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Title: Presented by:Robert Lindblad, M.D.


1
Identifying, Reporting and Resolving
Adverse Events in CTN Trials
  • Presented by Robert Lindblad, M.D.
  • Blake Apple
  • Maria Campanella, B.S.N., R.N., CCRA

2
Training Outline
  • Bob Lindblad, MD
  • Monitoring safety in research studies
  • Clinical and regulatory importance
  • New regulations and guidelines
  • Blake Apple
  • Safety Reporting The Site Perspective
  • Identifying
  • Naming (Verbatims)
  • Characterizing
  • Reporting
  • Maria Campanella, BSN,RN, CCRA
  • Responsibility and resources
  • MedDRA Coding
  • Resolving
  • Discussion and guidance
  • Closing the data base reconciliation

3
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4
Why Monitor Safety?
  • HUMAN SUBJECT PROTECTION
  • The Declaration of Helsinki
  • Concern for the interests of the subjects
  • must always prevail over the interests of
  • science and society.
  • Primum non nocere
  • Hippocrates, 460-377 BC

5
Why Monitor Safety?
  • GUIDELINES and REGULATIONS
  • ICH GCP guidelines
  • The rights, safety, and well-being of the trial
    subjects are the most important considerations
    and should prevail over interests of science and
    society.
  • The Federal Government
  • All clinical trials supported or conducted by
    the Federal Government must monitor and protect
    the safety of human subjects.

6
Why Monitor Safety
  • Not an IND study
  • Funded through NIH
  • Good Clinical Practice

7
Strategy for Reporting
Population
Intervention
RISK
8
Strategy for Reporting
  • Identify the Risk in the proposed clinical trial
  • Tailor the reporting to the identified risk
  • Maintain standard Adverse Event language
  • Definitions
  • Severity grading
  • Relationship designation

9
New Regulations
  • FDA issued new regulations regarding safety
    reporting
  • Will impact all clinical trial reporting
  • Increased consistency with ICH and GCP guidelines

10
Summary
  • Why report Safety?
  • It is the right thing to do to ensure
    participants well being in a clinical research
    study
  • NIDA CTN population meets the definition of a
    vulnerable population

11
Safety Event Process Recommendations
Identifying Reviewing
Resolving
AEorSAE
Reporting Verbatims
Discussion Guidance
12
Identifying Safety Events
Identifying Reviewing
What is a Safety Event?
  • The term Safety Events includes both
  • Adverse Events and Serious Adverse Events

13
Identifying Safety Events
  • What is an Adverse Event (AE)?
  • Any reaction, side effect, or untoward event
  • that occurs during the course of the clinical
    trial, whether or not the event
  • is considered clinically significant
  • or related to the intervention.

14
Identifying Safety Events
  • What is a Serious Adverse Event (SAE)?
  • A SAE is an AE that results in
  • Death or
  • or Is life-threatening
  • or Requires admission to an inpatient medical
    facility
  • or Prolongs a hospitalization
  • or Persistent or significant disability or
    incapacity
  • or Is a birth defect or congenital anomaly
  • or Requires medical intervention to prevent one
    of the above

15
Reporting Safety Events
  • WHEN are AEs and SAEs reported?
  • Research staff should assess for reportable AEs
    and SAEs at every study visit.
  • All reportable AE/SAEs should be entered into the
    EDC system via the Adverse Events CRF as soon as
    the site becomes aware of the event.
  • All information related to a reported AE should
    be entered into the EDC system within 7 days of
    the site becoming aware of the event.
  • All information related to a reported SAE should
    be entered into the EDC system within 24 hours of
    the site becoming aware of the event.

16
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17
Identifying Safety Events
Know your Protocol its all in the details
  • The protocol defines the rules for reporting
    adverse events.
  • It also defines the notification time frames and
    reporting responsibilities.

