CDISC Glossary Controlled Terminology

CDISC Glossary Controlled Terminology, 2017-12-22
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C67497CDISC Glossary

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C67497CDISC GlossaryThe terminology of the Clinical Data Interchange Standards Consortium (CDISC) glossary.CDISC Glossary Terminology
510(k)C80442510(k). Premarket Notification (PMN) required for certain medical devices. See http://www.fda.gov/cdrh/510khome.html.Premarket Device Notification
abbreviationC42610abbreviation. A set of letters that are drawn from a word or from a sequence of words and that are used for brevity in place of the full word or phrase. NOTE: An abbreviation is NOT pronounced as a word, but each letter is read in sequence (e.g., NIH). Compare to acronym.Abbreviation
absorptionC71733The process by which medications reach the blood stream when administered other than intravenously, for example, through nasal membranes. See also ADME (pharmacokinetics).Biological Absorption
acronymC93495A word formed from the beginning letters (e.g., ANSI) or a combination of syllables and letters (e.g., MedDRA) of a name or phrase. NOTE: An acronym is usually pronounced as a word, not by speaking each letter individually. Compare to abbreviationAcronym
action letterC142550An official communication from FDA to an NDA sponsor announcing an agency decision. See also approval letter, approvable letter, not-approvable letter.FDA Action Letter
activationC142528Enabling an eClinical trial system to capture data; usually used for EDC systems.Electronic Data Capture Activation
active ingredientC82533Any component of a drug product intended to furnish pharmacological activity or other direct effect in the diagnosis, cure, mitigation, treatment, or prevention of disease, or to affect the structure or any function of the body of humans or other animals. [Segen's Medical Dictionary]Active Ingredient
adequate and well-controlled studiesC142382Studies used to support drug marketing authorization and intended to provide substantial evidence of effectiveness required by law to support a conclusion that a drug is effective. NOTE: For additional information see COA glossary of terms. [After 1. FDA Clinical Outcome Assessment (COA) Glossary; 2. 21 CFR 314.126]Adequate and Well-controlled Study
administrable dosage formC142383Any component of a drug product intended to furnish pharmacological activity or other direct effect in the diagnosis, cure, mitigation, treatment, or prevention of disease, or to affect the structure or any function of the body of humans or other animals. [Segen's Medical Dictionary]Administrable Dosage Form
admission criteriaC142384Basis for selecting target population for a clinical trial. Subjects must be screened to ensure that their characteristics match a list of admission criteria and that none of their characteristics match any single one of the exclusion criteria set up for the study. See also inclusion criteria, exclusion criteria.Admission Criteria
adverse drug reaction (ADR)C142385adverse drug experienceAny noxious and unintended response associated with the use of a drug in humans. NOTE: 1. Post-approval: an adverse event that occurs at doses normally used in man for prophylaxis, diagnosis, or therapy of diseases or for modification of physiological function. 2. Pre-approval: an adverse event that occurs at any dose and where a causal relationship is at least a reasonable possibility. 3. FDA 21 CFR 310.305 defines an adverse drug experience to include any adverse event, "whether or not considered to be drug-related." CDISC recognizes that current usage incorporates the concept of causality. [WHO Technical Report 498(1972); ICH E2A]Adverse Drug Reaction
adverse event (AE)C41331adverse experience;side effectsAny untoward medical occurrence in a patient or clinical investigation subject administered a pharmaceutical product and which does not necessarily have a causal relationship with this treatment. an adverse event (AE) can therefore be any unintended sign (including an abnormal laboratory finding), symptom, or disease temporally associated with the use of a medicinal (investigational) product, whether or not related to the medicinal (investigational) product. NOTE: For further information, see the ICH Guideline for Clinical safety Data Management: Definitions and standards for expedited Reporting. [After ICH E2A] See also serious adverse event, serious adverse experience.Adverse Event
adverse reactionC41332A response to a medicinal product, devices, or procedures, which is noxious and unintended. Response in this context means that a causal relationship between a medicinal product and an adverse event is at least a reasonable possibility. In the context of drug development, the term is used as a synonym of adverse drug reaction. (After ICH E2A)Adverse Reaction
alertC142753To cause a high-priority signal (or warning) to be transmitted to the relevant stakeholder by way of the local system or another system (usually according to an established set of rules). For example, the system may transmit an alert to a patient's cardiologist that the patient has experienced another heart attack. another example is that the pharmacy system may transmit an alert to the prescribing physician that a potentially dangerous drug-drug interaction may occur based on the current list of medications. another example is that the system may notify a patient's physician that laboratory results (that are not within normal limits) are available. [HL7 EHR-SFM Glossary of Terms, 2010]System Alert
algorithmC16275Step-by-step procedures for making a series of choices among alternative decisions to reach a calculated result or decision. NOTE: An algorithm may be used clinically to guide treatment decisions for an individual patient on the basis of the patient's clinical outcome or result. [after AMA Style Guide, 9th Edition]Algorithm
alpha errorC142387The likelihood that a relationship observed between two variables is due to chance. The probability of a Type 1 error. [Modified from AMA Manual of Style]Alpha Error
amendmentC41200A written description of a change(s) to, or formal clarification of, a protocol.Amendment
American National Standards Institute (ANSI)C142388Founded in 1918, ANSI itself does not develop standards. ANSI's roles include serving as the coordinator for US voluntary standards efforts, acting as the approval body to recognize documents developed by other national organizations as American National Standards, acting as the US representative in international and regional standards efforts, and serving as a clearinghouse for national and international standards development information. [HL7]American National Standards Institute
analysis datasetC142389An organized collection of data or information with a common theme arranged in rows and columns and represented as a single file; comparable to a database table. NOTE: standardizing analysis datasets is intended to make review and assessment of analysis more consistent [ADaM].Analysis Dataset
analysis setC142390A set of subjects whose data are to be included in the main analyses. This should be defined in the statistical section of the protocol. NOTE: There are a number of potential analysis sets, including, for example, the set based upon the intent-to-treat principle. [ICH E9]Analysis Set of Subjects
analysis variablesC142391Variables used to test the statistical hypotheses identified in the protocol and analysis plan; variables to be analyzed. [PR Project] See also variable.Analysis Variable
anchorC142436Designation for a planned activity, often marking the transition between epochs or elements of a clinical study plan (e.g., "FPFV-first patient first visit").Clinical Study Anchor
anonymizationC142392The process of protecting privacy that removes the association between the identifying data and the data subject. In anonymized data, the patient cannot be identified by the recipient of the information. [ISO TS 25237:2008; TransCelerate Protection of Personal Data in Clinical Documents - A Model Approach]Anonymization
appletC142393A small application, typically downloaded from a server.Applet
applicable regulatory requirement(s)C142394Any law(s) or regulation(s) addressing the conduct of clinical trials of investigational products. [ICH E6(R2) Glossary, 1.4]Applicable Regulatory Requirement
approvable letterC142551An official communication from FDA to an NDA/ BLA sponsor that lists issues to be resolved before an approval can be issued. [Modified from 21 CFR 314.3; Guidance to industry and FDA staff (10/08/2003)]FDA Approvable Letter
approval (in relation to Institutional Review Boards)C70800The affirmative decision of the IRB that the clinical trial has been reviewed and may be conducted at the institution site within the constraints set forth by the IRB, the institution, good clinical practice (GCP), and the applicable regulatory requirements. [ICH E6]Institutional Review Board Approval
approval letterC70799An official communication from FDA to inform an applicant of a decision to allow commercial marketing consistent with conditions of approval. [Modified from 21 CFR 314.3; Guidance to industry and FDA staff (10/08/2003)]Approval Document
armC142684A planned sequence of elements, typically equivalent to a treatment group. [SDTM] See element.Sequence Arm
assessmentC25217A measurement, evaluation, or judgment for a study variable pertaining to the status of a subject. NOTE: Assessments are usually measured at a certain time, and usually are not compounded significantly by combining several simultaneous measurements to form a derived assessment (e.g., BMI) or a result of statistical analysis. The term assessment is intended to invoke some degree of evaluation or judgment concerning subject status. Refer to COA glossary of terms. See also variable, outcome, endpoint. [After Clinical Outcome Assessment (COA) Glossary of Terms FDA FDA eCOA Glossary]Assessment
attributableC25358A quality by which records and data can be traced back to the subject to whom they pertain, as well as to those persons who have acted on the records.Attribution
attribute (n)C62618In data modeling, refers to specific items of data that can be collected for a class.Object Attribute
auditC45269A systematic and independent examination of trial-related activities and documents to determine whether the evaluated trial-related activities were conducted and the data were recorded, analyzed, and accurately reported according to the protocol, sponsor's standard operating procedures (SOPs), good clinical practice (GCP), and the applicable regulatory requirement(s). [ICH E6 Glossary]Audit
audit certificateC115469Document that certifies that an audit has taken place (at an investigative site, CRO, or clinical research department of a pharmaceutical company). [ICH E6 Glossary]Audit Certificate
audit reportC142395A written evaluation by the auditor of the results of the audit. [Modified from ICH E6 Glossary]Audit Report
audit trailC142396A process that captures details such as additions, deletions, or alterations of information in an electronic record without obliterating the original record. An audit trail facilitates the reconstruction of the history of such actions relating to the electronic record. [after ICH E6, CSUICI]Audit Trail
authorizationC41192The process of giving someone permission to do or have something. In multi-user computer systems, a system administrator defines for the system which users are allowed access to the system and what privileges of use are permitted. [HL7 EHR-S FM Glossary of Terms, 2010].Authorization
back translation (natural language)C142397The process of translating a document that was translated from one language to another back to the original language. Used to ensure that consent forms, surveys, and other clinical trial documents will be clear and accurate in the translated form.Back Translation
background materialC142649Information pertinent to the understanding of a protocol. NOTE: Examples include investigator brochure, literature review, history, rationale, or other documentation that places a study in context or presents critical features. [PR Project]Protocol Background Material
balanced studyC142398Trial in which a particular type of subject is equally represented in each study group.Balanced Study
bandwidthC142399An indicator of the throughput (speed) of data flow on a transmission path; the width of the range of frequencies on which a transmission medium carries electronic signals. All digital and analog signal channels have a bandwidth.Bandwidth
baseline assessmentC142400Assessment of subjects as they enter a trial and before they receive any treatment.Baseline Assessment
