Everything You Ever Wanted to Know About ClinicalTrials.gov (Slides for presentation only.) Deborah A. Zarin, M.D. Director, ClinicalTrials.gov May 2010 1
Mar 31, 2015
Everything You Ever Wanted to Know About
ClinicalTrials.gov(Slides for presentation only.)
Deborah A. Zarin, M.D.
Director, ClinicalTrials.gov
May 2010
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Background
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What’s All The Fuss About?
• Suppression of research results impedes the scientific process
• Suppression of clinical trial data is particularly problematic:– Trials depend on human volunteers;– Trial results inform our medical decisions
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• “The results of Study 15 were never published or shared with doctors, even as less rigorous studies that came up with positive results for Seroquel were published and used in marketing campaigns aimed at physicians and in television ads aimed at consumers.”
• “The results of Study 15 were provided only to the Food and Drug Administration -- and the agency has strenuously maintained that it does not have the authority to place such studies in the public domain.”
Screen shot of Washington Post article. A Silenced Drug Study Creates An Uproar.
By Shankar VedantamWednesday, March 18, 2009
“Eli Lilly & Co. urged doctors to prescribe Zyprexa for elderly patients with dementia, an unapproved use for the antipsychotic... after [it] sent study results to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration” showing Zyprexa didn’t alleviate dementia symptoms in older patients…”
Screen shot of :Lilly Sold Drug for Dementia Knowing It Didn’t Help,
Files ShowBy Margaret Cronin Fisk, Elizabeth Lopatto and Jef Feeley
N Eng J Med. 2009 Nov 12;361:1963-71
Screen shot of :The New England Journal of Medicine
Outcome Reporting in Industry-Sponsored Trials of Gabapentin for Off-Label UseS. Swaroop Vedula, M.D., M.P.H., Lisa Bero, Ph.D., Roberta W. Scherer, Ph.D., and Kay Dickersin, Ph.D.
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Reasons to Register Clinical Trials and Report Results
• Human Subject Protections– Allows potential participants to find studies– Assists ethical review boards and others to determine
appropriateness of studies being reviewed (e.g., harms, benefits, redundancy)
– Promote fulfillment of ethical responsibility to human volunteers – research contributes to medical knowledge
• Research Integrity– Facilitates tracking of protocol changes– Increases transparency of research enterprise
• Evidence Based Medicine– Facilitates tracking of studies and outcome measures– Allows for more complete identification of relevant studies
• Allocation of Resources– Promotes more efficient allocation of resources
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Levels of “Transparency”
Zarin DA, Tse T.. Science. 2008 Mar 7;319(5868):1340-2.8
10th Anniversary of ClinicalTrials.gov
2000 - 2010
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101010
History of ClinicalTrials.gov• FDAMA 113 (1997): Mandates Registry
– IND trials for serious and life-threatening diseases• ClinicalTrials.gov Launched in February 2000• ClinicalTrials.gov Accommodates Other Policies
– Registration• Int’l Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE)• World Health Organization (WHO)
– Registration and Results Reporting• Maine State Law; State Attorneys General• European Medicines Agency (EMA)
• FDAAA 801 (2007): Expands Registry and Adds Results Database
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FDAAASec.801 Expanded Clinical Trial Registry
• Enacted on September 27, 2007• Requires Trial Registration (Dec 2007)
– Phase II-IV drug and device trials for all diseases– Data elements: ClinicalTrials.gov + ~ WHO/ICMJE
• Requires Results Reporting (Sept 2008)– Trials of FDA-approved or cleared drugs and devices– “Basic” Results: Baseline Characteristics, Primary &
Secondary Outcomes, Statistical Analyses– Adverse Events (Sept 2009)– “Expansion” of results by rulemaking (Sept 2010)
• Added enforcement provisions11
Trial Reporting:The Bottom Line Based on All Policies
• Register all interventional studies prior to enrollment of the first participant
• Keep entries up to date• Report results for trials subject to FDAAA:
– Drugs, devices, biologics– Not Phase 1– One year after “primary completion date”
(unless special circumstances apply)
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ClinicalTrials.gov—the Basics
