The Final Rule for Clinical Trials Registration and Results Information Submission (42 CFR Part 11) clarifies and expands the regulatory requirements and procedures for submitting registration and results information for certain clinical trials to ClinicalTrials.gov, in accordance with Section 801 of the Food and Drug Administration Amendments Act (FDAAA 801).
The Final Rule has been in effect since January 18, 2017. The International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE) requires trial registration as a condition of the publication of research results generated by a clinical trial. To fulfill this obligation organizations and individuals can provide the World Health Organization (WHO) Trial Registration Data Set required by ICMJE to ClinicalTrials.gov or a WHO primary registry.
The ICMJE expects authors to meet all results reporting requirements of their funding and regulatory agencies. If there are no such reporting requirements, the ICMJE encourages authors to submit results information to the same database on which their trials are registered.
In this session we will review the challenges clinical teams and sponsoring organization face in determining if a clinical trials are qualified and required to be registered, and discuss time frame for updates to be posted and reporting of the results to be completed.
This session will explore the challenges clinical teams and sponsoring organization face in determining if a clinical trials is qualified and required to be registered, determining time frame for updates to be posted and reporting the results.
Registration and summary results reporting of clinical trials has two main purposes: to inform potential subjects, and to increase transparency of conducted clinical trials and the likelihood that negative results of trials will be publicized. The U.S. Government site for registering clinical trials is ClinicalTrials.gov. A study is issued a CT.gov NCT registration number when it is registered. A trial only needs to be listed once.
For investigator-initiated clinical trials, the Principal Investigator is considered the Responsible Party, and is the one who has to complete the registration. For multi-center clinical trials, someone other than the local PI usually fulfills this responsibility (i.e. the Sponsor).
The Responsible Party who initially registered the clinical trial is also the one who must maintain the information about the trial, including updating recruitment information at least every 12 months and reporting final results.
This webinar is very much essential for Professionals involved in a clinical trials, either as a clinical site or a sponsor/CRO as it will provide valuable suggestions about which documents are essential according to FDA requirements for drugs, biologics and medical devices.
The instructor will discuss common deficiencies identified by FDA auditors during review of TMFs and provide potential solutions and best practices of implementation related to set up, maintenance and quality control of the TMF for drugs, biologics and medical devices.
- Discuss key factors to consider, when deciding if its qualified clinical trial
- Review rules, policies and guidelines to identify operational processes and best practices to register clinical trial, provide updates in a timely manner and file final reports
- Review “Summary of HHS Final Rule and NIH Policy on Registration/Reporting in ClinicalTrials.gov”in NEJM (Nov. 2016)
- Provide overview of registration process on Clinicaltrial.gov website
- FDA’s expectation for clinical site and sponsor’s essential regulatory documents
- Required components of a TMF
- Best practices for the set-up and maintenance of TMF
- Electronic and Paper TMF requirements
- Common discrepancies in TMF management
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