baseline characteristicsC142401Demographic, clinical, and other data collected for each participant at the beginning of the trial before the intervention is administered. NOTE: Randomized, controlled trials aim to compare groups of participants that differ only with respect to the intervention (treatment). although proper random assignment prevents selection bias, it does not guarantee that the groups are equivalent at baseline. any differences in baseline characteristics are, however, the result of chance rather than bias. The study groups should be compared at baseline for important demographic and clinical characteristics. Baseline data may be especially valuable when the outcome measure can also be measured at the start of the trial. [CONSORT statement]Baseline Characteristics
baseline imbalanceC142402A systematic error in creating intervention groups, such that they differ with respect to prognosis. That is, the groups differ in measured or unmeasured baseline characteristics because of the way participants were selected or assigned. NOTE: also used to mean that the participants are not representative of the population of all possible participants. [ICH E9]Baseline Imbalance
Bayesian approachesC142403Approaches to data analysis that provide a posterior probability distribution for some parameter (e.g., treatment effect), derived from the observed data and a prior probability distribution for the parameter. The posterior distribution is then used as the basis for statistical inference. [ICH E9 Glossary]Bayesian Approach
Bayesian statisticsC142404Statistical approach named for Thomas Bayes (1701-1761) that has among its features giving a subjective interpretation to probability, accepting the idea that it is possible to talk about the probability of hypotheses being true and of parameters having particular values.Bayesian Statistics
beta errorC142405Probability of showing no significant difference when a true difference exists; a false acceptance of the null hypothesis. See also Type 2 error. [AMA Manual of style]Beta Error
biasC28232Bias refers to defects in study design, measurement, analysis or interpretation such that they cause a result to depart from the true value in a consistent direction. [after AMA Manual of style, ICH E9, CONSORT Statement]Bias
bioanalytical assaysC16341Methods for quantitative measurement of a drug, drug metabolites, or chemicals in biological fluids.Bioassay
bioavailabilityC70913Rate and extent to which a drug is absorbed or is otherwise available to the treatment site in the body.Bioavailability
bioequivalenceC71763Scientific basis on which drugs with the same active ingredient(s) are compared. NOTE: To be considered bioequivalent, the bioavailability of two products must not differ significantly when the two products are given in studies at the same dosage under similar conditions.Bioequivalence
Biologics licensing application (BLA)C71778Biologics licensing application (BLA). an application to FDA for a license to market a new biologic product in the United states.Biologics License Application
biomarkerC16342biological markerA defined characteristic that is measured as an indicator of normal biological processes, pathogenic processes, or responses to an exposure or intervention, including therapeutic interventions. Molecular, histologic, radiographic, or physiologic characteristics are types of biomarkers. A biomarker is not an assessment of how an individual feels, functions, or survives. Categories of biomarkers include: susceptibility/risk biomarker; diagnostic biomarker; monitoring biomarker; prognostic biomarker; predictive biomarker; safety biomarker; pharmacodynamic/response biomarker. [NIH-FDA BEST (Biomarkers, Endpoints, and other Tools) Resource, https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK338448/]Biomarker
biometric signatureC142406A signature based on the verification of an individual's identity, based on measurement of the individual's physical feature(s) or repeatable action(s), where those features and/or actions are both unique to that individual, and measureable [21 CFR 11]Biometric Signature
biostatisticsC16347Branch of statistics applied to the analysis of biological phenomena.Biostatistics
blind reviewC142407Checking and assessing data prior to breaking the blind, for the purpose of finalizing the planned analysis. [Modified ICH E9]Blind Review
blinded (masked) medicationsC142408Products that appear identical in size, shape, color, flavor, and other attributes to make it very difficult for subjects and investigators (or anyone assessing the outcome) to determine which medication is being administered.Blinded Medication
blinded studyC70840A study in which the subject, the investigator, or anyone assessing the outcome is unaware of the treatment assignment(s). NOTE: Blinding is used to reduce the potential for bias. [Modified ICH E6 Glossary] See also blinding/masking, double-blind study, single-blind study, triple-blind study; contrast with open-label or unblinded study.Blinded Clinical Study
blindingC49068maskingA procedure to limit bias by preventing subjects and/ or study personnel from identifying which treatments or procedures are administered, or from learning the results of tests and measures undertaken as part of a clinical investigation. NOTE: Masking, while often used synonymously with blinding, usually denotes concealing the specific study intervention used. [After ICH E6 (R2) Glossary, 1.10]. The term masking is often preferred to blinding in the field of ophthalmology. [from AMA Manual of Style]. See also double-blind study, single-blind study, triple-blind study. Contrast with open-label and/or unblinded study.Blinded
branchC142701Point within a study design where there is an allocation of subject subsets to particular procedures or treatment groups.Study Branch
browserC80012Computer program that runs on the user's desktop computer and is used to navigate the World Wide Web. See also web browser.HTML Browser
cacheC63626Storage area on a computer's hard drive where the browser stores (for a limited time) web pages and/or graphic elements.Memory Cache
carry-over effectC142409Effects of treatment that persist after treatment has been stopped, sometimes beyond the time of a medication's known biological activity.Carry-over Effect
case historyC142588An adequate and accurate record prepared and maintained by an investigator that records all observations and other data pertinent to the investigation of each individual administered the investigational drug (device or other therapy) or employed as a control in the investigation. NOTE: Case histories include the case report forms and supporting data including, for example, signed and dated consent forms and medical records including, for example, progress notes of the physician, the individual's hospital chart(s), and the nurses' notes. The case history for each individual shall document that informed consent was obtained prior to participation in the study. [21 CFR 312.62(b)]Investigational Subject Case History
case report form (CRF)C40988case record formA printed, optical, or electronic document designed to record all of the protocol-required information to be reported to the sponsor for each trial subject. NOTE: In common usage, CRF can refer to either a CRF page, which denotes a group of one or more data items, linked together for collection and display, or a casebook, which includes the entire group of CRF pages on which a set of clinical study observations can be or have been collected by completion of such CRF pages for a subject in a clinical study. See also CRF (paper), eCRF. [ICH E6 Glossary, FDA Final Guidance on eSource].Case Report Form
case report tabulations (CRT)C142411In a paper submission, listings of data that may be organized by domain (type of data) or by subject. See also eCRT.Case Report Tabulation
categorical dataC142412Data evaluated by sorting values (for example, severe, moderate, and mild) into various categories.Categorical Data
causality assessmentC142413An evaluation performed by a medical professional concerning the likelihood that a therapy or product under study caused or contributed to an adverse event.Causality Assessment
CDISC SHAREC142415A global, accessible, electronic library, which, through advanced technology, enables precise and standardized data element definitions that can be used within applications and across studies to improve biomedical research and its link with healthcare. In the first iteration, CDISC SHARE will contain the existing CDISC standards, such as CDASH and SDTM, providing machine-readable elements (variables) within those standards. This will allow a range of applications used within organizations to automatically access those definitions. [CDISC]CDISC Shared Health And Research Electronic Library
CDISC Standard (The)C142416CDISC term for a proposed uniform CDISC standard intended to address the full life-cycle of a clinical trial including protocol representation, capture of source data, submission, and archiving using a set of fully integrated and consistent models, terms, and controlled vocabularies derived from the current set of CDISC standards.CDISC Standard
certified copyC142417A copy (irrespective of the type of media used) of the original record that has been verified (i.e., by a dated signature or by generation through a validated process) to have the same information, including data that describe the context, content, and structure, as the original. [ICH E6 (R2)]Certified Copy
certified IRB professional (CIP)C142418Certification awarded to persons who satisfy the educational and employment requirements and pass an examination conducted by the applied Research ethics national association (aRena), the membership division of Public Responsibility in Medicine and Research (PRiM&R).Certified IRB Professional
classC41106A definition of objects with properties (attributes, methods, relationships) that all objects in the class have in common. [HL7, 2001] in data modeling, a class defines a set of objects that share the same attributes, relationships, and semantics. A class is usually an entity that represents a person, place, or thing.Object Class
clean databaseC142419A set of reviewed data in which errors have been resolved to meet QA requirements for error rate and in which measurements and other values are provided in acceptable units; database that is ready to be locked. See also database lock, clean file.Clean Database
clean fileC142420When all data cleaning is completed and database is ready for quality review and unblinding.Clean File
clientC142421A program that makes a service request of another program, usually running on a server, that fulfills the request. Web browsers (such as Firefox and Microsoft explorer) are clients that request HTML files from web servers.Client Computer
clinical benefitC142422A therapeutic intervention may be said to confer clinical benefit if it prolongs life, improves function, and/or improves the way a subject feels.Clinical Benefit
clinical clarificationC142423A query resolution received from the sponsor staff (medical monitors, DSMB monitoring board, etc.). See also self-evident change.Clinical Clarification
clinical dataC15783Data pertaining to the medical well-being or status of a patient. Category also includes clinical reports and individual patient data (IPD) as defined in the EMA Policy 0070 Implementation Guide. [http://www.ema.eoropa.eu/docs/en_GB/document_library/REPORT/2014/10/WC500174378.PDF]Clinical Data
clinical development planC142424A document that describes the collection of clinical studies that are to be performed in sequence, or in parallel, with a particular active substance, device, procedure, or treatment strategy, typically with the intention of submitting them as part of an application for a marketing authorization. NOTE: The plan should have appropriate decision points and allow modification as knowledge accumulates. [from ICH E9] See also development plan.Clinical Development Plan
clinical documentC142425A documentation of clinical observations and services. NOTE: an electronic document should incorporate the following characteristics: persistence, stewardship, potential for authentication, wholeness, and human readability. [SPL]Clinical Document
clinical document architectureC142426Specification for the structure and semantics of "clinical documents" for the purpose of exchange. [HL7; SPL]Clinical Document Architecture
clinical efficacyC39547Power or capacity to produce a desired effect (i.e., appropriate pharmacological activity in a specified indication) in humans. [SQA]Treatment Efficacy
