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Electronic Data Acquisition in Clinical Trials

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Electronic Data Acquisition. in Clinical Trials. Alan Young & Chris Bray. CTSU. Data Wanted! ... Financial - can we afford to build, deploy and maintain a system ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Electronic Data Acquisition in Clinical Trials


1
Electronic Data Acquisition in Clinical Trials
  • Alan Young Chris Bray
  • CTSU

2
Data Wanted!
  • Better
  • Cheaper

3
Workshop Plan
  • Demonstration of technologies available
  • Example scenarios
  • Group presentations and discussion
  • Comparisons
  • Summary and round-up

4
Principal Distinction
  • Proxy Methods user passes data to Centre in
    non-electronic format for conversion and storage
    by a member of Centre
  • Direct Methods user enters data into Central
    computer systems without any other manual
    assistance

5
Principal Distinction
  • Direct
  • Web Browser
  • Mobile Phone
  • Laptop
  • Palm Pilot
  • Proxy
  • Paper
  • Telephone
  • Optical Recognition

6
Comparison Factors
  • Financial - can we afford to build, deploy and
    maintain a system
  • Quality - how good is the data we will obtain
  • Security - is it private and robust
  • Experiential - is use sufficiently easy that
    people complete first entry and are willing to
    use it again

7
1. Paper
  • User enters data onto a paper form
  • Form is mailed/faxed to Centre
  • Operator re-types data into Centre computer

8
Paper Characteristics
  • Good
  • Paper forms ubiquitous
  • Cheapest set-up
  • Bad
  • No quality control at source
  • Bulky to store
  • Error prone to transcribe
  • Easy to intercept or lose

9
2. Telephone
  • User telephones Centre
  • Telephonist interrogates user via structured QA
    dialogue

10
Telephony Centre
11
Trial Menu
12
Data Entry
13
Telephony Characteristics
  • Pro
  • Telephones ubiquitous
  • Quick access
  • Interaction with human operator gives reassurance
  • Con
  • Difficult for non-English speakers
  • Staff must work on 24-hour basis for
    international studies
  • Verbal transcription errors arise
  • Lines can saturate

14
3. Optical Character Recognition
  • User enters data onto a specially designed paper
    form
  • Form is mailed/faxed to Centre
  • Computer attempts to interpret and load form data

15
Optical form definition
16
Optical Data Checking
17
Optical Characteristics
  • Pro
  • Paper forms ubiquitous
  • Much higher throughput than manual re-typing
  • Electronic storage of raw forms facilitated
  • Con
  • Impossible to quality control at source
  • Form design constrained
  • Difficult to handle free-text
  • Manual supervision required

18
4. Web Browser
  • User connects via browser to secure web-page
  • User enters data into special form
  • Web server validates and stores data

19
Web Characteristics
  • Pro
  • Instant validation of data
  • Users tend to self-train
  • Bulk handling easy
  • Data instantly available
  • No paper to be stored
  • Con
  • Requires internet connection
  • Authentication distribution

20
5. Mobile Phone (WAP)
  • User dials secure WAP-page
  • Use enters data into special form
  • WAP server validates and stores data

21
Mobile Phone Characteristics
  • Pro
  • Instant validation of data
  • Bulk handling easy
  • Convenient to carry
  • Data instantly available
  • No paper to be stored
  • Con
  • Requires WAP connection
  • Authentication distribution
  • Clumsy interface

22
6. Laptop
  • Patient interviewed in-situ by trained operative
  • Data entered directly into laptop
  • Data transferred electronically to CTSU

23
Laptop Characteristics
  • Con
  • Expensive equipment
  • Complicated development cycle
  • Pro
  • Instant validation of data
  • Data rapidly available at Centre
  • No paper to be stored
  • Available off-line

24
7. Palm Pilot (PDA)
  • Patient is loaned Palm
  • Patient enters data into Palm
  • Data transferred electronically to CTSU

25
Palm enter meal
26
Palm enter glucose
27
Palm daily record
28
Palm Characteristics
  • Con
  • Expensive equipment
  • Complicated development cycle
  • Easy to lose equipment
  • Variety of interfaces in use
  • Pro
  • Instant validation of data
  • Data rapidly available at CTSU
  • No paper to be stored

29
Example Scenarios
  • There are 4 scenarios
  • Your group has been assigned 2 of the scenarios
    to study and discuss
  • Decide which technologies you feel would be most
    appropriate for these
  • Present your conclusions to the other groups

30
Financial Factors
  • Set-up - how expensive is the system to develop
    in terms of programming, equipment and staff
    training
  • Running - how expensive is the system to run on
    an ongoing per-unit basis

31
Quality Factors
  • Accuracy - how well does it record what the user
    intends it to
  • Consistency - how good is it at spotting and
    correcting logical inconsistencies in data
    entered
  • Accessibility - what fraction of potential users
    can make use of a method

32
Security Factors
  • Robustness - how well does it survive equipment
    failures
  • Privacy how easy is it for unauthorised persons
    to view or alter the data
  • Regulatory what external constraints have to be
    satisfied

33
Experiential Factors
  • Small datasets - is it good for entering things
    like the time of an appointment
  • Large datasets - is it good for entering things
    like a complete medical history
  • Feedback - can it give users feedback on their
    input, such as a randomization allocation
  • Pressure - can users enter data at a time and
    rate of their own choosing

34
Comparison Summary
Higher values are better
35
Summary
  • No method is optimal for a majority of tasks
  • Target audience should be considered when
    selecting methods
  • Many projects will benefit from multiple entry
    channels
  • Particular factors may over-ride all other
    considerations

36
Conclusion
  • Treat computing as an integral part of conducting
    a large study, not an add-on extra.
  • Consider methods of data collection at the very
    first stages of study design

37
Relevant regulations and guidelines
  • ICH-GCP (1996)
  • FDA regulation 21 CFR Part 11 regulation (1997)
  • FDA guideline Computerized systems used in
    clinical trials (1999)

38
Requirements for electronic records
  • Validation
  • System access restrictions
  • Audit trails
  • Record review and record protection

39
Requirements for electronic signatures
  • Can be biometric or non-biometric
  • Signature must be linked to record
  • Shall be unique to an individual
  • Individual's identity must be verified
  • FDA require "Certification Letter" prior to use

40
Non-biometric signatures
  • Minimum of 2 components (ID/password)
  • Only to be used by genuine owner
  • Misuse requires collaboration of 2 or more
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