Skip to content
Clinical Research Made Simple

Clinical Research Made Simple

Trusted Resource for Clinical Trials, Protocols & Progress

  • Home
  • Audit Findings
    • General Audit Findings in Clinical Trials
    • Investigator Site-Level Audit Findings
    • Sponsor & CRO-Level Audit Findings
    • Trial Master File (TMF) & eTMF Audit Findings
    • Informed Consent Audit Findings
    • Safety Reporting Audit Findings
    • Data Integrity & EDC Audit Findings
    • GCP Training & Compliance Audit Findings
    • Clinical Trial Supply & IMP Audit Findings
    • Ethics Committee / IRB Audit Findings
    • CAPA & Inspection Readiness Audit Findings
    • Case Studies & Trends in Audit Findings
  • Audits, CAPA & Deviations
    • CRO Audit Oversight
    • CAPA Management in CROs
    • Deviation Handling in CROs
    • Inspection Readiness for CROs
    • Data Integrity & Systems Oversight
    • Training & Quality Culture in CROs
  • SOPs for GCP
    • Global SOPs (Applicable to all Agencies)
    • SOP for IDE/Device
    • FDA — Unique SOPs (United States)
    • EMA — Unique SOPs (European Union)
    • CDSCO/DCGI – Unique SOPs (India)
    • WHO – Unique SOPs
    • ICH – Unique SOPs
    • MHRA — Unique SOPs (United Kingdom)
    • Health Canada — Unique SOPs (Canada)
    • PMDA — Unique SOPs
    • TGA — Unique SOPs
    • NMPA — Unique SOPs
    • ANVISA — Unique SOPs
    • Swiss Medic — Unique SOPs
    • Medsafe/HDEC — Unique SOPs (New Zealand)
  • US Regulatory Submissions
  • Toggle search form

Pre-IND to IND: FDA Meeting Strategy, Packages & Pitfalls (Type B/C)

Posted on November 1, 2025 digi By digi

Pre-IND to IND: FDA Meeting Strategy, Packages & Pitfalls (Type B/C)

Published on 21/12/2025

From Pre-IND to IND: A US-First FDA Meeting Strategy with Reviewer-Ready Packages and Avoidable Pitfalls (Type B/C)

Table of Contents

Toggle
  • Outcome-Oriented Game Plan: What “Good” Looks Like from Pre-IND to IND (US-First with EU/UK Mapping)
  • Regulatory Mapping: Pre-IND, Type B, and Type C—US Mechanics with EU/UK Notes
  • Process & Evidence: Make Your Package Inspection-Ready from Day 0
  • Decision Matrix: Meeting Types, Packages, and When to Use Them
  • QC / Evidence Pack: What to File Where—So Reviewers Can Trace Every Claim
  • Practical Templates Reviewers Appreciate (Use, Adapt, Reuse)
  • Related Topics
  • FAQs

Outcome-Oriented Game Plan: What “Good” Looks Like from Pre-IND to IND (US-First with EU/UK Mapping)

Decisions before documents: frame the meeting around outcomes

The most successful sponsors start with a crisp list of decisions they need from FDA—dose selection logic, first-in-human (FIH) cohort boundaries, safety stopping rules, and phase-appropriate CMC controls. Every page of the briefing book should ladder up to those decisions. The goal is not a literary tour of your science but a focused request for regulatory alignment that shortens time-to-first-patient. Early clarity turns the eventual IND into an assembly task instead of a salvage project. Concretely, open your book with a one-page “Decision Brief”: the decision requested, the evidence marshaled, your preferred answer, and your contingency if FDA disagrees. This sets reviewer expectations and prevents diffuse Q&A.

Make compliance visible once, then reuse references

Reviewers trust programs that demonstrate mature controls early. Declare the computerized system validation position for your study platforms (EDC, ePRO, safety database, CTMS/eTMF) and cite the governing regulations the first time you mention them—such as 21 CFR Part 11

for electronic records/signatures and Annex 11 in the EU/UK context. Provide a short appendix describing validation summaries, role/permission matrices, and configuration governance, and then reference this appendix instead of repeating boilerplate text across sections. This shows you understand the inspection trail and that your submission narrative is anchored in a robust quality system.

