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43 Courses

Data Protection for Clinical Trials and Medical Research

By Computer Law Training

Data Protection and Clinical Trials

Data Protection for Clinical Trials and Medical Research
Delivered Online
£550

CT12: How to Conduct Clinical Research Under the EU Clinical Trials Regulation

By Zenosis

This course describes the requirements that must be met by, and options available to, the sponsor during the conduct of an authorised clinical trial. It identifies the various interactions with MSCs that occur via the Clinical Trials Information System (CTIS), and it summarises and links to the extensive guidance available from the European Commission and the European Medicines Agency. Its companion course CT11 sets out the European legal and regulatory context for clinical trials and describes how to apply via the CTIS for authorisation to conduct trials. The two courses therefore provide an ideal foundation for understanding and complying with the new law.

CT12: How to Conduct Clinical Research Under the EU Clinical Trials Regulation
Delivered Online On Demand1 hour
£49

CT11: How to Gain Authorisation for Clinical Research Under the EU Clinical Trials Regulation

By Zenosis

This course sets out the procedures that sponsors need to follow to gain authorisation to conduct clinical trials under the Regulation, and it summarises and links to the extensive guidance available from the European Commission and the European Medicines Agency. Its companion course CT12 sets out the procedures that sponsors need to follow to conduct authorised clinical trials in compliance with the Regulation. The two courses therefore provide an ideal foundation for understanding and complying with the new law.

CT11: How to Gain Authorisation for Clinical Research Under the EU Clinical Trials Regulation
Delivered Online On Demand2 hours
£95

CT07: An Introduction to Clinical Trials and Drug Development

By Zenosis

This module provides an understanding of how clinical trials fit into the drug development process. It outlines the key historical events leading to the development of controlled clinical trials. It specifies the purpose of trials, outlines their features, and identifies codes and regulations that apply to them. Finally, it describes the environment of cost control in which the modern pharmaceutical industry operates.

CT07: An Introduction to Clinical Trials and Drug Development
Delivered Online On Demand1 hour 30 minutes
£74

CT04a - Clinical trials in drug development

By Zenosis

New drug development requires major investment in capital, human resources and technical expertise. Strict adherence to regulations on testing and manufacturing standards is also required before a new drug can be marketed. One of the greatest challenges in conducting clinical trials is that of efficiency. As trials become more comprehensive, involving large numbers of participants globally, their duration is prolonged and costs increase. The longer trials last, the shorter is the patent life remaining after market approval and the longer patients must wait for the new product. This short course covers the key components of clinical trials and how these requirements interact with the drug development cycle.

CT04a - Clinical trials in drug development
Delivered Online On Demand30 minutes
£25

CT01: How to Gain and Maintain Approval for Clinical Research Under the EU Clinical Trials Directive

By Zenosis

To conduct a clinical trial in the European Economic Area under the Clinical Trials Directive the sponsor must apply for authorisation from the national competent authority (i.e. medicines regulator), and favourable opinion must be obtained from a research ethics committee, in each member state in which the trial is to take place. This module sets out the requirements for successful compilation, submission and maintenance of the applications.

CT01: How to Gain and Maintain Approval for Clinical Research Under the EU Clinical Trials Directive
Delivered Online On Demand3 hours
£149

CT13: Safety Reporting in Clinical Trials

By Zenosis

This course explains the regulatory requirements for the reporting of adverse events and suspected adverse reactions in clinical trials. It describes how investigators should report to sponsors, and how sponsors should report to regulatory authorities and other stakeholders in the safety of investigational products. It explains how events are characterized as serious or non-serious, expected or unexpected, and it distinguishes the requirements for each category. It describes controlled vocabularies used for coding of events in reports.

CT13: Safety Reporting in Clinical Trials
Delivered Online On Demand2 hours
£95

CT04e - Statistical elements of clinical trials

By Zenosis

Analytical statistical elements are essential concepts in the design of clinical trials. This analysis helps us to understand whether a conclusion from a study of a sample of the target population applies generally to that population as a whole. In particular, it helps us to answer the question: Did the treatment effect in the given study occur just by chance? The statistical elements of a well-controlled study minimise the chances of drawing the wrong conclusions, by providing clear thresholds for such errors. The basic statistical elements of a clinical trial include eligibility criteria, randomisation, sample size, power, and blinding, and these are discussed in this short course.

CT04e - Statistical elements of clinical trials
Delivered Online On Demand30 minutes
£25

CT04g - Data capture and management in clinical trials

By Zenosis

Capture and management of clinical trial data is a challenge. The industry is under pressure to obtain and analyse such data more quickly, while maintaining data integrity, so that products can be brought to market sooner. Effective planning and adequate resources can ensure clinical trials yield high quality data within strict timelines and budget requirements, at the same time satisfying regulatory standards. This short course describes the purpose of data capture and explores efficiencies in data management as part of the evolving regulatory landscape.

CT04g - Data capture and management in clinical trials
Delivered Online On Demand15 minutes
£25

CT14: Clinical Trial Safety Reporting Requirements in the EU and USA

By Zenosis

This course sets out the legal and regulatory requirements for safety reporting in clinical trials of medicinal products under the jurisdictions of the European Union and the USA. It builds on the foundation laid by our companion course CT13, Safety Reporting in Clinical Trials, and provides greater detail of specific requirements in those jurisdictions.

CT14: Clinical Trial Safety Reporting Requirements in the EU and USA
Delivered Online On Demand2 hours
£95
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Educators matching "clinical trials"

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Newcastle University (on behalf of Conect4Children)

newcastle university (on behalf of conect4children)

Newcastle upon Tyne

c4c (conect4children) is a large collaborative European network that aims to facilitate the development of new drugs and other therapies for the entire paediatric population. It is a pioneering opportunity to build capacity for the implementation of multinational paediatric clinical trials whilst ensuring the needs of babies, children, young people and their families are met. c4c is committed to meeting the needs of paediatric patients thanks to a novel collaboration between the academic and the private sectors, which includes 35 academic and 10 industry partners and around 500 affiliated partners. c4c endeavours to provide a sustainable, integrated platform for the efficient and swift delivery of high quality clinical trials in children and young people across all conditions and phases of the drug development process. c4c strives to bring innovative processes to all stages of clinical development by generating a new model of organization and of the clinical development process. By emphasizing inclusiveness and collaboration across geographical, specialty, sectoral, cultural and societal backgrounds, it will set up a new infrastructure to support all evaluations of medicines in children. In this manner, it will become a benchmark in the currently fragmented European clinical research environment. Best practices and up-to-date expert advice will inform the c4c approaches and methods, which will subsequently be refined in the context of viability trials.