News

CTTI to Support NIH Workgroup in Developing Evaluation Plan for Single IRB Policy

The NIH has selected CTTI to support a workgroup that will develop a comprehensive plan for assessing the NIH’s new single institutional review board (sIRB) policy. The policy, which became...

Safety | Press Releases

CTTI to Support NIH Workgroup in Developing Evaluation Plan for Single IRB Policy

CTTI to Support NIH Workgroup in Developing Evaluation Plan for Single IRB Policy

Safety | CTTI News

CTTI Article Outlines Recommendations for Pregnancy Testing in Clinical Trials

Most clinical trials exclude pregnant women in order to minimize risk to the embryo or fetus. However, there are currently no specific guidelines for how pregnancy testing should be conducted...

Safety | CTTI News

CTTI Study Shows More Efforts Are Needed to Stimulate Pediatric Antibacterial and Antifungal Drug Trials

In an article recently published in Pediatrics, CTTI researchers assess the impact of the Best Pharmaceuticals for Children Act (BPCA) and the Pediatric Research Equity Act (PREA) on pediatric antibacterial and antifungal drug trials....

Formats

Stage of Trial

Data Monitoring Committees

Topics Included: Ensuring Quality, Safety

Data monitoring committees (DMCs) work closely with investigators and sponsors to monitor trial conduct and safety, assess risks and benefits, and make recommendations to protect the participants of clinical trials.   

Use CTTI’s recommendations to enhance your partnership and communication with DMCs, better understand the role of the DMC, and learn about best practices for DMC conduct, composition, and training. 

Resources

Safety

Safety Reporting

CTTI’s work will help you improve the quality and efficiency of safety reporting, reduce irrelevant reports, and increase adherence to FDA requirements for clinical trials conducted under an investigational new...

Safety

Data Monitoring Committees

Data monitoring committees (DMCs) work closely with investigators and sponsors to monitor trial conduct and safety, assess risks and benefits, and make recommendations to protect the participants of clinical trials.

Safety

Pregnancy Testing

Pregnant women have traditionally been excluded from clinical research – however, until now, there were no guidelines for planning for pregnancy testing in clinical trials.

Safety | CTTI News

IMPACT-AFib Shares Successes and Lessons Learned from Use of Single IRB

IMPACT-AFib (IMplementation of a randomized controlled trial to imProve treatment with oral AntiCoagulanTs in patients with Atrial Fibrillation) is a nationwide pragmatic clinical trial launched in 2017 by collaborators including CTTI....

Safety | CTTI News

CTTI Unveils New Resources to Facilitate Implementation of Single IRB for Multicenter Trials

CTTI has announced new resources to facilitate the implementation of single IRB (sIRB) in multicenter trials. The tools walk research institutions, sponsors, and IRBs through considerations for determining engagement, and...

Safety | Publications

Resources to assist in the transition to a single IRB model for multisite clinical trials

Resources to assist in the transition to a single IRB model for multisite clinical trials

Safety | CTTI News

CTTI to Support NIH Workgroup in Developing Evaluation Plan for Single IRB Policy

The NIH has selected CTTI to support a workgroup that will develop a comprehensive plan for assessing the NIH’s new single institutional review board (sIRB) policy. The policy, which became...

Safety | Press Releases

CTTI to Support NIH Workgroup in Developing Evaluation Plan for Single IRB Policy

CTTI to Support NIH Workgroup in Developing Evaluation Plan for Single IRB Policy

Safety | CTTI News

CTTI Article Outlines Recommendations for Pregnancy Testing in Clinical Trials

Most clinical trials exclude pregnant women in order to minimize risk to the embryo or fetus. However, there are currently no specific guidelines for how pregnancy testing should be conducted...

Safety | CTTI News

CTTI Study Shows More Efforts Are Needed to Stimulate Pediatric Antibacterial and Antifungal Drug Trials

In an article recently published in Pediatrics, CTTI researchers assess the impact of the Best Pharmaceuticals for Children Act (BPCA) and the Pediatric Research Equity Act (PREA) on pediatric antibacterial and antifungal drug trials....