US-first strategy with global reuse

Design the briefing so it maps naturally to global expectations. Keep your clinical governance aligned to ICH E6(R3) (GCP) and your safety exchange plans aligned to ICH E2B(R3). Plan the transparency footprint deliberately: register on ClinicalTrials.gov early and draft language compatible with EU-CTR disclosures to CTIS so you do not rewrite summaries later. For privacy, articulate where US protections via HIPAA diverge from GDPR/UK GDPR and how de-identification, minimization, and access controls resolve those differences.

Regulatory Mapping: Pre-IND, Type B, and Type C—US Mechanics with EU/UK Notes

US (FDA) angle—choose the right forum for the right question

Pre-IND interactions are commonly Type B meetings, with FDA providing written responses only or a short teleconference. Use the forum to test your riskiest assumptions: adequacy of safety margins from GLP tox and modeling; bioanalytical readiness; feasibility of your escalation schema; acceptability of your sentinel dosing plan; and clarity on CMC release criteria and stability. Escalate to Type C when your issues are policy-intensive (e.g., decentralized assessments, device-drug boundaries, or novel endpoints) or span multiple centers that benefit from coordinated FDA feedback. Always present your recommended answer and the action you will take if FDA offers an alternative; this converts minutes into executable commitments.

See also  Drug-Device Combination INDs: US Submission Nuances & Traps

EU/UK (EMA/MHRA) angle—parallel planning to avoid contradictions

EMA Scientific Advice and MHRA advice often probe estimands, endpoint interpretability, early stopping, and comparator choices. Your US materials port well if they reference ICH and include public-facing transparency language aligned with the expectations of EU-CTR/CTIS and the UK registry. Safety signal routing and E2B(R3) readiness must be demonstrated with the same rigor for both regions. Sponsors that pre-draft “public lay summaries” alongside the US synopsis avoid embarrassing mismatches later when opening EU/UK programs.

Dimension US (FDA) EU/UK (EMA/MHRA)
Electronic records 21 CFR Part 11 Annex 11
Transparency ClinicalTrials.gov posting EU-CTR disclosures via CTIS; UK clinical trials registry
Privacy HIPAA GDPR / UK GDPR
Safety exchange IND safety reports; E2B(R3) gateway SUSAR/E2B(R3) to EudraVigilance and MHRA
Advice forum Pre-IND, Type B, Type C meetings EMA Scientific Advice, MHRA advice routes

Process & Evidence: Make Your Package Inspection-Ready from Day 0

Audit trail & data integrity controls

Map your end-to-end data flow and show where integrity is preserved: capture, transformation, review, lock, and submission. Provide a system inventory (EDC/eSource, safety, CTMS, eTMF, LIMS) with validation status and change-control references. Demonstrate routine audit trail review and show examples of anomaly detection feeding issue management. Tie your controls back to Part 11/Annex 11 topics: identity, authority checks, timestamp controls, and record longevity. If you are using decentralized components (DCT) or electronic outcomes (eCOA), include equivalence demonstrations for measurement reliability and backup procedures for outages.

Risk oversight: RBM, QTLs, CAPA effectiveness

Define critical-to-quality factors from the protocol and set measurable thresholds. Establish centralized monitoring with statistical surveillance targeting selection bias, endpoint completeness, and visit adherence. Publish a governance rhythm where KRIs and predefined thresholds (QTLs) funnel to issues with containment, root cause, and systemic remediation via CAPA—with effectiveness checks. If you operate a hybrid onsite/remote model, justify reduced source-data verification with objective risk data instead of blanket percentages. Provide escalation paths to clinical leadership and, where appropriate, to an independent DSMB for safety inflection points.

  1. Open with a one-page Decision Brief summarizing decisions, evidence, preferred answers, and contingencies.
  2. Include a single validation appendix covering computerized systems and configuration governance; reference it elsewhere.
  3. Provide a clear risk framework (CTQ factors, KRIs, QTLs) and the route from trigger to CAPA with effectiveness checks.
  4. Demonstrate E2B(R3) readiness and IND safety reporting timelines; align vendors on submission mechanics.
  5. Draft public-facing language now for US/EU/UK transparency to avoid later rework.
See also  US vs EU Early Advice: FDA Meetings vs EMA Scientific Advice

Decision Matrix: Meeting Types, Packages, and When to Use Them

Scenario Option When to choose Proof required Risk if wrong
Standard small-molecule FIH Pre-IND (Type B) Conventional risk; known class; straightforward dose-escalation GLP tox outline; MABEL/MRSD model; assay readiness Late pushback on dose or monitoring; protocol amendment delays
Novel modality or borderline device-drug Type C Unclear jurisdiction, novel endpoint, or policy interpretation needed Comparative benefit–risk; alternatives considered; boundary analysis Jurisdiction dispute late; wasted CMC/nonclinical spend
Complex oncology with DSMB Type B Stopping rules, combination toxicities, biomarker gating Dose-limiting toxicity rules; safety review cadence; DSMB charter Unsafe escalation; early halt; reputational damage
Digital measure defines endpoint Type C or CDRH Pre-Sub Evidence on analytic/clinical validation and usability/human factors Verification/validation reports; equivalence to clinic measures Endpoint not accepted; repeat study or redesign

How to document decisions in TMF/eTMF

Store the request letter, briefing book, background package, agency questions, final minutes, and a sponsor “Decision Log” in the eTMF Communications and Trial Management zones. Cross-reference actions to SOPs, change-control tickets, and training records. Maintain a single “Regulatory Dialogue Index” so investigators and auditors can locate the canonical commitment chain quickly.

QC / Evidence Pack: What to File Where—So Reviewers Can Trace Every Claim

  • RACI for regulatory/clinical/CMC; risk register; KRI/QTLs dashboard and meeting rhythm.
  • System validation (Part 11 / Annex 11), audit trail review plan, user-role matrix, SOP links.
  • Safety: E2B(R3) gateway tests; signal management flow; DSUR/PBRER templates for lifecycle harmonization.
  • Data standards: CDISC plan with SDTM and ADaM lineage, derivations, and traceability proofs to TLFs.
  • CAPA register with root cause, systemic fix, effectiveness timeline, and close-out criteria.

Vendor oversight & privacy: HIPAA vs GDPR/UK GDPR in practice

Document how your vendors (labs, CROs, eCOA/DHT providers) process PHI/PII, how data are minimized, how roles restrict access, and how cross-border transfers are justified. Reference your HIPAA-based controls and how they map to GDPR lawful bases and UK adequacy mechanisms. Include breach playbooks with notification timelines and contact trees so reviewers know you have rehearsed real-world contingencies.

Practical Templates Reviewers Appreciate (Use, Adapt, Reuse)

Sample language, tokens, and table footnotes

Decision request token: “The Sponsor seeks FDA concurrence that the proposed starting dose of X mg is adequately supported by the attached exposure-margin model and GLP tox findings (margin Y). If FDA does not concur, the Sponsor proposes an alternative starting dose of Z mg and will incorporate the additional sentinel procedure.”

See also  CMC Stability & Specifications for IND: Phase-Appropriate Justification

Data integrity token: “All study-critical systems have been validated, with controls aligned to Part 11/Annex 11. Configuration is managed via change control; audit trails are routinely reviewed and retained for the life of the record.”

Safety footnote: “Expedited IND safety reports will be assessed continuously; 7/15-day requirements apply per 21 CFR 312.32. E2B(R3) messages will be dispatched via the validated gateway.”

Common pitfalls & quick fixes

Pitfall: Questions too broad (“Does FDA agree with our program?”). Fix: Ask decisionable questions and include your recommended answer.

Pitfall: Repeating boilerplate validation claims in every section. Fix: One validation appendix; reuse references.

Pitfall: Treating minutes as suggestions. Fix: Convert minutes into commitments, update the action tracker, and cross-reference the eTMF.

Pitfall: Ignoring transparency language alignment. Fix: Draft public synopses that are compatible across US/EU/UK registries.

Related Topics

  • Regulatory Submissions
  • Inspection Readiness
  • Data Integrity & Part 11
  • TMF / eTMF Quality
  • CDISC & Traceability

References:
FDA •
EMA •
MHRA •
ICH •
WHO •
PMDA •
TGA

FAQs

When should a sponsor choose a Type C meeting instead of a Pre-IND (Type B)?

Select Type C when your questions require policy interpretation or span multiple FDA centers (e.g., device-drug boundaries, novel digital endpoints, or adaptive design rules). If you can present a recommended position with evidence and a fallback, FDA can provide focused, actionable feedback that de-risks your IND path.

How do I ensure the primary endpoint and statistical plan are acceptable at the Pre-IND stage?

Provide a concise estimand statement, simulations or prior data supporting interpretability, and a monitoring plan suited to the early-phase safety focus. Tie the endpoint directly to dose-finding logic and include sensitivity analyses, especially if decentralization or digital measures are used.

What belongs in the CMC portion of the Pre-IND briefing book?

Include manufacturing process overview, control strategy, release testing with phase-appropriate specifications, stability plans, and comparability triggers. Show how lot selection supports FIH exposure and how deviations or out-of-trend results will be handled before dosing.

Do I need to describe transparency and privacy plans in the briefing book?

Yes. Briefly describe registry milestones (e.g., ClinicalTrials.gov) and how public synopses will remain consistent with EU-CTR/CTIS and UK expectations. Summarize your HIPAA-aligned safeguards and the GDPR/UK GDPR mapping for cross-border data flows to preempt reviewer questions.

How should IND safety reporting be described at this stage?

Outline the case intake pipeline, medical review, causality assessment, and E2B(R3) gateway testing. Rehearse 7/15-day timeframe scenarios, including weekends and holidays, and clarify sponsor vs vendor responsibilities for transmission and receipt tracking.

What is the cleanest way to convert FDA minutes into actions?

Within 48 hours, update a single Decision Log with each FDA response, the internal owner, due date, and the eTMF cross-reference. Where FDA requested follow-up data, open change-control tickets or protocol amendments and link training records on the affected SOPs.

US Regulatory Submissions Tags:(capa), 21 CFR Part 11, ADaM, Annex 11, audit trail, CDISC, ClinicalTrials.gov, CTIS, DCT, DSUR, eCOA, EU-CTR, FDA BIMO, FDA meeting, HIPAA, ICH E2B(R3), ICH E6(R3), PBRER, QTLs, RBM, SDTM

Post navigation

Previous Post: SOP for Division 5 CTA Submissions and Lifecycle Events (Health Canada)
Next Post: Site Activation Checklist (US & UK): Docs, Timelines, Pitfalls