clinical encounterC142427Contact between subject/patient and healthcare practitioner/researcher, during which an assessment or activity is performed. Contact may be physical or virtual. [CDISC]Clinical Encounter
clinical investigationC142430Any experiment that involves a test article and one or more human subjects, and that either must meet the requirements for prior submission to the FDA or the results of which are intended to be later submitted to, or held for inspection by, the FDA as part of an application for a research or marketing permit. Considered synonymous with clinical research by FDA. See clinical study, clinical trial. [FDA Science & Research]Clinical Investigation
clinical outcome assessment (COA)C142378Any assessment that may be influenced by human choices, judgment, or motivation and may support or refute treatment benefit. NOTE: Unlike biomarkers that rely completely on an automated process or algorithm, COAs reflect interpretation of reporting from a patient, a clinician, or an observer. There are four types of COAs. See also patient-reported outcome (PRO), clinician-reported outcome (ClinRO), observer-reported outcome (ObsRO), and performance outcome (PerfO). [FDA Clinical Outcome Assessment (COA) Glossary]Clinical Outcome Assessment
clinical outcome assessment (COA) qualificationC142552A formal conclusion by FDA that, within the stated context of use, the results of the COA measurement can be relied upon to have a specific interpretation and application. NOTE: For qualified COAs, FDA permits drug developers to use the COA in the qualified context in IND and NDA/BLA submissions without requesting that the relevant CDER review group reconsider and reconfirm the suitability of the COA. [FDA Clinical Outcome Assessment (COA) Glossary]FDA Clinical Outcome Assessment Qualification
clinical pharmacologyC16975Science that deals with the characteristics, effects, properties, reactions, and uses of drugs, particularly their therapeutic value in humans, including their toxicology, safety, pharmacodynamics, and pharmacokinetics (ADME).Clinical Pharmacology
clinical protocolC25320See protocol.Clinical Study Protocol
clinical research and developmentC142435The testing of a drug compound in humans primarily done to determine its safety and pharmacological effectiveness. Clinical development is done in phases, which progress from very tightly controlled dosing of a small number of subjects to less tightly controlled studies involving large numbers of patients. [SQA]Clinical Research and Development
clinical research associate (CRA)C25465Person employed by a sponsor or by a contract research organization acting on a sponsor's behalf, who monitors the progress of investigator sites participating in a clinical study. At some sites (primarily in academic settings), clinical research coordinators are called CRAs.Clinical Research Associate
clinical research coordinator (CRC)C51811clinical coordinator;research coordinator;study coordinator;trial coordinatorPerson who handles most of the administrative responsibilities of a clinical trial on behalf of a site investigator, acts as liaison between investigative site and sponsor, and reviews all data and records before a monitor's visit. Synonyms: trial coordinator, study coordinator, research coordinator, clinical coordinatorClinical Coordinator
clinical research subjectC70668A person who is enrolled into a clinical study or trial. See also study and trial.Clinical Trial Subject
clinical significanceC82562Change in a subject's clinical condition regarded as important whether or not due to the test intervention. NOTE: some statistically significant changes (in blood tests, for example) have no clinical significance. The criterion or criteria for clinical significance should be stated in the protocol. The term "clinical significance" is not advisable unless operationally defined.Clinical Significance
clinical studyC15206A clinical study involves research using human volunteers (also called participants) that is intended to add to medical knowledge. There are two main types of clinical studies: clinical trials (also called interventional studies) and observational studies. [ClinicalTrials.gov] See also clinical trial.Clinical Study
clinical study (trial) reportC142439A written description of a study of any therapeutic, prophylactic, or diagnostic agent conducted in human subjects, in which the clinical and statistical description, presentations, and analysis are fully integrated into a single report. NOTE: For further information, see the ICH Guideline for Structure and Content of Clinical Study Reports. [ICH E6 Glossary]Clinical Study Report
clinical study data elementC142437A single observation associated with a subject in a clinical study. A data element in an eCRF represents the smallest unit of observation captured for a subject in a clinical investigation. NOTE: Examples include birth date, white blood cell count, pain severity measure, and other clinical observations made and documented during a study. Data element identifiers should be attached to each data element as it is entered or transmitted by the originator into the eCRF. See also eCRF, data element identifier, data originator, item. [After FDA Guidance for Industry Electronic Source Data in Clinical Investigations , Body text and Glossary]Clinical Study Data Element
clinical trialC71104A research investigation involving human subjects that is designed to answer specific questions about the safety and efficacy of a biomedical intervention (drug, treatment, device) or new ways of using a known drug, treatment, or device). NOTE: NIH Office of Science Policy further specifies that a clinical trial is a type of research study that prospectively assigns subjects to interventions, and the EU clinical trial regulations set forth 3 specific conditions, any one of which qualifies a study as a clinical trial. These conditions include applying diagnostic or monitoring procedures not used in normal clinical practice to subjects. [after ICH E6 [R2], EU CTR 2014] See also clinical study, clinical investigation.Clinical Trial
clinical trial authorizationC142440Authorization granted by a Medicines Regulatory Agency to conduct a clinical trial in a jurisdiction. NOTE: If an ethical committee allows a trial to proceed it is called an approval to proceed. [After ISO 11615:2017, 3.1.12]Clinical Trial Authorization
clinical trial dataC142441Data collected in the course of a clinical trial. See also clinical trial information.Clinical Trial Data
clinical trial exemption (CTX)C142446A scheme that allows sponsors to apply for approval for each clinical study in turn, submitting supporting data to the Medicines Control Agency (MCA), which approves or rejects the application (generally within 35 working days). NOTE: Approval means that the company is exempt from the requirement to hold a clinical trial certificate (CTC). [UK]Clinical Trial Exemption
clinical trial informationC142447Data collected in the course of a clinical trial or documentation related to the integrity or administration of that data. A superset of clinical trial data.Clinical Trial Information
clinical trial materialsC142449Complete set of supplies provided to an investigator by the trial sponsor.Clinical Trial Material
clinical trial registryC142452A web-based publicly accessible platform for providing structured information about clinical trials. NOTE: Such registries help patients, family members, health care professionals, researchers, and the public identify studies in which they might participate. Some registries include clinical trial results. Examples include: EU Clinical Trials Register (EU CTR), for studies in the EU or the EEA after 1 May 2001; ClinicalTrials.gov, a web-based resource from the National Library of Medicine (NLM) in the US. [After International Committee of Medical Journal Editors]Clinical Trial Registry
clinician-reported outcome (ClinRO)C142453A type of clinical outcome assessment. A measurement based on a report that comes from a trained health-care professional after observation of a patient's health condition. [After BEST Resource]Clinician-reported Outcome
codelistC142454Finite list of codes and their meanings that represent the only allowed values for a data item. See also controlled vocabulary. A codelist is one type of controlled vocabulary.Codelist
codingC80216In clinical trials, the process of assigning data to categories for analysis NOTE: Adverse events, for example, may be coded using MedDRA.Encode
cognitive debriefingC142455A qualitative research tool used to determine whether concepts and items are understood by patients in the same way that PRO instrument developers intend. NOTE: Cognitive debriefing interviews involve incorporating follow-up questions in a field test interview to gain better understanding of how patients interpret questions asked of them and to collect and consider all concepts elicited by an item. [from PRO Draft Guidance Glossary]Cognitive Debriefing
cohortC61512A group of individuals who share a common exposure, experience or characteristic or a group of individuals followed-up or traced over time in a cohort study. [AMA Manual of Style] See also cohort study.Cohort
cohort studyC15208Study of a group of individuals, some of whom are exposed to a variable of interest, in which subjects are followed over time. Cohort studies can be prospective or retrospective. [AMA Manual of Style] See also prospective study.Cohort Study
combination productC546961. A product comprising two or more individual products. 2. Two or more separate products packaged together in a single package or as a unit. 3. A product that is packaged separately but is used only with another product. [Modified from SPL Glossary]Combination Product
commercially confidential information (CCI)C142456Any information contained in clinical reports or other documents that is not in the public domain or publicly available and where disclosure may undermine the legitimate economic interest of the company (the Marketing Application Holder) and cause harm (if disclosed). [After EMA Policy 0070 implementation Guide]Commercially Confidential Information
common data element (CDE)C19984A structured item characterized by a stem and response options together with a history of usage that can be standardized for research purposes across studies conducted by and for NIH. NOTE: The mark up or tagging facilitates document indexing, search and retrieval, and provides standard conventions for insertion of codes. [NCI, CaBIG]. See also item, stem.Common Data Element
Common Technical DocumentC142575A format agreed upon by ICH to organize applications to regulatory authorities for registration of pharmaceuticals for human use. [ICH] See also eCTD.ICH Common Technical Document
comparative studyC142457One in which the investigative drug is compared against another product, either active drug or placebo.Comparative Study
comparator (product)C142458An investigational or marketed product (i.e., active control), or placebo, used as a reference in a clinical trial. [ICH E6 Glossary] See also control.Comparator
Competent Authority (CA)C142544The regulatory body charged with monitoring compliance with the national statutes and regulations of European Member States.European Union Competent Authority
compliance (in relation to trials)C142734Adherence to trial-related requirements, good clinical practice (GCP) requirements, and the applicable regulatory requirements. [Modified ICH E6 Glossary]Trial Compliance
computer applicationC42608application softwareSoftware designed to fill specific needs of a user; for example, software for navigation, project management, or process control.Computer Application
conceptC45728Discrete notion having a single meaning. In a controlled vocabulary a concept is mapped to one or more of the words that convey its meaning.Concept
concept of interestC142433In the context of clinical outcomes, the thing measured by a COA assessment (e.g., pain intensity). [After Clinical Outcome Assessment (COA) Glossary of Terms FDA FDA eCOA Glossary]Clinical Outcomes Assessment Concept of Interest
confidence interval (CI)C53324A measure of the precision of an estimated value. The interval represents the range of values, consistent with the data, that is believed to encompass the "true" value with high probability (usually 95%). The confidence interval is expressed in the same units as the estimate. Wider intervals indicate lower precision; narrow intervals, greater precision. [CONSORT Statement]Confidence Interval
confidentialityC16466Prevention of disclosure to other than authorized individuals of a sponsor's proprietary information or of a subject's identity. [ICH E6 Glossary]Confidentiality
