Clinical Trials of Drug Substances
Clinical Trials of Drug Substances
Clinical Trials of Drug Substances
SUBSTANCES
Important Terminologies
Principal Investigator: A person responsible for the conduct of the
clinical trial.
Clinical Investigator: A medical researcher in charge of carrying out a
treatment options for a specified time period. When that time period
ends, the participants "cross over" to one of the remaining treatments
for another specified time period.
Double-blind:
A study in which neither the participants nor the investigators who work
clinical trial (or his or her legal representative), which states that he or
she understands what is going to happen in the trial and the risks
involved.
Institutional Review Board (IRB):
A pill or treatment designed to have no effect on the person who takes it,
A trial in which the research staff and the trial participant know the
which a drug sponsor requests the FDA to allow human testing of a new
drug, antibiotic drug, or biological drug in a clinical investigation. This
includes an application for a biological product used in vitro for
diagnostic purposes.
New Drug Application (NDA): An application submitted by a sponsor to
example, trials are often used to test new medicines or vaccines but can
also be used to look at new combinations of existing medicines. They
can also be used to test whether giving a treatment in a different way
will make it more effective or reduce any side effects.
Introduction to Clinical Trials
Clinical trials are not always about testing medicines, they can be used
prevent disease and reduce the number of people who become ill
improve the quality of life for people living with illness, including reducing
different types:
Prevention trials: look for better ways to prevent disease in people
health conditions.
Diagnostic trials: are conducted to find better tests or procedures
comfort and the quality of life for individuals with a chronic illness.
Compassionate use trials or expanded access trials provide partially
have if they are to be included in the study, while exclusion criteria are
those characteristics that disqualify prospective subjects from inclusion
in the study. Inclusion and exclusion criteria may include factors such
as age, sex, race, ethnicity, type and stage of disease, the subject’s
previous treatment history, and the presence or absence (as in the case
of the “healthy” or “control” subject) of other medical, psychosocial, or
emotional conditions.
Exclusion criteria
Whether there will be a control group and other ways to limit research bias
What assessments will be conducted, when, and what data will be collected
use existing data to design the trial, and then use interim results to
modify the trial as it proceeds. Modifications include dosage, sample
size, drug undergoing trial. In some cases, trials have become an
ongoing process that regularly adds and drops therapies and patient
groups as more information is gained. The aim is to more quickly
identify drugs that have a therapeutic effect.
Fixed trials
PURPOSE:
PURPOSE:
Several months.
EXPLANATION:
PURPOSE:
EXPLANATION:
PHASE 3:
PURPOSE:
1 to 4 years.
EXPLANATION:
PURPOSE: