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Clinical Trial Protocol Information

A Clinical Trial Protocol is a document that describes the objective(s), design, methodology, statistical considerations, and organization of a clinical trial. The protocol usually also gives the background and reason the trial is being conducted, but these could be provided in other documents referenced in the protocol (such as an Investigator's Brochure).

The protocol contains a study plan on which the clinical trial is based. The plan is designed to safeguard the health of the participants (while limiting their financial liability) as well as answer specific research questions. The protocol describes, among other things, what types of people may participate in the trial; the schedule of tests, procedures, medications, and dosages; and the length of the study. While in a clinical trial, study participants are seen regularly by the research staff (usually medical doctors and/or nurses) to monitor their health and to determine the safety and effectiveness of the treatment(s) they are receiving.

The format and content of clinical trial protocols sponsored by pharmaceutical, biotechnology or medical device companies in the United States, European Union, or Japan has been standardized: they are written to follow the Good clinical practice guidance issued by the International Conference on Harmonization of Technical Requirements for Registration of Pharmaceuticals for Human Use (ICH). Regulatory authorities in Canada and Australia also follow the ICH guidance.

Clinical trial protocols for other clinical trials do not necessarily follow the standard format.

The existence of a clinical trial protocol allows researchers at multiple locations (in a multicenter trial) to perform the study in exactly the same way, so that their data can be combined as though they were all working together. The protocol also gives the study administrators (often a contract research organization) as well as the local researchers a common reference document for the researchers' duties and responsibilities during the trial. Some journals, such as Trials, purposefully publish trial protocols.

See also

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References

Regulatory agencies using ICH guidelines for clinical trial protocol

Biomedical research: Clinical study design / Design of experiments
Overview

Clinical trial · Clinical trial protocol · Clinical trial management · Academic clinical trials

Controlled study (EBM I to II-1; A to B)

Randomized controlled trial (Blind experiment, Open-label trial)

Observational study (EBM II-2 to II-3; B to C)

Cross-sectional study vs. Longitudinal study, Ecological study Cohort study (Retrospective cohort study, Prospective cohort study) Case-control study (Nested case-control study) Case series · Case study / Case report

Epidemiology/ methods

occurrence: Incidence (Cumulative incidence) · Prevalence (Point prevalence, Period prevalence) association: absolute (Absolute risk reduction, Attributable risk, Attributable risk percent) · relative (Relative risk, Odds ratio, Hazard ratio) other: Virulence · Infectivity · Mortality rate · Morbidity · Case fatality · Specificity and sensitivity · Likelihood-ratios

Trial/test types

In vitro / In vivo · Animal testing · Animal testing on non-human primates · First-in-man study · Multicenter trial · Seeding trial · Vaccine trial

Analysis of clinical trials

Risk-benefit analysis

Interpretation of results

Selection bias · Correlation does not imply causation · Null result

Category · Glossary · List of topics

Categories: Clinical research

 

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