Quick Guide – 1

  • Clinical Trial Phases (7)
    • Preclinical Studies (25)
    • Phase 0 (Microdosing Studies) (6)
    • Phase 1 (Safety and Dosage) (66)
    • Phase 2 (Efficacy and Side Effects) (54)
    • Phase 3 (Confirmation and Monitoring) (70)
    • Phase 4 (Post-Marketing Surveillance) (79)
  • Regulatory Guidelines (71)
    • U.S. FDA Regulations (14)
    • CDSCO (India) Guidelines (11)
    • EMA (European Medicines Agency) Guidelines (17)
    • PMDA (Japan) Guidelines (1)
    • MHRA (UK) Guidelines (1)
    • TGA (Australia) Guidelines (1)
    • Health Canada Guidelines (1)
    • WHO Guidelines (1)
    • ICH Guidelines (12)
    • ASEAN Guidelines (11)
  • Country-Specific Clinical Trials (254)
    • Clinical Trials in USA (51)
    • Clinical Trials in China (49)
    • Clinical Trials in EU (51)
    • Clinical Trials in India (51)
    • Clinical Trials in UK (51)
    • Clinical Trials in Canada (1)
  • Clinical Trial Design and Protocol Development (106)
    • Randomized Controlled Trials (RCTs) (11)
    • Adaptive Trial Designs (10)
    • Crossover Trials (10)
    • Parallel Group Designs (11)
    • Factorial Designs (11)
    • Cluster Randomized Trials (11)
    • Single-Arm Trials (10)
    • Open-Label Studies (11)
    • Blinded Studies (Single, Double, Triple) (11)
    • Non-Inferiority and Equivalence Trials (8)
    • Randomization Techniques in Crossover Trials (1)
  • Good Clinical Practice (GCP) and Compliance (78)
    • GCP Training Programs (11)
    • ICH-GCP Compliance (11)
    • GCP Violations and Audit Responses (11)
    • Monitoring Plans (11)
    • Investigator Responsibilities (11)
    • Sponsor Responsibilities (11)
    • Ethics Committee Roles (11)
  • Clinical Research Operations (44)
    • Study Start-Up Activities (9)
    • Site Selection and Initiation (10)
    • Patient Enrollment Strategies (13)
    • Data Collection and Management (10)
    • Monitoring and Auditing (1)
    • Study Close-Out Procedures (0)
  • Site Management and Monitoring (72)
    • Site Feasibility Assessments (20)
    • Site Initiation Visits (10)
    • Routine Monitoring Visits (10)
    • Source Data Verification (12)
    • Site Close-Out Visits (10)
    • Site Performance Metrics (10)
  • Contract Research Organizations (CROs) (55)
    • Full-Service CROs (11)
    • Functional Service Providers (FSPs) (10)
    • Niche/Specialty CROs (11)
    • CRO Selection Criteria (11)
    • CRO Oversight and Management (11)
  • Patient Recruitment and Retention (57)
    • Recruitment Strategies (11)
    • Retention Strategies (11)
    • Patient Engagement Tools (11)
    • Diversity and Inclusion in Trials (11)
    • Use of Social Media for Recruitment (12)
  • Informed Consent and Ethics Committees (54)
    • Informed Consent Process (11)
    • Ethics Committee Submissions (10)
    • Ethical Considerations in Vulnerable Populations (11)
    • Consent in Emergency Research (10)
    • Re-Consent Procedures (11)
  • Decentralized Clinical Trials (DCTs) (55)
    • Remote Patient Monitoring (10)
    • Telemedicine in Trials (11)
    • Home Health Visits (11)
    • Direct-to-Patient Drug Delivery (11)
    • Digital Consent Platforms (11)
  • Clinical Trial Supply and Logistics (55)
    • Investigational Product Management (11)
    • Cold Chain Logistics (10)
    • Supply Chain Risk Management (11)
    • Labeling and Packaging (11)
    • Return and Destruction of Supplies (11)
  • Safety Reporting and Pharmacovigilance (56)
    • Adverse Event Reporting (11)
    • Serious Adverse Event (SAE) Management (11)
    • Safety Signal Detection (11)
    • Risk Management Plans (11)
    • Periodic Safety Update Reports (PSURs) (11)
  • Clinical Data Management (57)
    • Case Report Form (CRF) Design (11)
    • Data Entry and Validation (11)
    • Query Management (11)
    • Database Lock Procedures (11)
    • Data Archiving (12)
  • Biostatistics in Clinical Research (57)
    • Statistical Analysis Plans (11)
    • Sample Size Determination (11)
    • Interim Analysis (11)
    • Survival Analysis (12)
    • Handling Missing Data (11)
  • Real-World Evidence (RWE) and Observational Studies (56)
    • Registry Studies (11)
    • Retrospective Chart Reviews (11)
    • Prospective Cohort Studies (11)
    • Case-Control Studies (11)
    • Use of Electronic Health Records (EHRs) (11)
  • Medical Writing and Study Documentation (58)
    • Protocol Writing (11)
    • Investigator Brochures (11)
    • Clinical Study Reports (CSRs) (11)
    • Manuscript Preparation (11)
    • Regulatory Submission Documents (13)
  • Trial Master File (TMF) Management (57)
    • TMF Structure and Contents (10)
    • Electronic TMF Systems (7)
    • TMF Quality Control (12)
    • Inspection Readiness (12)
    • Archiving Requirements (11)
  • Protocol Amendments and Version Control (45)
    • Amendment Classification (11)
    • Regulatory Submissions of Amendments (11)
    • Communication of Changes to Sites (11)
    • Version Control Systems (11)
  • Data Integrity and ALCOA+ Principles (46)
    • Attributable, Legible, Contemporaneous, Original, Accurate (ALCOA) (12)
    • Complete, Consistent, Enduring, and Available (ALCOA+) (10)
    • Data Governance Policies (12)
    • Audit Trails (11)
  • Investigator and Site Training (44)
    • Investigator Meetings (11)
    • Site Staff Training Programs (11)
    • Training Documentation (11)
    • Continuing Education Requirements (10)
  • Budgeting and Financial Management (40)
    • Budget Development (10)
    • Site Payment Management (10)
    • Financial Forecasting (10)
    • Cost Tracking and Reporting (10)
  • AI, Big Data, and Technology in Clinical Trials (41)
    • AI in Patient Recruitment (10)
    • Machine Learning for Data Analysis (10)
    • Blockchain for Data Security (10)
    • Wearable Devices and Sensors (11)
  • Career in Clinical Research (52)
    • Clinical Research Coordinator (CRC) Roles (11)
    • Clinical Research Associate (CRA) Roles (10)
    • Data Manager Careers (10)
    • Biostatistician Roles (10)
    • Regulatory Affairs Careers (11)
  • Clinical Trial Registries and Result Disclosure (40)
    • ClinicalTrials.gov Registration (9)
    • EudraCT Registration (10)
    • Results Posting Requirements (10)
    • Transparency Initiatives (11)

