This document outlines the phases of clinical trials, from Phase 0 to Phase IV. It defines clinical trials as prospective biomedical studies on human subjects to answer questions about interventions. The objectives are listed as diagnosing or treating disease, preventing disease or early death, or changing behaviors. The phases are described in order from exploratory studies in small groups in Phase 0 to post-marketing surveillance trials in large populations in Phase IV. The importance of clinical trials is that they follow strict scientific standards to protect patients and produce reliable results, as a final stage of research after laboratory and animal testing.
2. Definition
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Clinical trials are prospective biomedical or
behavioral research studies on human
subjects that are designed to answer specific
questions about biomedical or behavioral
interventions (novel vaccines, drugs,
treatments, functional foods, dietary
supplements, devices or new ways of using
known interventions), generating safety
and efficacy data
3. WHO Definiton
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Any research study that prospectively assigns
human participants or groups of humans to
one or more health related measures obtained
in patients or participants, including
pharmacokinetic measures and adverse
events
4. Objectives of Clinical Trials
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To diagnose or detect disease
To treat an existing disorder
To prevent disease or early death
To change behaviour, habits or other lifestyle
factors
5. Types of Clinical Trials
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Treatment Trials
Prevention Trials
Diagnostic Trials
Screening Trials
Quality of life trials
7. Phase 0:
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Studies conducted before the traditional phase 1
studies
It is also called as the Exploratory IND studies
Helps to take the go Vs no-go decision-making
10-15 number of subjects
Limited dosing duration (<7 days)
Microdosing is done (1/100 th dose of the
pharmacological effect)
No therapeutic or diagnostic intent
Only to study pharmacokinetic and
pharmacodynamic characteristics
8. Phase I:
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Phase I trials are the first stage of testing in
human subjects
A small group of 20–100 healthy volunteers is
taken
This phase is designed to assess the safety
(pharmacovigilance),
tolerability, pharmacokinetics,
and pharmacodynamics of a drug
9. Phase II:
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Once a dose or range of doses is determined,
the next goal is to evaluate whether the drug
has any biological activity or effect
Phase II trials are performed on larger groups
(100-300) and are designed to assess how
well the drug works, as well as to continue
Phase I safety assessments in a larger group
of volunteers and patients
10. 10
Phase II studies are sometimes divided into
Phase IIA and Phase IIB.
Phase IIA is specifically designed to assess
dosing requirements (how much drug should
be given).
Phase IIB is specifically designed to study
efficacy (how well the drug works at the
prescribed dose(s))
When the development process for a new drug
fails, this usually occurs during Phase II trials
when the drug is discovered not to work as
planned, or to have toxic effects
11. Phase III:
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This phase is designed to assess the
effectiveness of the new intervention and,
thereby, its value in clinical practice
Phase III studies are randomized
controlled multicenter trials on large patient
groups (300–3,000 or more depending upon
the disease/medical condition studied)
Because of their size and comparatively long
duration, Phase III trials are the most
expensive, time-consuming and difficult trials
to design and run
12. Phase IV:
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Phase IV trial is also known as postmarketing
surveillance Trial
Phase IV trials involve the safety surveillance
(pharmacovigilance) and ongoing technical
support of a drug after it receives permission
to be sold
The safety surveillance is designed to detect
any rare or long-term adverse effects over a
much larger patient population and longer time
period than was possible during the Phase I-III
clinical trials
14. Importance of Clinical Trials
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The purpose of clinical trials is research, so the
studies follow strict scientific standards. These
standards protect patients and help produce
reliable study results.
Clinical trials are one of the final stages of a long
and careful research process. The process often
begins in a laboratory (lab), where scientists first
develop and test new ideas.
If an approach seems promising, the next step
may involve animal testing. This shows how the
approach affects a living body and whether it's
harmful. However, an approach that works well in
the lab or animals doesn't always work well in
people. Thus, research in humans is needed.