Good Clinical Practice GCP - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 24
About This Presentation
Title:

Good Clinical Practice GCP

Description:

Good Clinical Practice (GCP) is defined as a. standard for the design, conduct, performance, ... These may be called MOPs (Modified Operating ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:224
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 25
Provided by: bfar9
Category:
Tags: gcp | clinical | good | mops | practice

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Good Clinical Practice GCP


1
Good Clinical Practice(GCP)
  • UKTMN
  • 6th June 2006

2
What is GCP?
  • Good Clinical Practice (GCP) is defined as a
  • standard for the design, conduct, performance,
  • monitoring, auditing, recording, analyses and
  • reporting of clinical trials that provides
  • assurance that the data and reported results
  • are credible and accurate, and that the rights,
  • integrity and confidentiality of trial subjects
    are
  • protected
  • (ICH GCP)

3
GCP principles summary (1)
  • Rights, safety well being of subjects prevail
    over interests of science and society
  • Individuals involved in trial should be qualified
    by education, training and experience to perform
    his/her tasks
  • Trials shall be scientifically sound and guided
    by ethical principles in all their aspects
  • Necessary procedures to secure the quality of
    every aspect of the trial shall be complied with

4
GCP principles summary (2)
  • Available non-clinical and clinical information
    on an IMP shall be adequate to support the trial
  • Conducted according to Helsinki Declaration
    (1996)
  • Protocol shall provide inclusion and exclusion
    criteria, monitoring and publication policy
  • Investigator/sponsor shall consider all relevant
    guidance
  • Information recorded, handled and stored to allow
    accurate reporting, interpretation and
    verification and confidentiality of subjects
    records

5
GCP compliance
  • ICH GCP section 5.18.3 allows individual
    researchers to assess the needs of their trial
    and apply GCP appropriately
  • central monitoring in conjunction with
    procedures such as investigators training and
    meetings and extensive written guidance can
    assure appropriate conduct of the trial in
    accordance with GCP.
  • On-site monitoring not compulsory

6
Who must comply with GCP?
  • All individuals involved in any aspect of the
    trial must be suitably qualified to be able to
    comply with GCP.
  • Sponsors/CIs are responsible for ensuring that
    all staff are able to comply with GCP.

7
What counts as qualified?
  • According to GCP each individual involved in
  • conducting a trial shall be qualified by
  • education, training, and experience to perform
  • his or her respective task(s) (GCP principle
    8)
  • Education
  • Training
  • Experience
  • There is no GCP qualification

8
Education
  • Individuals must be educated to be able
  • to competently perform their specific trial
  • task.
  • Clinicians must be clinically qualified
  • Statisticians must be qualified
  • Managers must be appropriately educated

9
Training
  • There are a variety of courses and seminars
  • currently available
  • Employer induction courses
  • Industry courses
  • E-learning (Institute of Clinical Research)
  • Private courses (usually run by freelance
    consultant)
  • Host institution courses
  • Trial specific workshops
  • Investigators meetings

10
Experience
  • On-the-job learning
  • Discovering what is required
  • Doing the job (sometimes wrongly)
  • Cascading information and knowledge through
    teams/units
  • Talking to other trialists

11
Rationale and documentation
  • As there is no formal qualification it is
  • essential to keep up to date records of
  • training.
  • Describe the rationale for the methods of GCP
    training used in the trial
  • Document courses/seminars/meetings attended by
    staff on a training file
  • Keep it up to date

12
Approvals and permissions
  • Ethics committee approval
  • Clinical Trials Authorisation (IMPs)
  • R D permission
  • Sponsor approval

13
Trial Master File
  • Essential documents are defined as documents
    which individually and collectively permit
    evaluation of the conduct of a trial and the
    quality of the data produced and should be
    retained in the Trial Master File
  • Documents to be contained in the Master File will
    vary according to the trial
  • Trial Master File should be held at the principal
    site by the Chief Investigator or at the
    Co-ordinating Centre
  • Investigators Site Files are held by the
    Principle Investigators at sites and contains
    copies of the essential documents, local
    approvals, signed consent forms and completed
    data forms.

