FDA Warning Letters: Dont Make the Same Mistakes - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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FDA Warning Letters: Dont Make the Same Mistakes

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In the broadest sense, a fraud is a deception made for personal gain. ... Synonyms for Fraud & Misconduct. Wrong Doing Deception. Felony Malpractice ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: FDA Warning Letters: Dont Make the Same Mistakes


1
FDA Warning Letters Dont Make the Same Mistakes!
  • Neysa Rhoads, RN, CCRC
  • Preventive Medicine
  • nrhoads_at_utmem.edu

October 13, 2009
2
Experience is the name everyone gives to their
mistakes --Oscar Wilde
3
What are Good Clinical Practices?
  • Guidelines for the Investigator
  • Guidelines for the Trial Sponsor
  • Guidelines for the Clinical Trial Protocol
  • Guidelines for the Investigators Brochure

4
Fraud
  • In the broadest sense, a fraud is a deception
    made for personal gain. The specific legal
    definition varies by legal jurisdiction. Fraud is
    a crime, and is also a civil law violation. Many
    hoaxes are fraudulent, although those not made
    for personal gain are not technically frauds.
    Defrauding people of money is presumably the most
    common type of fraud, but there have also been
    many fraudulent "discoveries" in art,
    archaeology, and science.

From http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fraud
5
Objectives
  • Identify different types of misconduct and
    falsification in research
  • Discuss causes and consequences of misconduct
  • Learn from others mistakes

6
Synonyms for Fraud Misconduct
  • Wrong Doing Deception
  • Felony Malpractice
  • Unethical Behavior Mischief
  • Cheating Felony
  • Unprofessional Swindling
  • Deceit Crime

7
Misconduct
  • Three categories of misconduct
  • Illusion of Knowledge
  • Surprisingly Sloppy
  • Malicious Malfeasance
  • Detecting, Correcting and Preventing
  • FDA Sanctions
  • Resources

Woollen, S.W., n.d.
8
The Illusion of Knowledge
  • Lack of understanding
  • Misconduct of the uninformed kind
  • Examples Backdating the subjects signature on a
    consent form because the subject forgot to date
    the form, creating source documents from CRFs,
    discarding source document after accurate
    transcription and reporting transcribed data as
    original.

9
Surprisingly Sloppy
  • Lazy
  • Inaction, inattention to detail, inadequate
    staff, lack of supervision
  • Examples ICF inadvertently not obtained from
    subjects, blood pressures rounded to the nearest
    10mmHg, data estimated rather than actually
    measured, protocol ignored or shortcuts taken

10
Malicious Malfeasance
  • Deliberate action to deceive or mislead
  • F _ _ _ _
  • Examples creating, altering, recording, or
    omitting data
  • Data does not represent what actually occurred

11
Falsification of Data
  • FDA focus Falsification of Data
  • Deliberate or repeated noncompliance can be
    considered misconduct and is secondary focus of
    FDA

12
Recognizing Research Misconduct
  • Research misconduct means falsification of data
    in proposing, designing, performing, recording,
    supervising or reviewing research or in reporting
    research results

13
Consequences
  • Places subjects at possible safety risk
  • Jeopardizes the reliability of the data

14
What Causes Fraud
  • Study staff that does not have the necessary
    resources and support to accomplish their tasks
  • Study staff have unreasonable demands placed upon
    them
  • Grand enrollment incentives
  • Just tell the truth

15
Research for Hire Second of Two Articles. A
Doctors Drug Studies Turned Into Fraud
  • New York Times, May 1999
  • Dr. Robert Fiddes
  • Reports of Fraud by his staff went unnoticed
  • June 1996, auditors took notice
  • Plead guilty to fraud

16
The Emperor Has No Clothes!
17
Dos and Donts
  • Do
  • Fill in all blanks
  • Enter date and times
  • Make sure information is accurate and matches
    throughout the chart
  • Complete documentation the day of the visit
  • Write a progress note!
  • Do the right thing!

18
Dos and Donts
  • Dont Cut corners
  • Dont Backdate
  • Dont use liquid paper or pencil
  • Dont re-create
  • Dont perform study related procedures before the
    ICF is signed

19
FDA Sanctions
  • Warning Letters
  • Formal Disqualification
  • Clinical Hold
  • Voluntary Agreements
  • Debarment
  • Prosecution

20
Expectations of an Audit
  • Auditors work on the assumption the records are
    bogus and the study is a fraud
  • They are taught to carefully review and evaluate
    the Labs, ECGs X-Rays
  • Question missing information
  • Look out for denial and shifting of blame
  • Verify then trust

21
FDA Misconduct
22
You failed to obtain informed consent of each
human subject in accordance with 21 CRF 50 21
CRF 312.60
  • Lab samples drawn prior to signing and dating the
    ICF
  • IRB approved ICF required actual time in which
    legally effective IC was obtained. No
    documentation of the actual time. Unable to
    verify subjects signed dated prior to protocol
    specific procedures being conducted on them

23
You failed to obtain informed consent of each
human subject in accordance with 21 CRF 50 21
CRF 312.60
  • ICF not approved by IRB
  • ICF not signed prior to implanting
    investigational device

24
You failed to obtain informed consent of each
human subject in accordance with 21 CRF 50 21
CRF 312.60
  • No written documentation that IC was obtained
  • IRB approved a 3 page document. Found subjects
    who were consented with a 1 page ICF and
    unapproved ICFs
  • IRB approved ICF signed after study device was
    utilized

25
You failed to obtain informed consent of each
human subject in accordance with 21 CRF 50 21
CRF 312.60
  • Subject signed consent form for incorrect study
  • Consent not signed until 11 days after study
    related procedure. Handwritten note states, I
    was informed about study and risk-did not sign
    consent 6-26-03
  • No documentation that subject was given copy of
    the signed informed consent

26
You failed to obtain informed consent of each
human subject in accordance with 21 CRF 50 21
CRF 312.60
  • Prior to any study related procedures being
    performed, subject was given a copy of the ICF to
    read. Subject was given the opportunity to have
    her questions answered and wishes to participate
    in the TREAT trial. Subject willingly signed
    consent with witness present and copy of signed
    consent given to subject for her records. Neysa
    Rhoads, RN

27
Characteristics of Quality Data
  • Accuracy
  • Immediacy
  • Legibility
  • Durability
  • Integrity
  • Consistency
  • Honesty

28
Warning Letter
  • Most Recent Warning Letters are on the FDA
    website
  • Read Them, See What Others Did Wrong
  • Learn from the Mistakes of Others

29
Summary
  • Knowledge is Power
  • If it Looks Like a Skunk, Acts like a Skunk and
    Smells Like a Skunk ITS A SKUNK!!!!

30
The only real mistake is the one from which we
learn nothing --John Powell
31
References
  • www.fda.gov/foi/warning_letters
  • Wollen, S.W. (2003). Retrieved on 6/13/08 from
    http//www.fda.gov/oc/gcp/slideshows/2003/gcp2003.
    ppt
  • Wollen, S.W. Hage, A.E. (2001). Retrieved on
    6/13/08 from http//www.fda.gov/oc/gcp/slideshows/
    misconduct2001/misconduct.ppt
  • Eichenwald, K. Kolata G. (1999). A doctors
    drug trials turn to fraud. Retrieved from
    http//www.nytimes.com
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