This course explains the regulatory requirements for the reporting of adverse events and suspected adverse reactions in clinical trials. It describes how investigators should report to sponsors, and how sponsors should report to regulatory authorities and other stakeholders in the safety of investigational products. It explains how events are characterized as serious or non-serious, expected or unexpected, and it distinguishes the requirements for each category. It describes controlled vocabularies used for coding of events in reports.
This course provides essential information for clinical research, investigational product safety, and regulatory affairs staff of sponsors of clinical trials, as well as investigators and other healthcare professionals who undertake clinical trials.
Adverse events and safety reporting - In this session we explain the rationale for safety reporting in clinical trials, and we describe fundamental regulatory requirements. We discuss criteria for reporting, including causality, expectedness and seriousness. We set out the responsibilities of sponsors and investigators for individual-case expedited and aggregate reporting.
Safety reporting by drug sponsors - In this session we describe drug safety operations that will typically be carried out by a sponsor company or contract research organization engaged in clinical trials of medicinal products, and we outline some typical safety-reporting scenarios.
Controlled vocabularies - In this session we explain the requirement for the use of controlled vocabularies of medical terms in safety reporting. We describe the Medical Dictionary for Regulatory Activities (MedDRA) and identify the ISO standards for the identification of medicinal products (IDMP).
Assessment - Multiple-choice mastery assessment.