Introduction To Clinical Research
Introduction To Clinical Research
Introduction To Clinical Research
an
Overview
What is clinical research?
Branch of healthcare science that determines
the safety and effectiveness of medications,
devices, diagnostic products and treatment
regimens intended for human use.
Prevention
Treatment
Diagnosis
Palliative
Broad goal
A cardiac glycoside
Unethical human experiments
Syphilis Trial
Unethical Human Experiments
Phase III
Average
of 8 years Phase II
for the
whole
process
Phase I
Phase 0
Phase 0
• Phase 0 studies are exploratory first-in-human trials
that are designed to expedite the development of
promising therapeutic agents
• Typically 10-15 volunteers are utilized in the study to
evaluate the pharmacokinetics of the drug
• The dosage given is sub therapeutic that has almost
no risk of side effects
• It is reported that 75 per cent of the 20 leading
pharmaceutical companies have now used micro
dosing in drug development and have been endorsed
by the FDA
Phase I
• This is a study phase where about 20-80
healthy volunteers are recruited to receive the
investigational drug
• Exceptions include HIV and oncology trials and
end-stage diseases for obvious reasons
• Single ascending dose (SAD) and multiple
ascending dose (MAD) studies are carried out
to better evaluate the ADME profile of the
investigational new drug (IND)
Phase II
• Also designated a therapeutic exploratory phase, this
stage involves a larger group of patients (20-300)
• Phase II safety assessments are continued to
determine how well the drug works
• In recent times, these studies have been divided into:
Phase IIA – Designed to assess drug dosing requirements
Phase IIB – Designed to study drug efficacy in patients
Phase III
• This phase, also called the therapeutic
confirmatory phase, involve large patient
groups (300-3000)
• This stage is the most comprehensive critical,
and expensive in the whole business of clinical
trials
• It’s at this stage that regulatory submissions
are made that set the tempo for drug approval
by the regulatory authority to the sponsor
Phase IV
• These trials involve post-marketing surveillance and
ongoing technical support for an IND
• This stage is designed to detect long-term or rare
adverse events associated with the drug and
reported to the appropriate authority (such as the
Uppsala Monitoring Committee)
• Effectiveness of a drug as opposed to its efficacy is
the primary focus area in this phase
Fundamentals for clinical research….
• A hypothesis
• Definition of the primary endpoint
• A protocol
• Data collection
• Data analysis
• A study report
Issues
Cost: About $350 m (X __Rs) on average to get a
drug to market
Time: 12 years
Success rate : 5 in 5,000 drugs that enter
preclinical testing progress to human testing;
one is approved - 1 in 5,000.