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ClinicalTrials.gov Statistics(as of 5/24/2010)
Number Percent
Total 90,137 100%Type of Trial
Observational 15,252 17%Interventional 74,107 83%– Drug & Biologic 53,628 – Behavioral, Gene Transfer, Other 15,373 – Surgical Procedure 9,227 – Device* 5,538
International Sites (172 countries)US only 41,513 46%Non-US only 33,414 37%US & Non-US mixed 5,823 6%Missing 9,387 10%
*287 applicable device clinical trials submitted, but qualify for “delayed posting” under FDAAA
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User Statistics
Page Views per month 70 Million Unique visitors per month 950,000
Number Percent
Trials by Sponsor
US Federal (including NIH)10,828 12%Industry 29,233 32%University, Other 50,076 55%
Total 90,137
ClinicalTrials.gov Statistics (cont.)(as of 5/24/10)
ClinicalTrials.gov Visitors by “Role”(N=13,097)
Source: American Customer Satisfaction Index (ASCI) Online Consumer Survey; Six-Month Period in 2007
Patient - Volunteer 23%Researcher 14%Family/Friend 13%Patient - Learn 12%Provider 10%Other 9%Trial Team Personnel 7%Student/Educator 4%Healthy Volunteer 3%Investor 2%Journalist 1%Healthcare Admin 1%Advocate 1%
Screen shot of :Map of the World indicating number of studies with locations in that region.
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Sample Registry Record
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Screen shot of ClinicalTrials.gov showing Full Text View
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Screen shot of ClinicalTrials.gov showing Tabular View
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Screen shot of ClinicalTrials.gov showing archive
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Screen shot of MedlinePlus
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Screen shot of ClinicalTrials.gov number in The New England Journal of Medicine
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Screen shot of NLM Technical Bulletin article
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Screen shot of journal citation in PubMed highlighting Secondary Source ID
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Screen shot highlighting U.S. FDA Resources
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Screen shot highlighting Clinical Trials in U.S. FDA 510 (k) Premarket Notification
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Basic Results Database
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Basic Results Database
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Basic Results Reporting Requirements
• Results of FDA-approved/cleared products• Generally, submission within 12 months of
the earlier of estimated/actual primary completion date
• Delayed Submission of Results– Seeking initial approval – Seeking approval of a new use – Extensions for “good cause”
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Basic Results Modules
• Participant Flow • Baseline and Demographic Characteristics• Outcome Measures• Adverse Events (summary data)• Other Information
– “Certain Agreements” Restricting Results Disclosure
– Overall Limitations and Caveats– Results Point of Contact
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Sample Posted Results
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Screen shot of Clinical Trials Study Results
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Reasons Not Completed
Milestone
ArmsScreen shot of Participant Flow: Overall Study
User-SpecifiedMeasure
“Default” RequiredMeasures
Categories
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Screen shot of Baseline Characteristics
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Screen shot of Outcome Measures
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Screen shot of Primary Outcomes Measure
Statistical Analysis
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Screen shot of Measures Values and Statistical Analysis
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Screen shot of Serious Adverse Effects
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ICJME
“…will not consider results posted in the same primary clinical trials register in which the initial registration resides as previous publication if the results are presented in the form of a brief, structured (<500 words) abstract or table.”
[NOTE: Only about 23% of results records have associated publications at this time.]
