The Fundamentals of Clinical Research. P. Michael Dubinsky

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Administration (FDA) in the United States of America and the Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) in the United Kingdom, or the function may fall under the general authority of, for example, a country’s Ministry of Health.

      The authority or authorities make rules to govern the activities for drug development, that is, manufacturing of the medicinal product, animal testing, and clinical testing. For clinical testing specifically, there are rules that govern the activities of the Sponsor, Clinical Investigator, and the IRB. Each of the clinical testing players has rules to follow and these rules are typically called “responsibilities.” The Sponsor submits the data from clinical trials as part of an application for approval for marketing the test product. The Regulatory Authority reviews the application to assess a product’s safety and efficacy, will conduct inspections to ensure that trials were conducted according to GCP and the applicable regulatory requirements, and will consider other factors prior to granting approval.

      7.2.2 How the Main Players Interact

Schematic illustration of the players interaction.

      We recall that the initiation of a clinical trial comes from the Sponsor, and the Regulatory Authority is a public authority or government agency that is essentially the gate‐keeper between the Sponsor and the public who will eventually use the product.

      Before a trial may be initiated, the Sponsor must communicate its intention to the governing regulatory authority or authorities who will provide feedback as to whether or not the trial may be conducted. The Sponsor reports the progress and the final outcome of the trial to the authority(ies) who review, ask questions, or request additional information as needed form the Sponsor. The Sponsor also engages the Investigator and provides them with the investigational product for the trial and all information they need to execute the trial at the trial site.

      Prior to the Investigator initiating the clinical trial, the Investigator must obtain an approval from a duly constituted IRB/IEC to conduct the trial. The Investigator will communicate the progress and outcome of the trial to the IRB/IEC as well as the Sponsor. The Investigator, of course, will recruit the Trial Subject, who is asked to volunteer for the trial and to commit to following the trial procedures. The Trial Subject has the right to contact the IRB/IEC at any time if they have questions or concerns regarding the conduct of the clinical trial.

      Lastly, the Regulatory Authority oversees all the players who have GCP responsibilities. We note that the Investigator and IRB/IEC do not typically communicate directly with the Regulatory Authority for routine trial conduct, but may certainly do so if the need arises.

      Knowledge Check Questions

      1 Who are the main players involved in the conduct of clinical research?

      2 What is the role of the IRB/IEC?

      3 What is the role of the Sponsor?

      4 What is the role of the Investigator?

      5 What is the role of the Trial Subject?

      6 What is the role of the Regulatory Authority?

      7 How do the various players interact?

      1 1 International Council for Harmonisation of Technical Requirements for Pharmaceuticals for Human Use (ICH), Integrated Addendum to ICH E6(R2):Guideline for Good Clinical Practice, E6(R2) (2016). Current Step 4 version dated 9 November 2016 https://www.ich.org/page/efficacy‐guidelines

       P. Michael Dubinsky

      GCP Key Point

       The absence or failure of researchers to follow or have in place ethical standards and safeguards resulted in several key policy documents, e.g. Declaration of Helsinki being developed. The IRB/IEC functionally implements ethical expectations contained in those documents.

      In other chapters the authors touch on some details about historical events which resulted in the development and issuance of policy documents which define the ethical expectations associated with the conduct of clinical trials. The Nuremburg Code, Declaration of Helsinki and Belmont Report were all developed and put in place in reaction to ethical abuses by researchers. Institutional Review Boards (IRBs) were the operating or functional demonstration of ethical oversight beginning in the US circa the 1960s. The US FDA put regulations in place circa 1971 and in 1974 the National Research Act formalized the requirements for having IRBs review planned clinical research. Regulations governing both the IRBs and requiring informed consent of trial subjects were in place circa 1981. The US IRB system was initially developed and implemented by academic medical institutions. In Europe the system of ethical oversight was largely developed by governments and became known as independent ethics committees (IECs). Since the ICH E6 (R2) was a work product of the both the US FDA and the EU EMA along with the Japanese health authority both titles were included in the ICH Glossary.

      The objectives of this chapter are to review the requirements/expectations for IRB/IEC as found in the ICH E6 (R2) Guideline at section 3. The GCP expectations speak to:

      1 Responsibilities of the IRB/IEC

      2 Composition, functions, and operations of the IRB/IEC

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