confirmatory trialC142460Phase 3 trial during which the previously revealed actions of a therapeutic intervention are confirmed. NOTE: Procedures in confirmatory trials should be set firmly in advance. Compare to exploratory trial.Confirmatory Trial
conformity assessmentC142461The process by which compliance with the EMA's essential requirements is assessed. See also Notified Body.Conformity Assessment
consent formC16468informed consent formDocument used during the informed consent process that is the basis for explaining to potential subjects the risks and potential benefits of a study and the rights and responsibilities of the parties involved. NOTE: The informed consent document provides a summary of a clinical trial (including its purpose, the treatment procedures and schedule, potential risks and benefits, alternatives to participation, etc.) and explains an individual's rights as a subject. it is designed to begin the informed consent process, which consists of conversations between the subject and the research team. if the individual then decides to enter the trial, s/he gives her/his official consent by signing the document. See also informed consent.Consent Form
consumer safety officer (CSO)C142462FDA official who coordinates the review process of various applications.Consumer Safety Officer
content validityC78690The extent to which a variable (for example, a rating scale) measures what it is supposed to measure. [ICH E9 Glossary] evidence from qualitative research demonstrating that the instrument measures the concept of interest, including evidence that the items and domains of an instrument are appropriate and comprehensive, relative to its intended measurement concept, population, and use. NOTE: Testing other measurement properties will not replace or rectify problems with content validity. [FDA Final PRO Guidance]Content Validity
context of useC142434In the context of clinical outcomes, a comprehensive statement that fully and clearly describes and justifies the way a COA is to be used and the drug development-related purpose of the use. NOTE: The context of use defines the boundaries within which the available data adequately justify use of the COA and describes important criteria regarding the circumstances under which the COA is qualified. [FDA Clinical Outcome Assessment (COA) Glossary]Clinical Outcomes Assessment Context of Use
contingent subject trial contactC142463Planned response to an anticipated but conditional event in a clinical trial. [CDISC Trial Design Project]Contingent Subject Trial Contact
contractC115464A written, dated, and signed agreement between two or more involved parties that sets out any arrangements on delegation and distribution of tasks and obligations and, if appropriate, on financial matters. The protocol may serve as the basis of a contract. [ICH E6 Glossary]Contractual Agreement
contract research organization (CRO)C54148A person or an organization (commercial, academic, or other) contracted by the sponsor to perform one or more of a sponsor's trial-related duties and functions. [ICH E6 Glossary]Contract Research Organization
controlC142703comparatorComparator against which the study treatment is evaluated [e.g., concurrent (placebo, no treatment, dose-response, active), and external (historical, published literature)]. [After ICH E10]Study Control
control (of electronic records)C142464To prepare and maintain case histories and other records for regulated clinical investigations. NOTE: Control is often used as a casual synonym for the terms in 21 CFR 312.62 requiring investigative sites to prepare, maintain, and retain adequate and accurate case histories. [After 1. 21 CFR 11; 2. CSUCT]Control of Electronic Records
control groupC28143The group of subjects in a controlled study that receives no treatment, a standard treatment, or a placebo. [21 CFR 314.126] See also controls.Control Group
control of electronic recordsC142532Processes or operations intended to ensure authenticity, integrity, and confidentiality of electronic records. NOTE: The protocol incorporates scientific rationale for selection of comparator and describes how the comparator serves as a reference point for the evaluation. SDTM provides a codelist for type of control. [After 21 CFR 11; CSUCT]Electronic Records Control
controlled studyC28279A study in which a test article is compared with a treatment that has known effects. The control group may receive no treatment, active treatment, placebo, or dose comparison concurrent control. NOTE: For further information on "adequate and well-controlled study" see 21 CFR 314.126.Controlled Study
controlled vocabularyC48697controlled terminologyA finite set of values that represent the only allowed values for a data item. These values may be codes, text, or numeric. See also codelist.Controlled Vocabulary
coordinating committeeC142465A committee that a sponsor may organize to coordinate the conduct of a multicenter trial. [ICH E6]Coordinating Committee
coordinating investigatorC51818An investigator assigned the responsibility for the coordination of investigators at different centers participating in a multicenter trial. [ICH E6]Coordinating Investigator
correlationC48834The degree to which two or more variables are related. Typically the linear relationship is measured with either Pearson's correlation or spearman's Rho. NOTE: Correlation does not necessarily mean causation. [after hyperstat online Glossary; ADaM]Correlation
covariate (prognostic)C142645Factor or condition that influences outcome of a trial. [ADaM]Prognostic Covariate
CRF (paper)C142625Case report form in which the data items are linked by the physical properties of paper to particular pages. NOTE: Data are captured manually and any comments, notes, and signatures are also linked to those data items by writing or typescript on the paper pages. See also eCRF, case report form.Paper Case Report Form
CRF dataC142410Subset of clinical trial data that are entered into fields on a CRF.Case Report Form Data
crossover trialC82637A trial design for which subjects function as their own control and are assigned to receive investigational product and controls in an order determined by randomizations, typically with a washout period between the two products. [Center for the advancement of Clinical Research; ADaM]Crossover Study
curriculum vitae (CV)C54631Document that outlines a person's educational and professional history.Curriculum Vitae
dataC25474Representations of facts, concepts, or instructions in a manner suitable for communication, interpretation, or processing by humans or by automated means. [FDA]Data
data acquisitionC142469Capture of data into a structured, computerized format without a human-to-computer interface (i.e., from another measuring instrument or computerized source). Contrast with data entry, electronic data capture.Data Acquisition
data and safety monitoring board (DSMB)C94204See data monitoring committee.Data and Safety Monitoring Board
data captureC142470See data entry.Data Capture
data clarificationC142471Answer supplied by the investigator in response to a query. NOTE: The investigator may supply a new data point value to replace the initial value or a confirmation of the queried data point.Data Clarification
data clarification formC115521A form used to query an investigator and collect feedback to resolve questions regarding data.Data Clarification Form
data collectionC103159In the context of clinical research, accessing and recording information that provides source data for analysis and interpretation See data entry and data capture. [CDISC]Data Collection
data collection instrumentC142472A substrate or tool (either electronic or paper) used to record, transcribe, or collect clinical data. [PR Project]Data Collection Instrument
data elementC41002Smallest unit of information in a transaction. [From body and glossary of FDA Final Guidance on eSource] See also eXtensible markup language (XML) data element, common data element, clinical study data element.Data Element
data element identifierC142474Information associated with a data element that includes the origin of the data element, the date and time of entry, and the identification number of the study subject to whom the data element applies. NOTE: Data element identifiers should be attached to each data element as it is entered or transmitted by the originator into the eCRF. [From body and glossary of FDA Final Guidance eSource]Data Element Identifier
data encryption standard (DES)C142475A FIPS approved cryptographic algorithm for encrypting (enciphering) and decrypting (deciphering) binary coded information. Encrypting data converts it to an unintelligible form called cipher. Decrypting cipher converts the data back to its original form called plaintext. The standard specifies both enciphering and deciphering operations, which are based on a 64 bit binary number called a key. Unauthorized recipients of the cipher who know the algorithm but do not have the correct key cannot derive the original data algorithmically. NOTE: Data that are considered sensitive by the responsible authority or data that represent a high value should be cryptographically protected if vulnerable to unauthorized disclosure or undetected modification during transmission or while in storage. [from Federal Information Processing Standards (FIPS) Publication 46-2]Data Encryption Standard
data entryC142379Human input of data into a structured, computerized format using an interface such as a keyboard, pen-based tablet, or voice recognition. NOTE: Although data capture is often used synonymously, capture implies direct entry of original source data into an electronic record rather than transcription (entry) from paper source. Contrast with data acquisition, electronic data capture; direct entry. See data collection.Data Entry
data integrityC142476A dimension of data contributing to trustworthiness and pertaining to the systems and processes for data capture, correction, maintenance, transmission, and retention. Key elements of data integrity include security, privacy, access controls, a continuous pedigree from capture to archive, stability (of values, of attribution), protection against loss or destruction, ease of review by users responsible for data quality, proper operation and validation of systems, training of users. NOTE: In clinical research the FDA requires that data relied on to determine safety and efficacy of therapeutic interventions be trustworthy and establishes guidance and regulations concerning practices and system requirements needed to promote an acceptable level of data integrity. [FDA, CSUICI, IEEE]. Compare to data quality.Data Integrity
data integrity verificationC142477Process of manually supervised verification of data for internal consistency.Data Integrity Verification
data interchangeC142478Transfer of information between two or more parties, which maintains the integrity of the contents of the data for the purpose intended. See also interoperability.Data Interchange
data itemC142479A named component of a data element. Usually the smallest component [ANSI]. See also data model, data element.Data Item
data listingC142483Set of observations organized by domain.Data Listing
data managementC18086Tasks associated with the entry, transfer, and/or preparation of source data and derived items for entry into a clinical trial database. NOTE: Data management could include database creation, data entry, review, coding, data editing, data QC, locking, or archiving; it typically does not include source data capture.Data Management
data management conventionsC142484Procedures and policies for data management (e.g., documented procedure(s) for resolving self-evident changes). [ICH E6] See self-evident change.Data Management Convention
data modelC142487Unambiguous, formally stated, expression of items, the relationship among items, and the structure of the data in a certain problem area or context of use. A data model uses symbolic conventions agreed to represent content so that content does not lose its intended meaning when communicated.Data Model
data monitoringC142488Process by which clinical data are examined for completeness, consistency, and accuracy.Data Monitoring
data monitoring committee (DMC)C142489Group of individuals with pertinent expertise that reviews on a regular basis accumulating data from an ongoing clinical trial. The DMC advises the sponsor regarding the continuing safety of current participants and those yet to be recruited, as well as the continuing validity and scientific merit of the trial. NOTE: A DMC can recommend stopping a trial if it finds toxicities or if treatment is proved beneficial. [After FDA guidance on establishment and operation of clinical trial data monitoring committees]Data Monitoring Committee