Uses of ClinicalTrials.gov
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For those concerned with human subjects protections…
• Complete list of ongoing and completed trials of relevance
• Assurance that information about the trial of interest – is in the public domain– for some trials, results will become public
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For those with medical conditions…
• Finding a trial in which to participate• Finding an expanded access drug• Finding a center of research for a given
condition/intervention
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For those concerned with human subjects protections…
• Complete list of ongoing and completed trials of relevance
• Assurance that information about the trial of interest – is in the public domain– for some trials, results will become public
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Screen shot of ClinicalTrials.gov Advanced Search
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Screen shot of ClinicalTrials.gov List Results
For those concerned with research integrity…
• Relatively complete list of trials• Description of protocol• Tracking of changes to protocols• Identifying all outcome measures• Providing results, regardless of journal
publication status
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Screen shot of ClinicalTrials.gov Advanced Search
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Screen shot of ClinicalTrials.gov List Results
For thoseseeking study results…
• Linkages to PubMed• Summary Results in database• Results for all prespecified outcome
measures• Standardized format facilitating
comparisons
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Outcome Measures =“Six Minute Walk”
Age Group =“Child (birth-17)”
Screen shot of ClinicalTrials.gov Advanced Search
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Screen shot of ClinicalTrials.gov List Results
Resources
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Help for Users
53http://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/info
54http://www.nlm.nih.gov/bsd/viewlet/ct/index.html
Screen shot of ClinicalTrials.gov Online Training
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Screen shot of ClinicalTrials.gov Online Training
Help for Trial Sponsors & Investigators
56http://prsinfo.clinicaltrials.gov
57http://prsinfo.clinicaltrials.gov/icmje.html
Screen shot of ClinicalTrials.gov Protocol Registration System
58http://prsinfo.clinicaltrials.gov/fdaaa.html
Screen shot of ClinicalTrials.gov Protocol Registration System
Additional Background
• Tse T, Williams RJ, Zarin DA. Update on registration of clinical trials in ClinicalTrials.gov. Chest 2009;136:304-5.
• Tse T, Williams RJ, Zarin DA. Reporting basic results in ClinicalTrials.gov. Chest 2009;136:295-303.
• Zarin DA, Tse T. Moving toward transparency of clinical trials. Science 2008;319:1340-2.
• Wood AJ. Progress and deficiencies in the registration of clinical trials. N Engl J Med 2009;360:824-30.
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Common “Myths” about ClinicalTrials.gov
• “ClinicalTrials.gov matches – patients who are interested in participating in research with
recruiting trials OR – investigators who want to conduct trials with study sponsors.”
• FALSE. ClinicalTrials.gov does not provide any such matching services. ClinicalTrials.gov does not endorse the trials that it lists.
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Common “Myths” about ClinicalTrials.gov
• “Study data displayed in the ClinicalTrials.gov registry and results database are provided by the NIH.”
• FALSE. Data about each study are provided by the study sponsor or investigator.
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Common “Myths” about ClinicalTrials.gov
• “If I register my trial late and ClinicalTrials.gov accepts the registration, then my trial satisfies the requirements of FDAAA or the ICMJE policy.”
• FALSE. Although ClinicalTrials.gov will accept registrations at anytime during the study life cycle– FDAAA requires applicable clinical trials to be registered no later
than 21 days after enrollment of the first subject – ICMJE requires trials to be registered prior to enrollment
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Common “Myths” about ClinicalTrials.gov
• “FDAAA only applies to clinical trials conducted under an investigational new drug application (IND) or an investigational device exemption (IDE).”
• FALSE. FDAAA applies to ALL non-phase 1 interventional studies (with one or more arms) of drugs, biological products, or devices that:– Have an IND/IDE, OR– Have one or more sites in the U.S.
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Common “Myths” about ClinicalTrials.gov
• “Grantees do not need to register NIH-funded trials because NIH automatically registers all studies that it funds.”
• FALSE. NIH does not register grant-funded trials. Grantees are responsible for registering trials in accordance with relevant laws and policies (e.g., ICMJE).
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Additional Information
• Email LISTSERV and other FDAAA information:– http://prsinfo.clinicaltrials.gov/fdaaa.html
• Other general information:– http://prsinfo.clinicaltrials.gov
• Questions?– [email protected]
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