Revision 2 of ICH GCP caused confusion to those of us who work with non-interventional studies. The glossary claimed that a ‘clinical trial’ was synonymous with a ‘clinical study’ (Section 1.12 of ICH GCP(R2)). This works if you conduct clinical trials (they are a type of clinical study), but not if you conduct non-interventional studies, which are a type of ‘clinical study other than a clinical trial’ (Article 2.2(4) of Regulation EU/536/2014).
The (draft) Revision 3 of ICH GCP, makes it clear “This guideline applies to interventional clinical trials of investigational products that are intended to be submitted to regulatory authorities. This guideline may also be applicable to other interventional clinical trials of investigational products that are not intended to support marketing authorisation applications in accordance with local requirements.”
Also, the new definition of ‘clinical trial’ provided in the Glossary, removes any confusion regarding clinical trial vs clinical study.
Clinical Trial = Any interventional investigation in human participants intended to discover or verify the clinical, pharmacological and/or other pharmacodynamic effects of an investigational product(s); and/or to identify any adverse reactions to an investigational product(s); and/or to study absorption, distribution, metabolism and excretion of an investigational product(s) with the object of ascertaining its safety and/or efficacy.
The emphasis in ICH GCP(R3) is on ‘interventional’ investigations, although the term ‘intervention’ is missing from the Glossary…as well as most national clinical trial regulations. This may cause trialists some difficulties in the coming years when asked ‘what makes my non-interventional study…interventional?’
This revision to the clinical trial definition and explicit emphasis on ‘interventional clinical trials’ is a positive (constructive) move in the context of real world evidence as it removes the previously unnecessary confusion caused by revision 2 (i.e., clinical trial = clinical study).
The concept paper for Annex 2 was published on 28 April 2023, with the draft expected in 12 – 18 months. Annex 2 is of relevance to RWE because it will include additional considerations on how GCP principles may be applied across a variety of trial designs and data sources, where applicable. This will include:
1. Decentralised elements, where some or all trial-related activities occur at locations other than traditional clinical trial sites, and data collection may occur remotely.
2. Pragmatic elements, reflecting trials that closely resemble routine clinical practice.
3. Real-world data (RWD) sources [not including observational studies], for example, the use of registries, electronic health records (EHR), hospital data, pharmacy and medical claims data or wearables
Next? Is it time for similar harmonised guidelines for ‘non-interventional studies’?
Share this story...
Real World Evidence (RWE) 101 – Ethical Imperatives (CIOMS 2023)
RWE 101 - Ethical Imperatives (CIOMS 2023) Informed decision making with patients typically relies on evidence from clinical trials that describe the likely benefits and toxicities. However, patients treated [...]
Real World Evidence (RWE) 101 – Ethical Imperatives
RWE 101 - Ethical Imperatives Real-world evidence (RWE) refers to the clinical evidence regarding the usage and potential benefits or risks of a product derived from analysis of real-world [...]
Real World Evidence (RWE) 101 – The Importance of Intent
RWE 101 - The Importance of Intent Real-world evidence (RWE) is the clinical evidence about the usage and potential benefits or risks of a product derived from the analysis [...]
Real World Evidence (RWE) 101 – Inspections
RWE 101 - Inspections Real-World Evidence (RWE) can include data from sources such as electronic health records (EHRs), insurance claims and billing activities, patient registries, patient-generated data, and data [...]
Real World Evidence (RWE) 101 – Audits
RWE 101 - Audits A quality assurance auditor in the context of a real-world evidence (RWE) study has several responsibilities, key among them ensuring that all facets of the [...]
Real World Evidence (RWE) 101 – Compliance Maps
RWE 101 - Compliance Maps In the context of multi-country Real-World Evidence (RWE) studies, "Regulatory Compliance Maps" are essentially a detailed representation of the diverse regulatory requirements specific to [...]







