Clinical Trial Terminology
- December 31, 2021
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
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Clinical Trial Terminology
Subject – Science and Tech
Context – Covaxin trials on children show robust safety, says Bharat Biotech
Concept –
- While preclinical research that is done in a lab can provide foundation information about how a drug may work and its safety, it is not a substitute for studies that show how the drug will interact with the human body.
- The term “clinical trials” or “clinical research” refers to studies that are conducted in people. Researchers design clinical trials to answer specific research questions related to a drug candidate.
- A successful clinical trial process continues until the developer files a marketing application with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) or a regulatory agency in another country for the medication to be approved for doctors to prescribe to patients.
Though the phases and design of clinical trials may be different for certain diseases and specialized medicines, such as cancer drugs or gene therapies, here is a general overview of each phase of a clinical trial for most medications:
Pre-clinical studies, also called laboratory studies, include:
- Cell studies: These are often the first tests done on a new treatment. To see if it might work, researchers look for effects of the new treatment on cancer cells that are grown in a lab dish or a test tube. These studies may be done on human cancer cells or animal cancer cells.
- Animal studies: Treatments that look promising in cell studies are tested next on cancers in live animals. This gives researchers an idea of how safe the new treatment is in a living creature.
Phase 1:
- During Phase 1 studies, researchers generally test a new drug candidate in healthy volunteers (healthy people). In most cases, 20 to 80 healthy volunteers participate in Phase 1.
Phase 2:
- In Phase 2 studies, researchers administer the drug to a larger group of patients (typically up to a few hundred) with the disease or condition for which the drug is being developed to initially assess its effectiveness and to further study its safety.
- A key focus of Phase 2 studies is determining the optimal dose or doses of a drug candidate, in order to determine how best to administer the drug to maximize possible benefits, while minimizing risks.
Phase 3:
- For diseases affecting many patients, Phase 3 studies typically involve 300 to 3,000 participants from patient populations for which the medicine is eventually intended to be used.
- Researchers design Phase 3 studies – among other things – to demonstrate whether or not a drug candidate offers a treatment benefit to a specific population provide more detailed safety data, and serve as the basis for product labeling.
Approval:
- When one or more Phase 3 trials are completed, the researchers examine the results and decide whether the drug has demonstrated effectiveness and an acceptable safety profile in treating a disease.
- If so, the company can submit a New Drug Application (NDA), which contains all of the data and information gathered at every stage of the process through the results of the Phase 3 clinical trial(s), as well as other information required by the applicable regulatory authority.
- The NDA is submitted to the FDA (or analogous applications may be submitted to other regulatory agencies outside the US) for consideration for marketing approval.
- Because Phase 3 trial results often provide the basis for approval, Phase 3 trials are sometimes also called pivotal trials. If the drug is approved, doctors can prescribe the medication for their patients.