A Closer Look at 1572: Interpreting the FDA's Statement of Investigator Form

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Applied Clinical Trials Supplements

Applied Clinical Trials SupplementsSupplements-09-02-2010
Volume 0
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A new reference guide clarifies uncertainty surrounding this sometimes misunderstood document.

FDA officials responsible for the agency's good clinical practices (GCP) program emphasize that few, if any, GCP-related areas generate as much industry uncertainty as the Form FDA 1572—Statement of Investigator. Through this seemingly mundane form, a clinical investigator must provide a study sponsor with information on the education, training, and experience that qualifies him/her to conduct a particular study as well as his/her commitment to conduct the proposed study in accordance with the protocol and federal regulations.

Over the years, several factors have contributed to industry uncertainty regarding the 1572 and its use, among them the fact that, today, the 1572 has both mandatory and practical, nonmandatory uses. Complicating matters has been lingering uncertainty regarding the 1572's use at non-U.S. study sites, and questions about what U.S. sponsors can and should require of foreign-based investigators who may be reluctant to sign the 1572, which is often viewed as a formal contract.

In developing the May 2004 second edition of our new text, Good Clinical Practice: A Question & Answer Reference Guide we invested considerable time and effort to explore and resolve many of the long-standing and troublesome questions regarding the 1572. The series of questions below, which is excerpted directly from the text, addresses several of these questions.

Q: Because it is used for a few different purposes, there is uncertainty in some cases about the Form FDA 1572—Statement of Investigator, in particular when its use and submission is mandatory. What is the 1572's regulatory purpose, and in what ways is the form used in practice?

A: The 1572 itself declares that, "No investigator may participate in an investigation until he/she provides the sponsor with a completed, signed Statement of Investigator, Form FDA 1572." And FDA regulations at 21 CFR 312.53(c)(1) add that, "Before permitting an investigator to begin participation in an investigation, the sponsor shall obtain the following: (1) A signed investigator statement (Form FDA—1572)...." Therefore, the Form 1572 is a document that an investigator must submit to the study sponsor.

Through the 1572 Form and the attachments typically sent with it, an investigator provides a sponsor with, among other things, information on his or her education, training, and experience (CV or other statement of qualifications) that qualifies him or her to undertake the clinical investigation, information on the relevant facility, IRB, and subinvestigators, protocol information, and the investigator's commitment to conduct the study in accordance with the protocol and FDA regulations.

So where is there uncertainty about the 1572's use? In many cases, companies submit the completed and signed 1572s to the FDA in the original IND and subsequently when new investigators are added to a study. IND applicants and holders do this as a convenient way of fulfilling an FDA requirement at 21 CFR 312.23(a) (6)(b), which calls for a clinical trial protocol submitted in an IND to provide "the name and address and a statement of the qualifications (CV or other statement of qualifications) of each investigator."

Because this has become such a common practice, some incorrectly assume that this is an FDA requirement. In fact, the IND form (Form FDA 1571) explicitly gives sponsors the option of fulfilling 312.23(a)(6)(iii)(b) by submitting either "Investigator data [21 CFR 312.23(a) (6)(iii)(b)] or completed Form(s) FDA 1572."

In informal correspondence on this issue, the FDA stated that, "People seem to obsess over the 1572. We wonder how many people realize that the 1572 is not even required to be submitted to the FDA. In theory, we could never even see it. In practice, however, the 1572 is typically submitted to the IND by the sponsor as an efficient means to provide information required under 21 CFR 312.23(a)(6) (iii)(b)."

Q: Since it is such common practice for companies to provide the 1572 and accompanying CV and other information to the FDA in the original IND and subsequently when a new investigator is added to the study, has that become an agency expectation or even a de facto requirement?

A: None of several Center for Drug Evaluation and Research review divisions contacted recently claimed that the submission of the 1572 was a divisional expectation. And most did not express even a preference in terms of the format (i.e., a 1572 or alternative format) in which IND applicants should provide investigator qualification-related information.