Formats

Stage of Trial

Pregnancy Testing

Topics Included: Ensuring Quality, Safety

Pregnant women have traditionally been excluded from clinical research – however, until now, there were no guidelines for planning for pregnancy testing in clinical trials.   

Sponsors, investigators, and institutional review boards can now use CTTI’s recommendations to develop and review pregnancy testing plans, assess the benefits and burdens of various options, and calculate how many participants may potentially enroll while pregnant or become pregnant during the study by using CTTI’s Pregnancy Testing Outcomes Predictor for Clinical Trials. 

The recommendations and interactive web application provide a standard way to plan for and make decisions about pregnancy testing in clinical trials, while also improving communication and transparency with trial participants. 

Resources

Safety

Safety Reporting

CTTI’s work will help you improve the quality and efficiency of safety reporting, reduce irrelevant reports, and increase adherence to FDA requirements for clinical trials conducted under an investigational new...

Safety

Data Monitoring Committees

Data monitoring committees (DMCs) work closely with investigators and sponsors to monitor trial conduct and safety, assess risks and benefits, and make recommendations to protect the participants of clinical trials.

Safety

Pregnancy Testing

Pregnant women have traditionally been excluded from clinical research – however, until now, there were no guidelines for planning for pregnancy testing in clinical trials.

Safety | CTTI News

IMPACT-AFib Shares Successes and Lessons Learned from Use of Single IRB

IMPACT-AFib (IMplementation of a randomized controlled trial to imProve treatment with oral AntiCoagulanTs in patients with Atrial Fibrillation) is a nationwide pragmatic clinical trial launched in 2017 by collaborators including CTTI....

Safety | CTTI News

CTTI Unveils New Resources to Facilitate Implementation of Single IRB for Multicenter Trials

CTTI has announced new resources to facilitate the implementation of single IRB (sIRB) in multicenter trials. The tools walk research institutions, sponsors, and IRBs through considerations for determining engagement, and...

Safety | Publications

Resources to assist in the transition to a single IRB model for multisite clinical trials

Resources to assist in the transition to a single IRB model for multisite clinical trials

Safety | CTTI News

CTTI to Support NIH Workgroup in Developing Evaluation Plan for Single IRB Policy

The NIH has selected CTTI to support a workgroup that will develop a comprehensive plan for assessing the NIH’s new single institutional review board (sIRB) policy. The policy, which became...

Safety | Press Releases

CTTI to Support NIH Workgroup in Developing Evaluation Plan for Single IRB Policy

CTTI to Support NIH Workgroup in Developing Evaluation Plan for Single IRB Policy

Safety | CTTI News

CTTI Article Outlines Recommendations for Pregnancy Testing in Clinical Trials

Most clinical trials exclude pregnant women in order to minimize risk to the embryo or fetus. However, there are currently no specific guidelines for how pregnancy testing should be conducted...

Safety | CTTI News

CTTI Study Shows More Efforts Are Needed to Stimulate Pediatric Antibacterial and Antifungal Drug Trials

In an article recently published in Pediatrics, CTTI researchers assess the impact of the Best Pharmaceuticals for Children Act (BPCA) and the Pediatric Research Equity Act (PREA) on pediatric antibacterial and antifungal drug trials....

Formats

Stage of Trial

IMPACT-AFib Shares Successes and Lessons Learned from Use of Single IRB

IMPACT-AFib (IMplementation of a randomized controlled trial to imProve treatment with oral AntiCoagulanTs in patients with Atrial Fibrillation) is a nationwide pragmatic clinical trial launched in 2017 by collaborators including CTTI. IMPACT-AFib is the first trial conducted under FDA-Catalyst, which incorporates the infrastructure of the FDA’s Sentinel System and enables direct contact with health plan members and providers. To help facilitate large-scale interventional research more efficiently, the collaborators followed CTTI’s recommendations of using a single institutional review board (sIRB).

