ClinicalTrials.gov
ClinicalTrials.gov is a registry of clinical trials. It is run by the United States National Library of Medicine at the National Institutes of Health, and holds registrations from over 444,000 trials from 221 countries.
History
As a result of pressure from HIV-infected men in the gay community, who demanded better access to clinical trials, the U.S. Congress passed the Health Omnibus Programs Extension Act of 1988 which mandated the development of a database of AIDS Clinical Trials Information Services. This effort served as an example of what might be done to improve public access to clinical trials, and motivated other disease-related interest groups to push for something similar for all diseases.The Food and Drug Administration Modernization Act of 1997 amended the Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act and the Public Health Service Act to require that the NIH create and operate a public information resource, which came to be called ClinicalTrials.gov, tracking drug efficacy studies resulting from approved Investigational New Drug applications. With the primary purpose of improving access of the public to clinical trials where individuals with serious diseases and conditions might find experimental treatments, this law required information about:
- Federally and privately funded clinical trials;
- The purpose of each experimental drug;
- Subject eligibility criteria to participate in the clinical trial;
- The location of clinical trial sites being used for a study; and
- A point of contact for patients interested in enrolling in the trial.
As the result of toxicity tracking concerns raised following retraction of several drugs from the prescription market, ClinicalTrials.gov was further reinforced by the Food and Drug Administration Amendments Act of 2007 which mandated the expansion of ClinicalTrials.gov for better tracking of the basic results of clinical trials, requiring:
- Data elements that facilitate disclosure, as required by the FDAAA, as well as operations of ClinicalTrials.gov; and
- "Basic results" reporting.
Timeline
Later Developments
In a 2009 meeting of the National Institutes of Health speakers said that one of the goals was to have more clearly defined and consistent standards for reporting. As of March 2015, the NIH was still considering the details of this rule change.A study of trials conducted between 2008 and 2012 found that about half of those required to be reported had not been. A 2014 study of pre-2009 trials found that many had serious discrepancies between what was reported on clinicaltrials.gov versus the peer-reviewed journal articles reporting the same studies.
Content
Trial record life-cycle
The trial typically goes through stages of: initial registration, ongoing record updates, and basic summary result submission. Each trial record is administered by a trial record manager. A trial record manager typically provides initial trial registration prior to the study enrolling the first participant. This also facilitates informing potential participants that the trial is no longer recruiting participants. Once all participants were recruited, the trial record may be updated to indicate that is closed to recruitment. Once all measurements are collected, the trial status is updated to 'complete'. If the trial terminates for some reason, the status may be updated to 'terminated'. Once final trial results are known or legal deadlines are met, the trial record manager may upload basic summary results to the registry either by filling a complex web-based form or submitting a compliant XML file.Search
Standard Search
To search in ClinicalTrials.gov, users filter by All Studies, or select a certain phase in the study's recruitment. Then the user enters a search keyword or phrase into at least one of the provided search fields. Next, the user clicks the Search button, and results populate according to the user's input.Data sources
The database for Aggregate Analysis of ClinicalTrials.gov is a publicly available source based on the data in ClinicalTrials.gov.It was designed to facilitate aggregate analysis by normalizing some of the metadata across trials.