Clinical Study: Department of Pharmacology Faculty of Medicine Tadulako University
Clinical Study: Department of Pharmacology Faculty of Medicine Tadulako University
Clinical Study: Department of Pharmacology Faculty of Medicine Tadulako University
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
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
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
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
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