The study team shared that the use of an sIRB had many positive results, including reducing study start-up time and alleviating administrative burden and costs on sites.

The study team also shared lessons that were learned through the process of using an sIRB:

  • In a multi-center trial, each site has unique requirements, which must be taken into account by study leadership when identifying an sIRB that all sites will find acceptable. Selecting an sIRB that has national experience and is accustomed to dealing with different regulations across states is helpful. In addition, choosing an sIRB that many or all sites have used in the past expedites reliance agreements required between each site and the sIRB.
  • Certain approaches can increase the efficiency of the sIRB approval process and reduce administrative burden for sites. For example, the team behind IMPACT-AFib expedited the process by submitting the initial protocol application to the sIRB that applied to all five sites. They then provided each site a template for the site submissions, noting items that might need to be adjusted according to site-specific considerations.
  • Specific considerations around trial design, such as pragmatic studies leveraging claims data, should be taken into account when submitting to an sIRB. For example, sites for this study are virtual – with patient contact via mailings from their health plans – rather than contacting potential participants in-person at traditional clinical trial sites such as clinics or hospitals.
  • Using an sIRB expedites the amendment process because only one submission is required, which is reviewed and approved for all sites.

Historically, each site’s local IRB has reviewed a trial’s protocol separately in multi-center trials, which results in lengthy approval processes, duplicative work, and differing protocol or informed consent changes among sites. The use of sIRBs can improve the quality and efficiency of multi-center trials by improving oversight and streamlining the review process.

Understanding of sIRB implementation has recently become even more critical; in 2018, the NIH began to require the use of an sIRB for all multi-center trials funded by the NIH, and by 2020, all U.S. institutions involved in U.S.-based cooperative research will be required to use an sIRB.

CTTI has championed the adoption of sIRB review for nearly a decade, developing recommendations and resources to address barriers and assist in the implementation of sIRBs. CTTI is also supporting an NIH workgroup to develop a comprehensive plan for assessing the NIH’s new sIRB policy.

Learn more about the IMPACT-AFib trial on ClinicalTrials.gov.

CTTI Unveils New Resources to Facilitate Implementation of Single IRB for Multicenter Trials

CTTI has announced new resources to facilitate the implementation of single IRB (sIRB) in multicenter trials. The tools walk research institutions, sponsors, and IRBs through considerations for determining engagement, and provide a library of available sIRB resources. They are enhancements to CTTI’s extensive work on the topic dating back to 2010, which was featured in a recent issue of Contemporary Clinical Trials Communications.

“For nearly a decade, CTTI has been at the forefront of the sIRB movement, championing the thoughtful implementation of sIRBs for multicenter clinical trials to enhance patient safety, accelerate study start-up, and improve trial conduct,” said Pamela Tenaerts, executive director of CTTI. “We are pleased to unveil new resources to address some of the most pressing sIRB challenges and information gaps that remain for researchers. These tools augment CTTI’s already robust set of resources to collectively make sIRB adoption more seamless for the clinical trials enterprise.”

CTTI’s new tools include:

  • A set of Engagement Materials including:
    • An Engagement Overview, which provides an introduction to the Engagement Materials, information about who has the authority to make engagement decisions, required information to assess, and responsibilities of an engaged institution.
    • An Engagement Flowchart, which guides institutions through a set of questions for determining if its employees or agents are performing activities that constitute “human subjects research” on the institution’s behalf as defined by the Office for Human Research Protections (OHRP).
    • An Engagement Scenarios Guide, which illustrates examples of institutional involvement in research that would be considered “engaged” versus “not engaged.”
    • Engagement Definitions for terms used in the Engagement Materials.
  • Resource of Resources that offers a library of available sIRB guides, templates, and tools to help stakeholders to optimally prepare, engage, and implement sIRB.

More information on these new resources is available via a recent CTTI-hosted webinar that features Nichelle Cobb (University of Wisconsin-Madison) unveiling the tools and showcasing their utility. The webinar also includes an overview of CTTI’s previous and ongoing work on sIRB for multicenter clinical trials, as well as results of recent semi-structured interviews to assess current perceptions of sIRB benefits, process challenges and solutions, and informational needs for using an sIRB process for FDA-regulated studies.