It is important to note, however, that there are differences between some CDER review divisions, and that applicants should ask about a division's policy in this area. Under a 1992 policy, for example, the Division of Oncology Drug Products asks that sponsors of commercial INDs (i.e., those submitted by industry) not submit either the 1572 or the investigator's CV for new investigators because such submissions are "inefficient and cumbersome." Rather, in its "no CV letter," the division asks all IND holders to submit summary information, including "the minimum qualifications of investigators selected for the protocol...and a statement that each investigator meets or exceeds those qualifications" (see sidebar, "Division of Oncology Drug Products' 'No CV Letter'").

Division of Oncology Drug Products' "No CV Letter"

In the letter, the Division of Oncology Drug Products emphasizes to applicants that, "You are, of course, also required to maintain the information provided to you by the investigator on the form FDA 1572, which is to be retained by you. In addition, you must maintain in your files a current C.V. of each investigator which must be updated as investigators are added. Only upon request of the Agency, will you be required to submit the current C.V. for a specific investigator."

Q: Occasionally, European clinical investigators and sites are reluctant to sign the FDA Form 1572—Statement of Investigator. Is this ever acceptable for studies conducted under INDs and, if so, what is done in lieu of the 1572?

A: For a variety of reasons (e.g., the need for an IRB, which some countries do not have), some foreign investigators may refuse to sign the FDA Form 1572—Statement of Investigator, in part because they do not want to enter into a contract directly with the FDA (U.S. government). All study investigators who will participate in studies under an IND must sign the 1572, however. In such scenarios, then, trial sponsors must find other investigators who are willing to sign the form.

Q: But does this mean that, if a sponsor has an IND under which it is studying a specific drug, then investigators at all non-U.S. sites conducting studies involving that drug must complete sign a 1572?

A: Not necessarily. Only those sites involved in studies specifically included under the IND are required to sign a 1572.

In a February 2004 informal response to this question, the FDA stated the following:

"There is no FDA requirement that study sites outside of the United States operate under a U.S. IND. FDA regulations (21 CFR Parts 312.120 and 314.106) [establish the criteria under which the agency will accept] non-U.S., non-IND studies/data for purposes of FDA review in support of applications (IND or NDA). The decision to operate under an IND at non-U.S. sites is therefore discretionary on the part of the study sponsor.

"HOWEVER, should a sponsor make the decision that non-U.S. studies/sites [will be conducted] under a U.S. IND, then all FDA IND regulatory requirements must be met. This includes submission of the 1572 with its investigator certification that U.S. IND requirements are understood and will be met.

"On the other hand, a sponsor may decide and indicate that a study's non-U.S. sites [will not be conducted] under a U.S. IND. In this case, elements of IND regulations (beyond provisions for FDA's acceptance of non-U.S., non-IND studies/data under 312.120/314.106) are not FDA-enforceable requirements per se. That is, there is no FDA regulatory requirement for completion of a 1572 when a sponsor has designated the non-U.S. study or sites as 'non-IND' (although a sponsor may still request completion of the 1572 as part of an internal SOP—and FDA, of course, expects SOPs to be followed).

"The distinction, then, is whether the sponsor has chosen/committed to operate its non-U.S. sites under U.S. regulations (in which case, the 1572 and all IND requirements must be met at non-U.S. sites) or as non-IND (in which case the FDA regulatory requirement for a 1572 does not apply)."

Under a June 2004 proposed regulation, the agency proposed to revamp its sometimes-vague regulatory standards for non-U.S. clinical trials by specifically referencing its good clinical practice regulations as the FDA expectation for such studies. Although U.S. GCP standards have long been the expectation for non-U.S. clinical trials conducted under INDs, the agency has traditionally accepted foreign studies that were not conducted under an IND if they conformed to either the Declaration of Helsinki or national requirements, whichever afforded the greater protections to study subjects. While the proposed rule would make U.S. GCP the standard for all clinical studies to be used in supporting U.S. regulatory applications, it would not affect the 1572-related requirements discussed above.

