Throughout the entire clinical development, who has the most interaction with prospective and active subjects? Who is primarily responsible for the quality of the source data that ultimately decides the approvability of all biopharmaceutical products?
Throughout the entire clinical development, who has the most interaction with prospective and active subjects? Who is primarily responsible for the quality of the source data that ultimately decides the approvability of all biopharmaceutical products?
Principal investigators were asked who satisfaction surveys should focus on during a study. Site Coordinators were named more than half the time, ahead of PIs themselves.
Yes, the answers are identical: the site coordinator, study coordinator, or clinical research coordinator, whatever title you choose. These individuals are the keystone, the glue that holds the study process together. Without them very few patients would be randomized, informed consent forms would not be completed, site contracts would not be negotiated, data would not be entered, queries would not get resolved, and database lock would be delayed.
Delay is the key point. Site coordinators help a study stay on track. Without good ones, hitting milestones would be nearly impossible.
ISR dedicated an entire study (The Voice of the Site Coordinator— www.isrreports.com/reports) to understanding site coordinator's experiences and perspectives on improving the success of clinical trials.
—Industry Standard Research
Unifying Industry to Better Understand GCP Guidance
May 7th 2025In this episode of the Applied Clinical Trials Podcast, David Nickerson, head of clinical quality management at EMD Serono; and Arlene Lee, director of product management, data quality & risk management solutions at Medidata, discuss the newest ICH E6(R3) GCP guidelines as well as how TransCelerate and ACRO have partnered to help stakeholders better acclimate to these guidelines.
Gilead Shares Final Data from Phase III MYR301 Trial of Bulevirtide in Chronic Hepatitis Delta Virus
May 7th 2025Long-term results from the study show 90% of patients with chronic HDV who achieved undetectable HDV RNA at 96 weeks of treatment remained undetectable for nearly 2 years post-treatment.