CTTI to Support NIH Workgroup in Developing Evaluation Plan for Single IRB Policy

The NIH has selected CTTI to support a workgroup that will develop a comprehensive plan for assessing the NIH’s new single institutional review board (sIRB) policy. The policy, which became effective in January, requires U.S. sites participating in nonexempt multicenter human subjects research funded by the NIH to use a sIRB for ethical review, with the goal of improving the quality and efficiency of clinical research.

 

“For nearly a decade, CTTI has championed the adoption of sIRBs for multicenter clinical trials,” said Pamela Tenaerts, executive director at CTTI. “We are excited to use our expertise to craft an evaluation plan for the NIH policy, and to design standard evaluation methods that can be used by academic organizations, research sponsors, and others who are interested in implementing sIRBs.”

 

Sites in multicenter clinical trials have typically relied on their own IRBs to conduct required ethical reviews, often leading to needless repetition across sites. The goal of the NIH’s new sIRB policy is to enhance and streamline the review process for multicenter studies so that research can proceed as quickly as possible and research oversight may be improved.

 

CTTI has developed a number of recommendations and resources to support sIRB adoption, and the NIH referenced CTTI’s work in a 2014 draft policy recommending the use of sIRBs. Currently, CTTI is gathering information from sponsors, investigators, IRB members, and research and regulatory coordinators to determine actions that the NIH, the FDA, and the Office for Human Research Protections can take to help the research community adopt sIRB review.

CTTI Article Outlines Recommendations for Pregnancy Testing in Clinical Trials

Most clinical trials exclude pregnant women in order to minimize risk to the embryo or fetus. However, there are currently no specific guidelines for how pregnancy testing should be conducted for female trial participants of reproductive potential, nor how risks should be clearly communicated with them.

In a recent article in PLOS ONE, CTTI shares recommendations developed by experts in academia, industry, and regulatory agencies on pregnancy testing in clinical research. They include the following:

  • The study protocol should clearly state the rationale for pregnancy testing and the plan for handling positive and indeterminate tests.
  • Investigators should assess the balance of the advantages and burdens of the pregnancy testing plan, as well as and evaluate participant burdens regarding the likelihood of false-negative and false-positive results.
  • Participant-administered home pregnancy testing should be avoided in clinical trials.
  • The consent process should describe what is known about the study intervention’s potential risk to an embryo or fetus and the limitations and consequences of pregnancy testing.

CTTI also developed an online tool to estimate the potential outcomes of different pregnancy testing strategies in the proposed trial population. Together, these resources aim to help research sponsors, investigators, and institutional review boards create and review pregnancy testing plans, in an effort to conduct safer, more efficient clinical trials.

CTTI Study Shows More Efforts Are Needed to Stimulate Pediatric Antibacterial and Antifungal Drug Trials

In an article recently published in Pediatrics, CTTI researchers assess the impact of the Best Pharmaceuticals for Children Act (BPCA) and the Pediatric Research Equity Act (PREA) on pediatric antibacterial and antifungal drug trials.

The study, which evaluated pediatric trials conducted between 2007 and 2017, found that nearly two-thirds of pediatric antibacterial and antifungal drug trials were conducted under BPCA or PREA. These trials were more likely to collect pharmacokinetic data and report results than non-BPCA/PREA trials.

However, the overall number of pediatric antibacterial and antifungal drug trials was low, representing less than 1 percent of pediatric trials overall. These trials also rarely enrolled infants up to 30 days old.

The findings show that, while federal legislation is likely having an impact on pediatric antibacterial and antifungal drug trials, more efforts are needed to stimulate these trials and improve the reporting of results.

This study was conducted as part of CTTI’s ABDD Peds Trials Project, which focuses on creating efficient, evidence-based processes to accelerate the development of safe and effective pediatric antibacterial drugs.