With the growing use of online study management systems and rapid availability of data, timely data review and quality assessments are necessary to ensure proper clinical trial implementation. In this report we describe central monitoring used to ensure protocol compliance and accurate data reporting, implemented during a large phase 3 clinical trial.
The Tuberculosis Trials Consortium (TBTC) Study 31/AIDS Clinical Trials Group (ACTG) study A5349 (S31) is an international, multi-site, randomized, open-label, controlled, non-inferiority phase 3 clinical trial comparing two 4-month regimens to a standard 6 month regimen for treatment of drug-susceptible tuberculosis (TB) among adolescents and adults with a sample size of 2500 participants.
Central monitoring utilized primary study data in a five-tiered approach, including (1) real-time data checks & topic-specific intervention reports, (2) missing forms reports, (3) quality assurance metrics, (4) critical data reports and (5) protocol deviation identification, aimed to detect and resolve quality challenges. Over the course of the study, 240 data checks and reports were programed across the five tiers used.
This use of primary study data to identify issues rapidly allowed the study sponsor to focus quality assurance and data cleaning activities on prioritized data, related to protocol compliance and accurate reporting of study results. Our approach enabled us to become more efficient and effective as we informed sites about deviations, resolved missing or inconsistent data, provided targeted guidance, and gained a deeper understanding of challenges experienced at clinical trial sites.
This trial was registered with ClinicalTrials.gov (Identifier: NCT02410772) on April 8, 2015.
Copyright © 2019. Published by Elsevier Inc.
About The Expert
Kia E Bryant
Yan Yuan
Melissa Engle
Ekaterina V Kurbatova
Cynthia Allen-Blige
Kumar Batra
Nicole E Brown
Kuo Wei Chiu
Howard Davis
Mascha Elskamp
Melissa Fagley
Pamela Fedrick
Kimberly N C Hedges
Kim Narunsky
Joanita Nassali
Mimi Phan
Ha Phan
Anne E Purfield
Jessica N Ricaldi
Kathleen Robergeau-Hunt
William C Whitworth
Erin E Sizemore
References
PubMed