Johanne ☆ Canada, 2018-08-02 02:31 (2425 d 04:00 ago) Posting: # 19125 Views: 3,248 |
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Hello, Since I've started to work with BE, I've always seen in protocol that bioanalysis was required to be performed for samples of subject discontinued due to AE or emesis, but could be omitted for subjects discontinued for other reasons. I'm looking for the specific guidance (EMA, FDA) related to this requirement. Can someone help ? Joe |
Helmut ★★★ ![]() ![]() Vienna, Austria, 2018-08-02 04:02 (2425 d 02:29 ago) @ Johanne Posting: # 19126 Views: 2,949 |
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Hi Joe, I’m not aware of any guidance covering such a case. For my personal opinion see this post. Sometimes volunteers withdraw consent “for personal reasons” not reporting AEs (being afraid that they will not be recruited for another study). The budget of the study covers analysis of all samples – so why not analyze them? — Dif-tor heh smusma 🖖🏼 Довге життя Україна! ![]() Helmut Schütz ![]() The quality of responses received is directly proportional to the quality of the question asked. 🚮 Science Quotes |
ElMaestro ★★★ Denmark, 2018-08-02 13:14 (2424 d 17:18 ago) @ Johanne Posting: # 19127 Views: 3,188 |
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Hi Johanne, first of all, from a data perspective I agree with what Helmut said. However, I recall a case where the authority interpretation of a withdrawn consent was that if a trial subject withdraws her consent, then it implicitly also implies that she withdraws her permission for the CRO to touch the un-analysed samples she has given up until the time of consent retraction. This is of course a matter of interpretation, but actually it also makes sense to me. When it comes to rights of trial subjects there is no reason to take any chances. In this regard we need to think about ICH E6 §2.3 - rights, safety and well-being before science. Other clauses are in play, too. — Pass or fail! ElMaestro |