data originC16493Source of information collected in the course of a clinical trial, specifically used to differentiate between data as collected versus data that are derived or calculated. NOTE: In CDISC, a metadata attribute defined for each dataset variable in the Define.xml document of an SDTM submission that refers to the source of a variable (e.g., CRF, derived, sponsor defined, PRO, etc.). See also data element originator.Data Source
data originatorC142490Metadata characterizing the entity creating a data element in an eCRF for a clinical investigation. NOTE: Per FDA Final Guidance on eSource, "Each data element is associated with an origination type that identifies the source of its capture in the eCRF. This could be a person, a computer system, a device, or an instrument that is authorized to enter, change, or transmit data elements into the eCRF (also sometimes known as an author)." See also data element, data element originator, origin. [CDISC, Note is from FDA Final Guidance on eSource]Data Originator
data qualityC142491A dimension of data contributing its trustworthiness and pertaining to accuracy, sensitivity, validity, and suitability to purpose. Key elements of data quality include attribution, legibility (decipherable, unambiguous), contemporaneousness, originality (i.e., not duplicated), accuracy, precision, completeness, consistency (logical, not out of range), and those who have modified the data. NOTE: Scientists may reasonably trust data that are accurate (high quality) that have also been reviewed by investigators and protected from unauthorized alteration (high integrity). See also ALCOA, data integrity.Data Quality
data securityC142492Degree to which data are protected from the risk of accidental or malicious alteration or destruction and from unauthorized access or disclosure. [FDA]Data Security
data selection criteriaC142493The rules by which particular data are selected and/ or transferred between the point of care and the patient record; subsequently, from the patient record to the database; and from database to inclusion in sub-population analyses.Data Selection Criteria
data storageC142494To maintain data by placing the data, or a copy of the data, onto an electronically accessible device for preservation (either in plain-text or encrypted format). [HL7 eHR-s FM Glossary of Terms, 2010].Data Storage
data subjectC142495An individual who is the subject of personal data, persons to whom data refers. [ISO/TS 25237:2008]Data Subject
data transformationsC43582Algorithmic operations on data or data sets to achieve a meaningful set of derived data for analysis. [ADaM] See also derived variable.Data Transformation
data typeC42645Data types define the structural format of the data carried in the attribute and influence the set of allowable values an attribute may assume. [HL7]Data Type
data validationC1425001. Checking data for correctness and/or compliance with applicable standards, rules, and conventions. 2. Process used to determine if data are inaccurate, incomplete, or unreasonable. The process may include format checks, completeness checks, check key tests, reasonableness checks, and limit checks. [1. FDA. 2. ISO]Data Validation
databaseC15426A collection of data or information, typically organized for ease and speed of search and retrieval.Database
database lockC142503Action taken to prevent further changes to a clinical trial database or any equivalent clinical data storage system. NOTE: Locking of a database is done after review, query resolution, and a determination has been made that the database is ready for analysis.Database Lock
datasetC47824A collection of structured data in a single file. [CDISC, ODM, and SDS] Compare to analysis dataset, tabulation dataset.Data Set
de-identificationC459701. The process of rendering data into a form that does not identify individuals and where identification is not likely to take place. A general term for a process of removing the association between a set of identifying data and the data subject. 2. Removal of elements connected with data which might aid in associating those data with an individual. Examples include name, birth date, social security number, home address, telephone number, e-mail address, medical record numbers, health plan beneficiary numbers, full-face photographic images). [1. ISO/TS 25237: 2008 - Health Informatics - Pseudonymization; 2. HIPAA: 45 CFR, 164.514]Deidentification
de-identified informationC142507Records that have had enough personally identifiable information removed or obscured such that the remaining information does not identify an individual, and there is no reasonable basis to believe that the information can be used to identify an individual. [Guide to Protecting Personally Identifiable Information (PII): Special Publication NIST pubs/800-122]De-identified Information
decision ruleC142504Succinct statement of how a decision will be reached based upon the expected foreseen clinical benefits in terms of outcomes of the primary endpoint. [FDA documentation]Decision Rule
Declaration of HelsinkiC142505A set of recommendations or basic principles that guide medical doctors in the conduct of biomedical research involving human subjects. it was originally adopted by the 18th World Medical assembly (Helsinki, Finland, 1964) and recently revised (64th WMA General Assembly, Fortaleza, Brazil, October 2013).Declaration of Helsinki
defineC142506Table used by XML review tools to configure a review engine to deal with CDISC standard data for a trial.Define.xml
demographic dataC142508Characteristics of subjects or study populations, which include such information as age, sex, family history of the disease or condition for which they are being treated, and other characteristics relevant to the study in which they are participating.Demographic Data
dependent variableC142509Outcomes that are measured in an experiment and that are expected to change as a result of an experimental manipulation of the independent variable(s). [Center for advancement of Clinical Research]Dependent Variable
deploymentC142538Readying an electronic clinical trial system for field use by providing or disseminating capture devices, tokens, or passwords for users of an activated system. See activation.Electronic System Deployment
derived variableC142510New variable created as a function of existing variables and/or application of mathematical functions. See also variable, raw data.Derived Variable
design configurationC142442Clinical trial design developed to compare treatment groups in a clinical trial. NOTE: The configuration usually requires randomization to one or more treatment arms, each arm being allocated a different (or no) treatment. examples include: Parallel Group Design, Crossover Design, Factorial Designs. [from ICH E9]Clinical Trial Design Configuration
development planC142443An ordered program of clinical trials, each with specific objectives. [adapted from ICH E9, see ICH E8]. See also clinical development plan.Clinical Trial Development Plan
digital signatureC80447An electronic signature, based on cryptographic methods of originator authentication, computed by using a set of rules and a set of parameters, such that the identity of the signer and the integrity of the data can be verified. [21 CFR 11]Digital Signature
direct accessC142511Permission to examine, analyze, verify, and reproduce any records and reports that are important to evaluation of a clinical trial. NOTE: The party (e.g., domestic and foreign regulatory authorities, sponsor's monitors and auditors) with direct access should take all reasonable precautions within the constraints of the applicable regulatory requirement(s) to maintain the confidentiality of subjects' identities and sponsor's proprietary information. [ICH E6 Glossary]Direct Access
direct entryC142512Recording of data by human or automated action where an electronic record is the original means of capturing the data into an electronic records system without a paper source document. Examples are an individual keying original observations into a system or the automatic recording into the system of the output from measuring devices such as a balance that measures subject's body weight or an ECG machine. Compare to data entry, data acquisition.Direct Data Entry
direct identifierC142513A piece of data that can be used to uniquely identify an individual (e.g., name, patient ID, social security number, exact address, telephone number, e-mail address, government issued identifiers, passport/VISA numbers) either without additional information or with cross-linking through other information that is in the public domain. [After PhUSE De-identification Standard for SDTM 3.2, version 1.0.1.]Direct Identifier
discontinuationC142444The act of concluding participation, prior to completion of all protocol-required elements, in a trial by an enrolled subject. NOTE: Four categories of discontinuation are distinguished: a) dropout: Active discontinuation by a subject (also a noun referring to such a discontinued subject); b) investigator initiated discontinuation (e.g., for cause); c) loss to follow-up: cessation of participation without notice or action by the subject; d) sponsor initiated discontinuation. Note that subject discontinuation does not necessarily imply exclusion of subject data from analysis. "Termination" has a history of synonymous use, but is now considered nonstandard. See also withdrawal and ICH E3, section 10.1 and FDA Guidance for Industry: Submission of Abbreviated Reports & Synopses in Support of Marketing Applications, IV A.Clinical Trial Discontinuation
discrepancyC142473The failure of a data point to pass a validation check. NOTE: Discrepancies may be detected by computerized edit checks or observed/ identified by the data reviewer as a result of manual data review. See also query.Data Discrepancy
diseaseC2991Any deviation from or interruption of the normal structure or function of a part, organ, or system of the body as manifested by characteristic symptoms and signs. [Dorland's Medical Dictionary]Disease or Disorder
document (HL7)C142571An ordered presentation of XML elements, possibly including text and tabular analyses, description, and figures. Descriptors for HL7 documents include type, class, and element. NOTE: In HL7, a document can be either physical (referring to the paper) or logical (referring to the content) with the following characteristics: 1) Stewardship; 2) Potential for authentication; 3) Wholeness; 4) Human readability; 5) Persistence; 6) Global vs. local context.HL7 Document
document rootC142751The element in an XML document that contains all other elements; the first element in the document. [SPL Glossary]XML Document Root
document type definition (DTD)C142515XML specification for content and presentation of data and text in a document including definitions for the elements considered to be legal in the document. NOTE: Agreeing on a common DTD facilitates interoperability among systems incorporating the agreed standards. [from XML files.com]Document Type Definition
documentationC19498All records, in any form (including but not limited to written, electronic, magnetic, and optical records, and scans, x-rays, and electrocardiograms) that describe or record the methods, conduct, and/or results of a trial, the factors affecting a trial, and the actions taken. [ICH E6 Glossary]Document
domainC62289A collection of observations with a topic-specific commonality about each subject in a clinical investigation. NOTE: CDISC classifies domains. For example, the Interventions class is a domain that captures investigational treatments, therapeutic treatments, and surgical procedures that are intentionally administered to the subject (usually for therapeutic purposes) either as specified by the study protocol (e.g., exposure), coincident with the study assessment period (e.g., concomitant medications), or other substances self-administered by the subject (such as alcohol, tobacco, or caffeine). The Events class captures occurrences or incidents independent of planned study evaluations occurring during the trial (e.g., "adverse events" or "disposition") or prior to the trial (e.g., "medical history"). The Findings class captures the observations resulting from planned evaluations such as observations made during a physical examination, laboratory tests, ECG testing, and sets of individual questions listed on questionnaires.Domain