18
Adverse events can be identified through a
variety of ways
  • Direct participant discussions
  • Direct observation of the participant (bruises
    etc)
  • Family or friends of the participant
  • Newspaper articles, as in death announcements
  • Confidential discussions with other research
    staff
  • Discussions with outside providers, if the
    participant has given consent to do so

19
Following up on Unresolved AE/SAEs
  • It is easy to forget a certain participant has an
    open AE.

20
Identifying Safety Events
Identifying Reviewing
  • Safety events are chronically underreported in
    clinical trials
  • the participant is not forthcoming with the
    information
  • the research staff isnt asking the right
    questions
  • the information is hidden in a progress note
    and not recorded appropriately as a safety event
  • participants sometimes report AEs in regular
    conversations

21
Reporting Safety Events
  • WHAT information about an AE/SAE
  • needs to be reported
  • When a Participant Reports an Event, the RA
    has to figure out
  • 1- The name of the event
  • 2- The severity of the event
  • 3- The relatedness of the event
  • 4- If the event is a Serious Adverse Event?
  • 5- If the event is a reportable one?
  • (To whom, what and when?)

22
Reporting Safety Events
  • The Biggest Challenge? The Name of the Event
  • Knowing how to take everything that you see and
    hear during your assessment and boiling it down
    to
  • one, accurate and succinct term
  • Avoiding getting caught in the drama of the
    event
  • It sounds a lot easier than it is.

23
Naming the Events
  • The Name of the Event
  • The Verbatim the AE description
  • Simple
  • Accurate
  • 2-3 words
  • Prefer a diagnosis to symptoms

24
Naming the Events
  • Examples of AEs that were incorrectly reported
    during other clinical trials

Oops!
25
Normally normal after drinking coffee
Naming Safety Events
26
Avoid Vague or Ambiguous Medical Terms
Naming Safety Events
AE Term AE Term AE Term
Incorrect Eye problem Borderline cardio reply Liver disturbance
Why? What is the problem? What does reply mean? What is the disturbance?
Correct Eye pain Congestive heart failure Fatty liver
Site action Record diagnosis if obtainable. If diagnosis unobtainable, record one specific sign/symptom per line. Record diagnosis if obtainable. If diagnosis unobtainable, record one specific sign/symptom per line. Record diagnosis if obtainable. If diagnosis unobtainable, record one specific sign/symptom per line.
27
HEARS NEW AGE MUSIC WHEN THE FURNACE TURNS ON
Naming Safety Events
Could this be a hallucination?
28
LK RTCTL UNSP XTRNDL ORG
Naming Safety Events
29
Watch out for Abbreviations and Acronyms
Naming Safety Events
AE Term AE Term
Incorrect CA DM
Why? Could be -Cardiac arrest -Coronary angioplasty Could be Diastolic murmur -Dermatomyositis -Or others
Correct Cancer Diabetes Mellitus
Site action Avoid use of abbreviations or acronyms since they can be ambiguous. Enter each word completely. Avoid use of abbreviations or acronyms since they can be ambiguous. Enter each word completely.
30
ABDOMINAL DISCOMFORT SECONDARY TO AIRPLANE FOOD
INGESTION
Naming Safety Events
31
Avoid Extraneous Data Keep it simple
Naming Safety Events
AE Term AE Term
Incorrect Vomited several times at midnight after eating spicy food Headache off and on during the evening
Why? Frequency, time and food type unnecessary in AE field Frequency and time unnecessary in AE field
Correct Vomited Headache
Site action If date/time/severity, etc. are needed, fields will be provided. Record the additional data in appropriate fields, not the AE name field. If date/time/severity, etc. are needed, fields will be provided. Record the additional data in appropriate fields, not the AE name field.
32
MUSCLE PAIN IN THE BAG
Naming Safety Events
33
Where is it?Body Site is Needed for Certain
Conditions
Naming Safety Events
AE Term AE Term AE Term
Incorrect Obstruction Congestion Ulcer
Why? These conditions can occur in multiple locations. These conditions can occur in multiple locations. These conditions can occur in multiple locations.
Correct Bronchial obstruction Venous congestion Ulcer (site unknown)
Site action Record body site/organ for ambiguous medical terms. If body site is unobtainable, document that it is unknown. Record body site/organ for ambiguous medical terms. If body site is unobtainable, document that it is unknown. Record body site/organ for ambiguous medical terms. If body site is unobtainable, document that it is unknown.
34
PEES LIKE A CAMEL
Naming Safety Events
35
We Need Complete Medical Terminology
Naming Safety Events
AE Term AE Term AE Term AE Term
Incorrect Diabetes Anorexia Cold Sore
Why? Could be mellitus or insipidus Different conditions Feels cold or has an infection Could be a lesion or has sore muscles
Correct Diabetes Insipidus Anorexia nervosa Chest cold Cold soreSore shoulder
Site action Ensure complete medical condition is recorded. Ensure complete medical condition is recorded. Ensure complete medical condition is recorded. Ensure complete medical condition is recorded.
36
PATIENT RECENTLY BEGAN NEW JOB WHERE HE WORKS
AROUND CHICKEN WINGS AND BARBECUE SAUCE
Naming Safety Events
Nice Information! But what is The adverse event?
37
HEADACHES and SEEING PEOPLE IN ROOM, SEEING
CHICKENS AT WINDOW
Naming Safety Events
38
Dont Place Multiple Diagnoses in One Entry
Naming Safety Events
AE Term AE Term
Incorrect Broken finger/Hand abrasions Urinary bladder obstruction with Cystitis
Why? 2 events 2 events
Correct Broken finger Hand abrasions Urinary bladder obstruction Cystitis
Site action Record only one medical diagnosis per line. Record only one medical diagnosis per line.
39
Reporting Safety Events
Reporting Safety Events
  • Why is the getting the verbatim right
  • so important?
  • MedDRA Coding
  • (Medical Dictionary for Regulatory Activities)