Quick Guide – 2

  • Clinical Trial Operations & Data Integrity (31)
    • TMF & eTMF (10)
    • Study Operations & Enrollment (10)
    • Biostats, CDISC & Traceability (11)
  • Clinical Trial Operations & Compliance (54)
    • Clinical Trial Logistics (30)
    • TMF / eTMF Management (6)
    • Clinical Trial Phases & Design (6)
    • Regulatory Submissions (CTD/eCTD) (6)
    • Vendor Oversight & CRO Compliance (6)
  • Quality Assurance and Audit Management (40)
    • Internal Audits (10)
    • External Audits (10)
    • Audit Preparation (10)
    • Corrective and Preventive Actions (CAPA) (10)
  • Risk-Based Monitoring (RBM) (40)
    • Risk Assessment Tools (10)
    • Centralized Monitoring Techniques (10)
    • Key Risk Indicators (KRIs) (10)
    • Key Risk Indicators (KRIs) (10)
  • Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs) (39)
    • SOP Development (9)
    • SOP Training (10)
    • SOP Compliance Monitoring (10)
    • SOP Revision Processes (10)
  • Electronic Data Capture (EDC) and eCRFs (40)
    • EDC System Selection (10)
    • eCRF Design (10)
    • Data Validation Rules (10)
    • User Access Management (10)
  • Wearables and Digital Endpoints (35)
    • Integration of Wearable Devices (10)
    • Digital Biomarkers (9)
    • Data Collection and Analysis (7)
    • Regulatory Considerations (9)
  • Blockchain and Data Security in Trials (39)
    • Blockchain Applications in Clinical Research (10)
    • Data Encryption Methods (9)
    • Access Control Mechanisms (11)
    • Compliance with Data Protection Regulations (9)
  • Biomarkers and Companion Diagnostics (39)
    • Biomarker Identification (10)
    • Validation Processes (10)
    • Companion Diagnostic Development (9)
    • Regulatory Approval Pathways (10)
  • Pediatric and Geriatric Clinical Trials (55)
    • Ethical Considerations (11)
    • Age-Specific Protocol Design (22)
    • Dosing and Safety Assessments (11)
    • Recruitment Strategies (11)
  • Oncology Clinical Trials (54)
    • Phase-Specific Oncology Trials (10)
    • Immunotherapy Studies (14)
    • Biomarker-Driven Trials (10)
    • Basket and Umbrella Trials (8)
    • Cancer Vaccines (12)
  • Vaccine Clinical Trials (40)
    • Phase I–IV Vaccine Trials (10)
    • Immunogenicity Assessments (10)
    • Cold Chain Requirements (10)
    • Post-Marketing Surveillance (10)
  • Rare and Orphan Disease Trials (186)
    • Patient Recruitment Challenges (31)
    • Regulatory Incentives (10)
    • Adaptive Trial Designs (10)
    • Natural History Studies (10)
    • Regulatory Frameworks (22)
    • Trial Design & Methodology (22)
    • Operational Challenges (21)
    • Ethics & Patient Engagement (20)
    • Data & Technology (20)
    • Case Studies & Breakthroughs (20)
  • Bioavailability and Bioequivalence Studies (BA/BE) (41)
    • Study Design Considerations (11)
    • Analytical Method Validation (10)
    • Statistical Analysis Requirements (10)
    • Regulatory Submission (10)
  • Regulatory Submissions and Approvals (73)
    • IND (Investigational New Drug) Submissions (10)
    • CTA (Clinical Trial Application) (10)
    • NDA/BLA/MAA Filings (10)
    • ANDA for Generics (10)
    • eCTD Submission Process (2)