Excerpted from Good Clinical Practice: A Question & Answer Reference Guide, available from Barnett Educational Services (www.barnettinternational.com).

Douglas R. Mackintosh, DrPH, MBA, MSHyg, was president and Vernette J. Molloy, MBA, RN, is vice president of GCPA, Inc., Fairfax Station, Virginia. Mark P. Mathieu is director of publications with Barnett Educational Services.

Six Years Later

The Author's Thoughts

One might think that the topic of FDA form 1572 would not be fodder for lively discussion with colleagues in our industry, but over the years as GCP auditors, the late Dr. Douglas Mackintosh and I have found ourselves involved in some heated discussions about the required elements of the form, who should be listed on it, and whether or not the form is really required at all. The pervasive misinformation about the form, along with long-held conventions regarding its content and reporting requirements, was the stimulus behind the creation of this article.

Vernette J. Malloy Vice President GCPA, Inc. Fairfax Station, VA

Investigational site staff, as well as sponsors, often struggle with questions that they cannot get clear answers to, such as: do we have to update the form every time new hospital residents join the study in whatever minimal capacity; do we have to submit the 1572 or is there another venue by which we can submit the required information to the FDA; can two investigators be listed as co-investigators on the 1572 or does the FDA require that only one investigator be named Principal Investigator and other investigators participating in the study be named as Sub-Investigators. As more studies conducted under U.S. INDs were conducted overseas, we found that some of those participating investigators were reluctant to sign the 1572...what to do in that scenario?

Inspired by these types of questions, we decided to share what we have heard and learned from colleagues and regulatory personnel internationally and develop a manuscript that would concisely answer some of our colleagues' questions , which hopefully would help demystify the form and its related ambiguities.

The Advisory Board's Take

Since the article, "A Closer Look at the 1572," written by Mackintosh and colleagues was published in this journal in 2004, there has been new leadership at the FDA committed to protecting the public. Margaret Hamburg, MD, Commissioner of Food and Drugs, in her address to participants at the Food and Drug Law Institute in 2009 stated:1

Felix Khin-Maung-Gyi Chief Executive Officer Chesapeake Research Review, Inc. Columbia, MD

"Again and again, from all sides of various questions, I heard support for a strong FDA... an agency that protects the safety of the food supply... an agency that facilitates access to safe and effective medical products... an agency for the American public to count on. A strong FDA has credibility with the public. A strong FDA is transparent in explaining its decisions. A strong FDA pursues creative solutions to long-standing problems and is always looking for novel ways to prevent illness and promote health. And a strong FDA enforces the law."

Recently, the FDA has visibly and noticeably enhanced its enforcement activities and stepped-up efforts to take swift and aggressive action against violators,2 evident by the increased number of warning letters, NIDPOEs, and 483s. As such, the clinical research community is keenly aware of the need to be even more diligent and compliant with all aspects of the regulations in light of the increased likelihood of an ad hoc FDA inspection.

There continues to be confusion regarding the regulatory role of the Form FDA 1572. The concern is that missteps in completing appropriate regulatory forms will result in additional citations. Mackintosh and colleagues' approach to appropriately completing the 1572 is as valid today as it was when initially introduced in 2004. Their article, in conjunction with the recent FDA Guidance issued in May 2010,3 will guide clinical research practitioners on best practices to remain in compliance with the requirements of the Form FDA 1572.

References

1. M. A. Hamburg, "Effective Enforcement and Benefits to Public Health" Remarks at Food and Drug Law Institute, August 6, 2009, http://www.fda.gov/NewsEvents/Speeches/ucm175983.htm.

2. B. M. Kuehn, "FDA Steps Up Efforts to Find, Remove Violators of Clinical Trial Regulations," JAMA, 302( 16) 1739-1741 (2009).

3. Information Sheet Guidance for Sponsors, Clinical Investigators, and IRBs Frequently Asked Questions–Statement of Investigator (Form FDA 1572), May 2010

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