40
MedDRA Coding
  • MedDRA - the Medical Dictionary for Regulatory
    Activities
  • medical terminology used to classify adverse
    event
  • coding allows health authorities and the
    biopharmaceutical industry to more readily
    exchange and analyze data related to the safe use
    of medical products.
  • MedDRA was developed by the International
    Conference on Harmonisation (ICH)

41
MedDRA Coding
42
MedDRA Coding
  • The structural elements of the MedDRA terminology
    are as follows
  • SOC Highest level of the terminology, and
    distinguished by anatomical or physiological
    system, etiology, or purpose
  • HLGT Subordinate to SOC, superordinate
    descriptor for one or more HLTs
  • HLT Subordinate to HLGT, superordinate
    descriptor for one or more PTs
  • PT Represents a single medical concept
  • LLT Lowest level of the terminology, related to
    a single PT as a synonym, lexical variant, or
    quasi-synonym (Note All PTs have an identical
    LLT).

43
MedDRA Coding
44
Reporting Safety Events
  • Once youve named the event,
  • then you have to characterize it.
  • Events are characterized by determining
  • the relatedness and severity.

45
Reporting Safety Events
Relatedness requires an assessment of temporal
relationships
  • The relatedness of the event refers to whether
  • the event is thought to have been
  • caused by or made worse by the study intervention

46
Event Relatedness
  • Is the event related to the study intervention
    that the participant has been randomized to?
  • NO Unrelated No reasonable temporal sequence and
    if the event can most likely be explained by the
    study participants clinical disease state or by
    other therapies
  • YES Possibly A reasonable temporal sequence,
    follows a known response pattern, but could have
    been produced by the study participants clinical
    state or by other therapies
  • YES Probably A reasonable temporal sequence,
    follows a known response pattern, cannot be
    reasonably explained by the known characteristics
    of the study participants clinical state or other
    therapies
  • YES Definitely A temporal sequence follows a
    known response pattern.

47
Reporting Safety Event - Severity
  • Grade 1 Mild
  • Transient or mild discomfort (less than 48 hours)
    no or minimal medical Intervention/therapy
    required, hospitalization not necessary.
  • Grade 2 - Moderate
  • Mild to moderate limitation in activity, some
    assistance may be needed no or minimal
    intervention/ therapy required, hospitalization
    possible.
  • Grade 3 - Severe
  • Marked limitation in activity, some assistance
    usually required medical intervention/ therapy
    required, hospitalization possible.
  • Grade 4 - Life-threatening
  • Extreme limitation in activity, significant
    medical/ therapy intervention required,
    hospitalization or hospice care probable.
  • Grade 5 - Death
  • Remember that death is not the SAEthe cause of
    the death is the SAEdeath is the outcome.