    • Pre-Submission Meetings (FDA Type A/B/C) (10)
    • Regulatory Query Response Handling (10)
    • Post-Approval Commitments (11)
  • Clinical Trial Transparency and Ethics (60)
    • Trial Disclosure Obligations (10)
    • Result Publication Requirements (10)
    • Ethical Review Standards (10)
    • Open Access Data Sharing (10)
    • Informed Consent Disclosure (10)
    • Ethical Dilemmas in Global Research (10)
  • Protocol Deviation and CAPA Management (50)
    • Major vs Minor Deviations (10)
    • Root Cause Analysis (9)
    • CAPA Documentation (9)
    • Preventive Action Planning (1)
    • Monitoring and Training Based on Deviations (10)
    • Deviation Logs and Tracking Tools (11)
  • Audit Trails and Inspection Readiness (59)
    • TMF and eTMF Audit Trails (10)
    • Audit Trail Reviews in EDC (10)
    • Inspection Preparation Checklists (10)
    • Regulatory Inspection Types (Routine, For-Cause) (10)
    • Responding to Audit Observations (9)
    • Mock Inspections and Readiness Drills (10)
  • Study Feasibility and Site Selection (68)
    • Feasibility Questionnaire Design (10)
    • Site Capability Assessment (11)
    • Historical Performance Review (17)
    • Geographic and Demographic Considerations (10)
    • PI (Principal Investigator) Experience Evaluation (10)
    • Site Activation Planning (10)
  • Outsourcing and Vendor Management (65)
    • Vendor Qualification Process (12)
    • Due Diligence and Risk Assessment (11)
    • Vendor Contract Management (12)
    • KPIs for Vendor Performance (10)
    • Vendor Oversight and Audits (10)
    • Communication and Escalation Plans (10)
  • Remote Monitoring and Virtual Visits (64)
    • Centralized Monitoring Techniques (12)
    • Source Data Review Remotely (12)
    • Virtual Site Visits Protocols (11)
    • eConsent and Remote Data Collection (10)
    • Hybrid Monitoring Models (10)
    • Remote Site Training (9)
  • Laboratory and Sample Management (77)
    • Sample Collection SOPs (10)
    • Sample Labeling and Transport (10)
    • Chain of Custody Documentation (11)
    • Bioanalytical Testing and Storage (15)
    • Central vs Local Labs (11)
    • Laboratory Data Reconciliation (20)
  • Adverse Event Reporting and Management (63)
    • AE vs SAE Differentiation (10)
    • Expedited Reporting Timelines (11)
    • MedDRA Coding of Events (11)
    • AE Data Collection in eCRFs (11)
    • Causality and Severity Assessments (10)
    • Regulatory Reporting Requirements (CIOMS, SUSARs) (10)
  • Interim Analysis and Trial Termination (60)
    • Data Monitoring Committees (DMC) (10)
    • Pre-Specified Stopping Rules (10)
    • Statistical Thresholds for Early Stopping (10)
    • Adaptive Modifications Based on Interim Data (10)
    • Unblinding Protocols (10)
    • Reporting of Early Termination to Regulators (10)

Recent Posts

  • Test
  • Comprehensive Guide to Dental Health Care with Braces
  • Understanding Dental Health Care: Managing Implants Cost Effectively
  • Invisalign Alternatives: Practical Dental Health Care Solutions
  • Practical Guide to Dental Health Care: Managing Braces Effectively

Copyright © 2026 Clinical Research Made Simple.

Powered by PressBook WordPress theme