domain nameC54076The way a particular web server is identified on the internet. For example, www.fda.gov names the World Wide Web (www) server for the Food and Drug administration, which is a government (.gov) entity. [Center for advancement of Clinical Research]Domain Name
dosageC94394The amount of drug administered to a patient or test subject over a period of time; a regulated time bound administration of individual doses. NOTE: For example, a daily dosage specified in a prescription or a clinical trial, such as one 100mg tablet taken 4 times per day. [After AMA Manual of style]Cumulative Dose
dosage formC42636Physical characteristics of a drug product, (e.g., tablet, capsule, or solution) that contains a drug substance, generally-but not necessarily-in association with one or more other ingredients. [21 CFR 314.3 and after IDMP]. See also drug product.Pharmaceutical Dosage Form
dosage regimenC142516The number of doses per given time period; the elapsed time between doses (for example, every six hours) or the time that the doses are to be given (for example, at 8 a.m. and 4 p.m. daily); and/or the amount of a medicine (the number of capsules, for example) to be given at each specific dosing time. [from Center for advancement of Clinical Research]Dosage Regimen
dosage strengthC1425171. Proportion of active substance to excipient, measured in units of volume or concentration. NOTE: The strength of a drug product tells how much of the active ingredient is present in each dosage. [NOTE: FDA Glossary of Terms]Dosage Strength
doseC25488Specified quantity of a medicine, to be taken at one time or at stated intervals. [ISO 11615:2012 Health Informatics]Dose
double-blind studyC15228A study in which neither the subject nor the investigator nor the research team interacting with the subject or data during the trial knows what treatment a subject is receiving.Double Blind Study
double-dummyC142518A technique for retaining the blind when administering supplies in a clinical trial, when the two treatments cannot be made identical. supplies are prepared for Treatment a (active and indistinguishable placebo) and for Treatment B (active and indistinguishable placebo). subjects then take two sets of treatment; either a (active) and B (placebo), or a (placebo) and B (active). [ICH E9]Double-Dummy
dropoutC142445A subject in a clinical trial who for any reason fails to continue in the trial until the last visit or observation required of him/her by the study protocol. [from ICH E9]Clinical Trial Dropout
drugC1909Article other than food intended for use in the diagnosis, cure, mitigation, treatment, or prevention of disease; or intended to affect the structure or any function of the body. not a device or a component, part, or accessory of a device. [from FDA Glossary of Terms, CDER] See also medicinal product, active substance.Pharmacologic Substance
drug development processC142519The program for advancing an investigational product from preclinical studies through approval for marketing following review by regulatory agencies.Drug Development Process
drug distributionC79370In pharmacokinetics, the processes that control transfer of a drug from the site of measurement to its target and other tissues. See also ADME.Pharmacokinetics: Distribution
drug productC459A finished dosage form, for example, tablet, capsule, solution, etc., that contains an active drug ingredient generally, but not necessarily, in association with inactive ingredients. The term also includes a finished dosage form that does not contain an active ingredient but is intended to be used as a placebo. [21CFR210.3]Medication
dynamic HTMLC142520Collective term for a combination of tags and options, style sheets, and programming that allows users to create web pages in hypertext Mark-up language (HTML) that are more responsive to user interaction than previous versions of HTML.Dynamic Hypertext Markup Language
ecertified copyC142525A copy of an electronic record that is created through the application of a process validated to preserve the data and metadata of the original and where the validation of the process is certified by the dated signature of an authorized person. [CDISC, after EMA/INS/GCP/454280/2010 GCP Inspectors Working Group (GCP IWG) June 2010]Electronic Certified Copy
eclinical trialC142526Clinical trial in which primarily electronic processes are used to plan, collect (acquire), access, exchange, and archive data required for conduct, management, analysis, and reporting of the trial. NOTE: FDA has recently drawn a distinction between studies and trials. Both words refer to systematic efforts to obtain evidence relevant to regulatory authorities, but, depending on regulatory context and particularly in the case of postmarketing commitments, a study might not be the appropriate word for a clinical trial (prospective, controlled, randomized), but should be reserved instead for surveillance, structured gathering of information, epidemiological studies, or even animal studies [DRAFT Guidance for industry Postmarketing studies and Clinical Trials-implementation of section 505(o) of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic act]. Synonyms: eClinical study, eClinical investigation.Electronic Clinical Trial
eCRF (electronic case report form)C142523An auditable electronic record of information that is reported to the sponsor (or sponsor's agent such as an EDC provider) on each trial subject to enable data pertaining to a clinical investigation protocol to be systematically captured, reviewed, managed, stored, analyzed, and reported. The eCRF is a CRF in which related data items and their associated comments, notes, and signatures are linked programmatically. See also case report form, CRF, eSRF.[CSUICI; Revised from FDA Final Guidance on eSource]Electronic Case Report Form
eCRTC142524CRTs provided in electronic format for esubmissions (electronic regulatory submissions). NOTE: according to FDA guidance, eCRTs are datasets provided as SAS Transport files with accompanying documentation in electronic submissions. They enable reviewers to analyze each dataset for each study. each CRF domain should be provided as a single dataset; however, additional datasets suitable for reproducing and confirming analyses may also be needed. Becoming obsolete, being replaced by SDTM.Electronic Case Report Tabulation
edit checkC142521An auditable process, usually automated, of assessing the content of a data field against its expected logical, format, range, or other properties that is intended to reduce error. NOTE: Time-of-entry edit checks are a type of edit check that is run (executed) at the time data are first captured or transcribed to an electronic device at the time entry is completed of each field or group of fields on a form. Back-end edit checks are a type that is run against data that has been entered or captured electronically and has also been received by a centralized data store.Edit Check
effectC18919treatment effectAn effect attributed to a treatment in a clinical trial. In most clinical trials, the treatment effect of interest is a comparison (or contrast) of two or more treatments. [ICH E9] See also treatment effect.Outcome of Therapy
effectivenessC142522The desired measure of a drug's influence on a disease or condition as demonstrated by substantial evidence from adequate and well-controlled investigations.Effectiveness
efficacyC88183The capacity of a drug or treatment to produce beneficial effects on the course or duration of a disease at the dose tested and against the illness (and patient population) for which it is designed.Efficacy
electronic data capture (EDC)C142527The process of collecting clinical trial data into a permanent electronic form. NOTE: Permanent in the context of these definitions implies that any changes made to the electronic data are recorded with an audit trail. EDC usually denotes manual entry of CRF data by transcription from source documents. The transcription is typically done by personnel at investigative sites. See also data entry, direct data entry, data acquisition.Electronic Data Capture
electronic health record (EHR)C142529An electronic record for healthcare providers to create, import, store, and use clinical information for patient care, according to nationally recognized interoperability standards. NOTE: The EHR has the following distinguishing features: able to be obtained from multiple sources; shareable; interoperable; accessible to authorized parties. [After National Office of Health Information Technology-HIT, USHHS]Electronic Health Record
electronic medical record (EMR)C45259An electronic record for healthcare providers within one healthcare organization to create, store, and use clinical information for patient care. An electronic record derived from a computerized system used primarily for delivering patient care in a clinical setting. NOTE: EMRs may serve as source documents, and such data could serve also as source data for clinical trials provided that the controls on the EMR system and the transfer of such data to the eClinical trial system were to fulfill regulatory requirements (e.g., 21 CFR 11).Electronic Medical Record
electronic personal health record (ePHR)C142530An electronic record for individuals to create, import, store, and use clinical information to support their own health.Electronic Personal Health Record
electronic recordC142531Any combination of text, graphics, data, audio, pictorial, or other information representation in digital form that is created, modified, maintained, archived, retrieved, or distributed by a computer system. [21 CFR 11.3(b) (6)]Electronic Record
electronic signatureC142533eSignatureA computer data compilation of any symbol or series of symbols, executed, adopted, or authorized by an individual to be the legally binding equivalent of the individual's handwritten signature. [CSUCT Glossary; 21 CFR 11.3(7)]Electronic Signature
endpointC25212A defined variable intended to reflect an outcome of interest that is statistically analyzed to address a particular research question. NOTE: A precise definition of an endpoint typically specifies the type of assessments made, the timing of those assessments, the assessment tools used, and possibly other details, as applicable, such as how multiple assessments within an individual are to be combined. [After BEST Resource] See also outcome, variable.End Point
enrolledC142715Status in a clinical study when a participant agrees to participate following completion of the informed consent process. NOTE: In some cases, when the prospective participant is unable to legally consent, permission to participate may be obtained from their legally-authorized representative. In some cases, enrollment requires verification of eligibility and inclusion in the analysis database. [after Clinicaltrials.gov]Study Subject Enrolled
enrollmentC37948The action of enrolling one or more subjects. NOTE: The subject will have met the inclusion/exclusion criteria to participate in the trial and will have signed an informed consent form. See also enrolled.Enrollment
enrollment (cumulative)C142466Current enrollment including any subjects who were once enrolled and have ended participation.Cumulative Enrollment
enrollment (current)C142467Subjects actively continuing to participate in a clinical trial as of the current date.Current Enrollment
epochC71738Interval of time in the planned conduct of a study. An epoch is associated with a purpose (e.g., screening, randomization, treatment, follow-up), which applies across all arms of a study. NOTE: Epoch is intended as a standardized term to replace: period, cycle, phase, stage. See also arm, visit.Clinical Trial Epoch
ePROC137811PRO data initially captured electronically. NOTE: Usually ePRO data is captured as eSource. [DIA ePRO Working Group]. See also patient reported outcome, PRO, eSource.Electronic Patient-reported Outcome System
equipoiseC142428A state in which an investigator is uncertain about which arm of a clinical trial would be therapeutically superior for a patient. NOTE: An investigator who has a treatment preference or finds out that one arm of a comparative trial offers a clinically therapeutic advantage should disclose this information to subjects participating in the trial.Clinical Equipoise
equivalence trialC142539A trial with the primary objective of showing that the response to two or more treatments differs by an amount that is clinically unimportant. NOTE: This is usually demonstrated by showing that the true treatment difference is likely to lie between a lower and an upper equivalence margin of clinically acceptable differences.Equivalence Trial