48
Reporting Safety Events
  • Remember that Severe and Serious
  • are not the same thing
  • Serious events may be Grade 2 (Moderate)
  • Grade 3 (Severe) events are NOT always serious

Know your protocol!
Death or or Is life-threatening or Requires
admission to an inpatient medical facility or
Prolongs a hospitalization or Persistent or
significant disability or incapacity or Is a
birth defect or congenital anomaly or Requires
medical intervention to prevent one of the above
49
Reporting Safety Events
The reportability of an event in CTN trials
based on TWO things
  • Your Protocol
  • Your IRB

Protocol
50
Reporting Safety Events
  • WHO reports AEs and SAEs?
  • The participant Study staff
  • The study staff EDC Site IRB
  • EDC NIDA CTN Safety Office
  • NIDA CTN Safety Office Sponsor

51
Protocol Reporting Requirements
Reporting Safety Events
  • Knowledge of the protocol requirements
  • A process
  • for eliciting adverse event related information
    from your participants
  • for reporting this information to the Medical
    Monitor/Safety Monitor in the appropriate
    timeframes
  • for following up and resolving reported events.

52
IRB Reporting Requirements
Reporting Safety Events
  • Knowledge about how your site IRB(s) reporting
    requirements differ from the protocol
    requirements.
  • A process for reporting to the IRB and for
    documenting evidence of this reporting to a
    protocol monitor.

53
Consider a Cheat Sheet that will Breakdown what
isReportable for Protocol vs. Reportable for the
IRB
54
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55
Resolving Safety Events
  • Youve identified, named, characterized and
    reported a safety event according to the protocol
    and your IRB

Now what?
56
Resolving Safety Events
  • All Adverse Events including deaths reported in a
    Clinical Trial should have
  • An outcome
  • A resolution date (end date)

57
Resolving Safety Events
What is the difference between clinical
resolution and regulatory resolution?
  • Clinical resolution
  • Events may never be resolved and may be
    chronic or ongoingforever.
  • Regulatory resolution
  • Events may be resolved when they are medically
    stable or when they are no longer followed within
    the parameters of a clinical trial

58
Resolution Outcomes
Ongoing From a clinical standpoint, when an event is not yet resolved and the participant is still enrolled in the trial Events is this category should move to a resolution category as soon as resolution is achieved
Resolved An event is no longer present or when an event is medically stable
Resolved with sequelae The event is no longer active and there may be some residual effects from the event
Resolved by convention From a regulatory standpoint, when no follow up about the event is anticipated and a window of time, defined as 30 days past the study termination date or 30 days past the active study participation date has passed.
Death A death is reported
59
Resolving Safety Events
  • Resolved by Convention
  • AEs/SAEs are to be followed until resolved or
    medically stable or until 30 days have passed
    since study completion.
  • If study participant is lost to follow up and
    resolution information about a previously
    reported event is not anticipated, the site
    should make every effort to locate the
    participant in order to resolve the event.
  • Once the study participation window ends however,
    attempt to contact a participant for 30 days. If
    no contact made, then the event may be resolved
    by convention.

60
Responsibility and Resources
  • Any research staff member who comes into contact
    with an individual enrolled in a clinical trial
    has a responsibility to identify and report
    adverse events.

61
Know Your Safety Resources
  • The Protocol
  • The Protocol Manual of Operations and
  • CRF Instructions Manual
  • The Protocol Safety Monitor
  • The Protocol Monitor for your site
  • The Protocol Lead Study Team

62
Questions?
63
Questions?
64
Polling Question Review
  • Why care about safety events in a CTN clinical
    trial?
  • NIH requires safety monitoring.
  • What determines the risk in a clinical trial?
  • Risk is determined by the intervention and the
    population being studied
  • A participant reports they have had a symptoms of
    a cold for the last week. You would
  • I would determine the severity of the event and
    then the relatedness, and then determine from the
    protocol whether or not it is reportable
  • You hear through the grapevine that a study
    participant has died. What should you do next?
  • Always report the death, even if details are
    pending
  • A study participant has an ongoing adverse event.
    Despite all efforts the participant is lost to
    follow up. What should you do next?
  • Always resolve an event

65
Clinical Trials Network Dissemination
Library
National Drug Abuse Treatment
A copy of this presentation will be available
electronically after the meeting from
CTN Dissemination Library
http//ctndisseminationlibrary.org
and
NIDA Livelink
https//livelink.nida.nih.gov
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