Clinical Study: Department of Pharmacology Faculty of Medicine Tadulako University

Download as pptx, pdf, or txt
Download as pptx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 38

CLINICAL STUDY

A. Alfia MT

Department of Pharmacology
Faculty of Medicine
Tadulako University
Development

Preclinical studies
The R&D Clinical studies
process
Discovery Early Clinical Development
CHEMISTRY/ IND* PHASE I PHASE II PHASE III NDA** PHASE IV
 PHARMA­
COLOGY
Regulatory  Efficacy  Clinical  Comparativ Regulatory  Continued 
Search for 
review studies on  studies on a  e studies on  review comparative 
active 
healthy  limited scale a large  studies
substances *Investigational 
New Drug volunteers number of  KNOWLEDGE
Toxicology,  Application for  patients
50–150 100–200 LEVEL
efficacy  permission to  Registration, 
administer a new  persons patients
studies on  market 
various types 
drug to humans 500–5,000
introduction
of animals KNOWLEDGE patients
**New Drug 
LEVEL Application
Application for 
permission to market
a new drug

TIME SPAN

2–4 yrs. 2–6 months 3–6 yrs. 1–3 yrs. 

Approximately 10–15 years from idea to marketable drug

6/3/19
What Are Clinical Trials?
 Research studies involving people
 Try to answer scientific questions and
find better ways to prevent, diagnose, or
treat disease
Why Are Clinical Trials
Important?
 Clinical trials translate results of basic
scientific research into better ways to
prevent, diagnose, or treat disease
 The more people take part, the faster
we can:
 Answer critical research questions
 Find better treatments and ways to prevent
disease
Do Many People Take Part in
Clinical Trials?
 Few people participate
What Are the Different Types
of Clinical Trials?
 Treatment
 Prevention
 Early detection/screening
 Diagnostic
 Quality of life/supportive care
Treatment Trials

 What new treatments can help people


with a particular disease?

 What is the most effective treatment for


people with that disease?
Randomized Trials
Participants have an equal chance to
be assigned to one of two or more
groups:
 One gets the most widely accepted
treatment (standard treatment)
 The other gets the new treatment being
tested, which researchers hope and
have reason to believe will be better
than the standard treatment
Randomization
Why is Randomization
Important?
 So all groups are as alike as possible
 Provides the best way to prove the
effectiveness of a new agent or
intervention
Treatment Trials
Placebos are almost never used:
 Placebos are used only when no
standard treatment exists
 Patients are told of this possibility
before deciding to take part
Clinical Trial Protocol
 A recipe or blueprint
 Strict scientific guidelines:
--Purpose of study
--How many people will participate
--Who is eligible to participate
--How the study will be carried out
--What information will be gathered about
participants
--Endpoints
Benefits of Participation
Possible benefits:
 Patients will receive, at a minimum, the
best standard treatment (if one exists)
 If the new treatment or intervention is
proven to work, patients may be among
the first to benefit
 Patients have a chance to help others
and improve patient care
Risks of Participation
Possible risks:
 New treatments or interventions under study
are not always better than, or even as good as,
standard care
 Even if a new treatment has benefits, it may not
work for every patient
 Health insurance and managed care providers
do not always cover clinical trials
Patient Protection
 There have, unfortunately, been past
abuses in patient protection

 Ensure that people are told about the


benefits, risks, and purpose of
research before they agree to
participate
How Are Patients’ Rights
Protected?

 Informed consent
 Scientific review
 Institutional review boards (IRBs)
 Data safety and monitoring boards
(DSMBs)
How Are Patients’ Rights
Protected?
Informed Consent:
Purpose
Procedures
Potential risks and
benefits
Individual rights
Data and safety monitoring boards:
 Ensure that risks are minimized
 Ensure data integrity
 Stop a trial if safety concerns arise or
objectives have been met
Why Do So Few People
Participate in Clinical Trials?
Sometimes patients:
 Don’t know about clinical trials
 Don’t have access to clinical trials
 May be afraid or suspicious of research
 Can’t afford to participate
 May not want to go against health care
provider’s wishes
Health care providers might:
 Lack awareness of appropriate clinical trials
 Be unwilling to “lose control” of a person’s care
 Believe that standard therapy is best
 Be concerned that clinical trials add administrative
burdens
Safety in Clinical Trials

 First consideration is the


protection of the rights,
safety and well-being of
the study subject.
Groups concerned with clinical
research
Ethics
Committees

Patients & healthy


Sponsors volunteers

clinical
research
Drug
Clinical regulatory
investigators authorities
Clinical Trial Phases

Phase 1 trials
 How does the agent affect the human body?
 What dosage is safe?
Phase I Testing
 Description:
 Establishes safety and toxicity in humans
 Short term (up to 1 month)
 Few healthy volunteers (20 – 80)

 Evaluates:
 Pharmacodynamics (physiologic effects)
 Pharmacokinetics
 Bioavailability
 Bioequivalance
 Dose proportionality
 Metabolism
Phase I Studies: Participant Issues

 Less information for informed consent


 Generally requires over night stays
 Frequent blood draws for lab work.
 Least likely to receive therapeutic dose.
 No therapeutic benefit to healthy
volunteers.
Clinical Trial Phases
Phase 2 trials
 Does the agent or intervention have an effect
on the disease?
Phase II Studies
 Description
 Well-defined subject eligibility criteria
 Controlled comparisons with either placebo or active
control
 Short-medium duration (weeks to months long)
 Larger number of subjects (100-300)
 Establishes effectiveness of drug for a specific
population and disease
 First to use subjects with the disease or
condition (not healthy volunteers)
 Evaluates:
 Safety in patients
 Efficacy/pharmacologic effects
 Pharmacokinetics (single and multi dose
optional)
 Bioavailability
 Drug-disease interactions
 Drug-drug interactions
 Efficacy at different doses
Phase II Studies
Participant Issues:
 Slightly more information for informed
consent
 Greater chance of therapeutic dose
 Study maybe placebo controlled
 Frequent visits with blood draws
Clinical Trial Phases
Phase 3 trials
 Is the new agent or intervention (or new use
of a treatment) better than the standard?
 Participants have an equal chance to be
assigned to one of two or more groups
Phase III Studies

 Description
 Broader patient eligibility criteria than in
Phase II studies
 Studies may have two or three treatment
groups
 Longer duration (months to years)
 Involves hundreds to thousands of subjects
 Evaluates
 Efficacy and safety evaluation in population
subgroups
 Dosing intervals
 Drug-drug interactions
 Drug-disease interactions
 Risk/benefit information
Phase III Studies
Participant Issues
 More Information for making informed
consent
 Visits are less frequent and shorter in
duration
 May or may not receive active drug
 FDA can stop the study from proceeding
or stop a trial that has started:
 For safety reasons
 If the company fails to disclose accurately
the risks of the study to the investigators
 If protocol design is clearly deficient in
meeting stated objectives (Phase II and III)
Phase IV Studies
Description
Post-marketing studies
May involve additional age or ethnic groups
Monitors continued safety in large groups
Must be conducted if the FDA approves the drug on the
“fast track” before all premarketing data is collected
Evaluates
Adverse events
Other efficacy or pharmacoeconomic data

Epidemiologic date
Phase IV Studies
Participant Issues
 Most information available for the informed consent
 Most likely to receive therapeutic dosage
 Less rigid inclusion criteria
 Study drug may or may not be free
 May be done at their primary care providers office
Cost of Developing New Drugs

 It costs $500,000,000
to develop one new
medication from the
laboratory to FDA
approval.
Thank You

You might also like