eSourceC142536Source record that is electronic. See also source, electronic record.Electronic Source Record
eSource data (electronic source data)C142534Source data captured initially into a permanent electronic record (eSource document) used for the reconstruction and evaluation of a clinical study or a source data item included in an eCRF when direct entry is made. NOTE: permanent in the context of these definitions implies that any changes made to the electronic data are recorded via an audit trail. See also eSource document, source data, permanent data, data originator. [From body of FDA Final Guidance on eSource]Electronic Source Data
eSource documentC142535Electronic record containing source data for a clinical trial, used to aggregate a particular instance of eSource data items for capture, transmission, storage, and/ or display, and serving as a source document for a clinical investigation. NOTE: Electronic Source documents are recorded in electronic systems according to conventions (such as those for PDF documents) that ensure that all the fields of eSource data and associated contextual information (e.g. time of capture, time zone, authorship, origin, signatures, revisions, etc.) are linked to each other in a particular structure for presentation. The encoded specifications in the electronic record thus serve the same role as have the physical properties of paper (binding data items together). eSource documents are subject to regulations and guidance that apply to source documents. See also source documents. [relevant to FDA Final Guidance on eSource]Electronic Source Document
eSource report form (eSRF)C142537The human-readable rendering of an electronic record serving as an eSource document that is part of a case history. The eSRF supports capture, transmission, storage, editing and/ or display of eSource documents (original records and certified copies of original records of clinical findings, observations, or other activities in a clinical investigation) used for reconstructing and evaluating the investigation. NOTE: Intended use distinguishes eCRF and eSRF. The eCRF is for capture, review and editing of protocol data belonging to the sponsor; the eSRF is for the human-readable representation of the eSource document for review or to maintain the eSource document that is part of the case history under 21CFR312.62. See also eCRF, eSource document. [CDISC, relevant to FDA Final Guidance on eSource]Electronic Source Report Form
essential documentsC142540Documents that individually and collectively permit evaluation of the conduct of a study and the quality of the data produced. [ICH E6 Glossary]Essential Trial Document
established nameC97104The official name of a drug substance. [Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act]Established Drug Name
ethics committeeC142541See institutional review board, independent ethics committee.Ethics Committee
ethnicityC16564Denotes social groups with a shared history, sense of identity, geography, and cultural roots.Ethnic Group
European Medicines Agency (EMA)C142543The regulatory agency for the EU.European Medicines Agency
evaluable (for efficacy and safety)C142546Pertains to data or subjects that meet statistical analysis Plan criteria for inclusion in efficacy/safety datasets.Evaluable for Safety and Efficacy
exclusion criteriaC25370List of characteristics in a protocol, any one of which may exclude a potential subject from participation in a study.Exclusion Criteria
excretionC94618The act or process of eliminating waste products from the body. See also ADME.Excretion
exploratory IND studyC142547A clinical study that is conducted early in Phase 1; involves very limited human exposure and has no therapeutic or diagnostic intent (e.g., screening studies, microdose studies) [FDA Guidance for industry, investigators, and Reviewers: exploratory IND studies, January 2006] See also Phase 0.Exploratory Investigational New Drug Study
exploratory studyC39538Phase 1 or 2 study during which the actions of a therapeutic intervention are assessed and measured. NOTE: Procedures in exploratory studies may appropriately be altered beyond the standard adequate and well controlled processes to expand the scope or method of investigation. [NOTE: After FDA eCOA Glossary] Compare to confirmatory study.Therapeutic Exploratory Study
eXtensible markup language (XML) data elementC142548For XML, an item of data provided in a mark-up mode to allow machine processing. NOTE: The mark-up or tagging facilitates document indexing, search and retrieval, and provides standard conventions for insertion of codes. [FDA - GL/IEEE]Extensible Markup Language Data Element
extraction transformation load (ETL)C142549A class of software applications for data extraction, transformation, and loading that are used to implement data interfaces between disparate database systems, often to populate data warehouses.Extraction Transformation Load
feelsC142557A patient's physical sensation (e.g., symptoms) or perceived mental state. A patient may feel pain, feel feverish, or perceive a severely low mood (as with depression). [FDA Clinical Outcome Assessment (COA) Glossary]Feels
fieldC25507Locus on a data collection instrument (usually a CRF) for recording or displaying a data element. See data item.Data Field
File Transfer Protocol (FTP)C100047A standard protocol for exchanging files between computers on the internet. See also TCP/IP.File Transfer Protocol
final reportC115575A written description of a trial/study of any therapeutic, prophylactic, or diagnostic agent conducted in human subjects, in which the clinical and statistical description, presentations, and analyses are fully integrated into a single report. [ICH E3]Clinical Trial Final Report
findingC3367A meaningful interpretation of data or observations resulting from planned evaluations. Compare to conclusion, hypothesis.Finding
first subject in - date, time (FSI - date, time)C142558FPI - date, time;first patient in - date, timeThe date and/or date and time the first subject is enrolled into a study. See also enrollment.First Subject In Date Time
first subject in - identity (FSI - identity)C142559FPI - identity;first patient in - identityThe first subject enrolled. See also enrollment.First Subject In Identity
first subject screened - date, timeC142560first patient screened - date, timeThe date and/or date and time the first subject signs the informed consent form and is screened for potential enrollment or randomization into a study, but has not yet been determined to meet the inclusion/exclusion criteria for the trial.First Subject Screened Date Time
first subject screened - identityC142561first patient screened - identityThe first subject who is so screened.First Subject Screened Identity
first subject treated - date, timeC142562first patient treated - date, timeThe date and/or date and time when the first subject receives the test article or placebo in a clinical investigation.First Subject Treated Date Time
first subject treated - identityC142563first patient treated - identityThe first subject who is so treated.First Subject Treated Identity
first-in-humans studyC142564first-in-man studyThe first Phase 1 study in which the test product is administered to human beings.First-in-Human Study
Food and Drug administration (FDA)C17237The United states regulatory authority charged with, among other responsibilities, granting IND and NDA approvals.Food and Drug Administration
FormC19464A collection of items and item groups for capturing and displaying clinical trial data.Form
frequentist methodsC142565Statistical methods, such as significance tests and confidence intervals, which can be interpreted in terms of the frequency of certain outcomes occurring in hypothetical repeated realizations of the same experimental situation. [ICH E9]Frequentist Method
frozenC142502Status of a database, file, or element that has been presumed to be in its final state pending "lock" and where further editing is prevented without "unfreezing." NOTE: Freezing and unfreezing are usually formalized in audit trails and differ from "locking" and "unlocking" only in the degree of approval required. See database lock.Database Frozen
functional roles (in a study)C142438The function or responsibility assumed by a person in the context of a clinical study. Examples include data manager, investigator. [HL7]Clinical Study Functional Role
functionsC142468functioningThe manner in which a patient can perform successfully tasks and roles required for everyday living. A patient's ability to perform specified activities that are a meaningful (to the patient), part of typical (e.g., daily) life. [FDA Clinical Outcome Assessment (COA) Glossary]Daily Living
genderC17357Subject self-identification re: masculine/feminine. [IOM] See also sex.Gender
generalizabilityC142429The extent to which the findings of a clinical trial can be reliably extrapolated from the subjects who participated in the trial to a broader patient population and a broader range of clinical settings. [ICH E9]Clinical Generalizability
generic nameC97054The drug identifying name to which all branded (proprietary) names for that medicinal product are associated.Generic Name
global assessment variableC142566A single variable, usually a scale of ordered categorical ratings, which integrates objective variables and the investigator's overall impression about the state or change in state of a subject. [ICH E9]Global Assessment Variable
glossaryC18232A collection of specialized words or terms with their meanings.Glossary
good clinical practice (GCP)C94236GCRP;good clinical research practiceA standard for the design, conduct, performance, monitoring, auditing, recording, analyses, and reporting of clinical trials that provides assurance that the data and reported results are credible and accurate and that the rights, integrity, and confidentiality of trial subjects are protected. NOTE: For Guidance on Good Clinical Practice see COMP/ICH/135/95; Declaration of Helsinki; 21 CFR 50, 21 CFR 54, 21 CFR 56, and 21 CFR 312. [ICH]Good Clinical Practice
granularityC142567Refers to the size of an information unit in relation to a whole. NOTE: Structuring "privileges" in electronic systems is said to be highly granular when each of many roles can differ in their capacity to act on electronic records.Granularity
group sequential designC142568A trial design that allows a look at the data at particular time points or after a defined number of patients have been entered and followed up based on formulating a stopping rule derived from repeated significance tests. [Center for Advancement of Clinical Research]Group Sequential Design
handwritten signatureC142569The scripted name or legal mark of an individual handwritten by that individual and executed or adopted with the present intention to authenticate a writing in a permanent form. NOTE: The act of signing with a writing or marking instrument such as a pen or stylus is preserved. [21CFR 11]Handwritten Signature
harmonized standardC142542A European Norm (EN) that has been accepted by all Member States and has been published in the Official Journal of the European Communities (OJEC).European Harmonized Standard
Health Level 7 (HL7)C80485An ANSI-accredited Standards Developing Organization (SDO) operating in the healthcare arena. NOTE: Level 7 refers to the highest level of the International Standards Organization's (ISO) communications model for Open Systems Interconnection (OSI), the application level. The application level addresses definition of the data to be exchanged, the timing of the interchange, and the communication of certain errors to the application. Level 7 supports such functions as security checks, participant identification, availability checks, exchange mechanism negotiations, and, most importantly, data exchange structuring.Health Level Seven
health-related quality of life (HRQoL)C142570A multi-domain concept that represents the patient's general perception of the effect of illness and treatment on physical, psychological, and social aspects of life. NOTE: Claiming a statistical and meaningful improvement in HRQoL implies: (1) that all HRQoL domains that are important to interpreting change in how the clinical trial's population feels or functions as a result of the targeted disease and its treatment were measured; (2) that a general improvement was demonstrated; and (3) that no decrement was demonstrated in any domain. [FDA Clinical Outcome Assessment (COA) Glossary] Compare to quality of life (QoL).Health-related Quality of Life
healthcare providerC16666A person licensed, certified, or otherwise authorized or permitted by law to administer healthcare in the ordinary course of business or practice of a profession, including a healthcare facility. [HL7]Health Care Provider