14
Standard Operating Procedures
  • There should be a written description of all
    trial management
  • systems and conventions. This documentation
    forms the
  • operating procedures, often referred to as
    Standard Operating
  • Procedures (SOPs).
  • SOPS are usually generic to the Trials Unit or
  • Institution.
  • A trial specific operating procedure must be
    developed
  • for each trial. These may be called MOPs
    (Modified Operating
  • Procedures) or TSOPs (Trial Specific Operating
    Procedures).

15
Trial monitoring
  • ICH-GCP Extent and Nature of Monitoring
  • The sponsor should ensure that the trials are
    adequately monitored. The
  • sponsor should determine the appropriate extent
    and nature of monitoring.
  • The determination of the extent and nature of
    monitoring should be based
  • on considerations such as the objective, purpose,
    design, complexity,
  • blinding, size,and endpoints of the trial. In
    general there is a need for on-
  • site monitoring, before, during, and after the
    trial however, in exceptional
  • circumstances the sponsor may determine that
    central monitoring in
  • conjunction with procedures such as
    investigators training and meetings,
  • and extensive written guidance can assure
    appropriate conduct of the trial
  • in accordance with GCP. Statistically controlled
    sampling may be an
  • acceptable method for selecting the data to be
    verified.
  • 5.18.3

16
Informed consent
  • Informed consent personal autonomy
  • a competent individual should have the right to
    determine those discretionary risks he/she is
    willing to accept for whatever benefits he/she
    perceives may result .
  • Weil WB. Informing and Consenting
  • In Silverman W. Wheres the evidence? OUP 1997

17
Informed consent
  • Following the second world war and the Nuremberg
    trials, the Nuremberg Code and Declaration of
    Helsinki was agreed worldwide as a charter to
    protect people/patients against human
    experimentation
  • Up until 1995 USA, Japan and Europe worked to
    different standards in the conduct of clinical
    trials
  • 1995 ICH-GCP was implemented a global standard
  • 2001 EU Directive set out regulations for
    clinical trials of medicines conducted within the
    EU
  • 2004 (May) the UK implemented the Directive and
    the UK Regulations became law

18
Consent
  • Ethics committee must approve all information
    given to the trial participant
  • Statements to comply with Data Protection Act
    must also be included in the PIL
  • Consent forms and patient information leaflets
    must take into account recent legislation
  • SOPs required describing who is authorised to
    conduct consent procedure
  • Centre personnel who participate in the consent
    procedure should be listed on the delegation log,
    provide CVs and be trained!!

19
Consent
  • Decision time confusing
  • ICH states ample time to decide
  • The Directive does not state any time-frame
  • 6-day rule in Ireland (being revised in 2006)
  • UK has no time -frame

20
Consent procedures
  • Given freely
  • Face to face
  • Telephone
  • Watch
  • Listen
  • Learn
  • What works well?
  • Share

21
Safety reporting
  • Adverse events (annual)
  • Serious Adverse Events (SAEs)
  • (within 7 days)
  • Serious Adverse Reactions (SARs)  
  • (within 7 days)
  • Suspected Unexpected Serious Adverse Reactions
    (SUSARs)
  • (expedited)

22
Expedited reporting
  • Fatal or life threatening SUSARSnot later than
    7 days after the person responsible for
    pharmacovigilance received information that the
    case fulfilled the criteria for a fatal or life
    threatening SUSAR, and any follow up information
    within a further 8 days.
  • All other SUSARsnot later than 15 days after
    the sponsor for pharmacovigilance had information
    that the case fulfilled the criteria for a SUSAR.

23
Archiving
  • Essential documents NOT used in a regulatory
    submission must be retained for at least FIVE
    years after the end of the trial
  • Destruction of essential documents and a record
    of the destruction must also be retained for a
    further FIVE years
  • Local RD offices may also impose a retention
    period

24
Good Clinical Practice in Practice
  • Be pragmatic in your approach to GCP
  • Use your Rick Assessment to justify your approach
  • Document the rationale behind the decisions
  • Be brave
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com