healthy volunteerC49651A healthy person volunteering to participate as a subject in a clinical trial, often a healthy person agreeing to participate in a Phase 1 trial. See also Phase 1.Healthy Subject
human subjectC70665subject/trial subjectIndividual who is or becomes a participant in research, either as a recipient of the test article or as a control. A subject may be either a healthy human or a patient. [21 CFR 50.3].Human Study Subject
Huriet LawC142572France's regulations covering the initiation and conduct of clinical trials.Huriet Law
hypertextC142573Links in a document that permit browsers to jump immediately to another document. NOTE: In most browsers links are displayed as colored, underlined text.Hypertext
HyperText Markup Language (HTML)C142380A specification of the W3C that provides markup of documents for display in a web browser. [HL7] Contrast to XML.Hypertext Markup Language
hypothesis to testC142574In a trial, a statement relating to the possible different effect of the interventions on an outcome. The null hypothesis of no such effect is amenable to explicit statistical evaluation by a hypothesis test, which generates a P value. [CONSORT Statement]Hypothesis To Test
impartial witnessC142577A person who is independent of the trial, who cannot be unfairly influenced by people involved with the trial, who attends the informed consent process if the subject or the subject's legally acceptable representative cannot read, and who reads the informed consent form and any other written information supplied to the subject. [ICH]Impartial Witness
inclusion criteriaC25532The criteria in a protocol that prospective subjects must meet to be eligible for participation in a study. NOTE: Exclusion and inclusion criteria define the study population. See also exclusion criteria.Inclusion Criteria
independent data monitoring committee (IDMC)C142578A committee established by the sponsor to assess at intervals the progress of a clinical trial, safety data, and critical efficacy variables and recommend to the sponsor whether to continue, modify, or terminate the trial. [ICH E9] See also data monitoring committee.Independent Data Monitoring Committee
independent ethics committee (IEC)C142579An independent body (a review board or a committee, institutional, regional, national, or supranational) constituted of medical/scientific professionals and non-scientific members, whose responsibility it is to ensure the protection of the rights, safety, and well-being of human subjects involved in a trial and to provide public assurance of that protection by, among other things, reviewing and approving/providing favorable opinion on the trial protocol, the suitability of the investigator(s), facilities, and the methods and material to be used in obtaining and documenting informed consent of the trial subjects. NOTE: The legal status, composition, function, operations, and regulatory requirements pertaining to independent ethics committees may differ among countries but should allow the independent ethics committee to act in agreement with GCP as described in the ICH guideline. [ICH] See also institutional review board.Independent Ethics Committee
indicationC41184A health problem or disease that is identified as likely to be benefited by a therapy being studied in clinical trials. NOTE: Where such a benefit has been established and approved by regulatory authorities, the therapy is said to be approved for such an indication.Indication
indirect identifierC142581quasi identiferData which in connection with other information can be used to identify an individual with high probability, e.g., age at baseline, race, gender, events, specific findings, etc. NOTE: two levels of indirect identifier are distinguished. Level 1 - not likely to change over time, is visible, and is available in other sources. Typically it is demographic data such as sex, age at a particular date, country, body mass index (BMI). Level 2 - longitudinal information that is likely to change such as measurements, events, age. See also quasi identifier. [PhUSE De-identification Standard for SDTM 3.2, version 1.0.1.]Indirect Identifier
informed consentC16735An ongoing process that provides the subject with explanations that will help in making educated decisions about whether to begin or continue participating in a trial. informed consent is an ongoing, interactive process rather than a one-time information session. NOTE: Under 21 CFR 50.20, no informed consent form may include any "language through which the subject or the representative is made to waive or appear to waive any of the subject's legal rights, or releases or appears to release the investigator, the sponsor, the institution, or its agents from liability for negligence." [ICH] See also consent form.Informed Consent
ingredientC51981Active and/or inactive material used in pharmaceutical product. [After ISO 11615:2017, 3.1.28]Ingredient
inspectionC142448The act by a regulatory authority(ies) of conducting an official review of documents, facilities, records, and any other resources that are deemed by the authority(ies) to be related to the clinical trial and that may be located at the site of the trial, at the sponsor's and/or contract research organization's (CRO's) facilities, or at other establishments deemed appropriate by the regulatory authority(ies). [ICH] See also audit.Clinical Trial Inspection
institution (medical)C21541Any public or private entity or agency or medical or dental facility where clinical trials are conducted. [ICH]Healthcare Facility
institutional review board (IRB)C16741committee for the protection of human subjects;independent ethics committee;independent review boardAn independent body constituted of medical, scientific, and non-scientific members, whose responsibility it is to ensure the protection of the rights, safety, and well-being of human subjects involved in a trial by, among other things, reviewing, approving, and providing continuing review of trial protocol and of the methods and material to be used in obtaining and documenting informed consent of the trial subjects. [ICH E6 1.31]Institutional Review Board
instrumentC142631A means to capture data (e.g., questionnaire, diary) plus all the information and documentation that supports its use. NOTE: Generally, instruments include clearly defined methods and instructions for administration or responding, a standard format for data collection, and well-documented methods for scoring, analysis, and interpretation of results. [from PRO Draft Guidance] Compare to questionnaire, survey (see Comments on Draft PRO Guidance, April 4, 2006, by ISOQOL, p. 8).Patient-Reported Survey Instrument
intention-to-treatC54398The principle that asserts that the effect of a treatment policy can be best assessed by evaluating the basis of the intention to treat a subject (i.e., the planned treatment regimen) rather than the actual treatment given. NOTE: This has the consequence that subjects allocated to a treatment group should be followed up, assessed, and analyzed as members of that group irrespective of their compliance with the planned course of treatment. The principle is intended to prevent bias caused by loss of participants that may reflect non-adherence to the protocol and disrupt baseline equivalence established by random assignment. [ICH E9; after CONSORT statement]Intent To Treat
inter-rater reliabilityC78688The property of scales yielding equivalent results when used by different raters on different occasions. [ICH E9]Inter-rater Reliability
interaction (qualitative and quantitative)C142732The situation in which a treatment contrast (e.g., difference between investigational product and control) is dependent on another factor (e.g., center). A quantitative interaction refers to the case where the magnitude of the contrast differs at the different levels of the factor, whereas for a qualitative interaction, the direction of the contrast differs for at least one level of the factor. [ICH E9 Glossary]Treatment Contrast Interaction
interim analysis scheduleC142583The time/information points at which interim analyses are planned.Interim Analysis Schedule
interim analysis(es)C142582Analysis comparing intervention groups at any time before the formal completion of the trial, usually before recruitment is complete. [CONSORT statement]Interim Analysis
interim clinical trial/study reportC115555A report of intermediate results and their evaluation based on planned analyses performed during the course of a trial. [ICH]Interim Analysis Output
internal consistencyC78687Pertaining to data that do not include contradictions.Internal Consistency
international birth date (IBD)C142584The date of the first marketing authorization for a new product granted to any company in any country in the world. [ICH E2C(R2), Appendix A]International Marketing Authorization Birth Date
international nonproprietary name (INN)C142585A unique name that is globally recognized and public property, which identifies pharmaceutical substances or active pharmaceutical ingredients. NOTE: The INN name is established by the World Health Organization (WHO). [After WHO]International Nonproprietary Name
internetC20342A global system of computer networks that provides the common TCP IP infrastructure for e-mail, the World Wide Web, and other online activities.Internet
internet service provider (ISP)C142586A company that provides access to the internet for individuals and organizations.Internet Service Provider
interoperabilityC142381Ability of two or more systems or components to exchange information and to use the information that has been exchanged. [IEEE Standard Computer Dictionary]. See also syntactic, semantic.Interoperability
interventionC25218The drug, device, therapy, or process under investigation in a clinical study that is believed to have an effect on outcomes of interest in a study (e.g., health-related quality of life, efficacy, safety, pharmacoeconomics). See also: test articles; devices; drug product; medicinal product; combination product.Intervention or Procedure
interventional clinical trialC98388A trial which intervenes with the inviolability of the trial subject for the purpose of the investigation. For example, the administration of an investigational medical product to the trial subject or use of some extra means of intervention (i.e., samples, tests, or questionnaires) that would not otherwise be used. [Clinical Trial Directive EC/20/2001 definitions]Interventional Study
investigational productC142587A pharmaceutical form of an active ingredient or placebo being tested or used as a reference in a clinical trial, including a product with a marketing authorization when used or assembled (formulated or packaged) in a way different from the approved form, or when used for an unapproved indication, or when used to gain further information about an approved use. NOTE: CDISC includes test articles in its definition of investigational products. Compare to Investigational Medicinal Product (IMP) from EU-CTR (EU) No 536/2014. [ICH]Investigational Product
investigational treatmentC142589An intervention under investigation in a clinical study.Investigational Treatment
investigatorC25936An individual who actually conducts a clinical investigation (i.e., under whose immediate direction the test article is administered or dispensed to, or used involving a subject, or, in the event of an investigation conducted by a team of individuals, is the responsible leader of that team). [21 CFR 50.3] See also sponsor-investigator, site investigator.Investigator
investigator's brochureC79303A compilation of the clinical and non-clinical data on the investigational product(s) that is relevant to the study of the investigational product(s) in human subjects.Investigational Brochure
investigator/institutionC142591An expression meaning the investigator and/or institution, where required by the applicable regulatory requirements. [ICH E6 1.35]Investigator/Institution
itemC142431A representation of a clinical variable, fact, concept, or instruction in a manner suitable for communication, interpretation, or processing by humans or by automated means. NOTE: Items are collected together to form item groups. [CDISC] Compare to data item, item (PRO).Clinical Item
item (PRO)C142629An individual question, statement, or task (and its standardized response options) that is evaluated by the patient to address a particular concept. [FDA Clinical Outcome Assessment (COA) Glossary] See also item generation, response option.Patient-reported Outcome Item
item definitionC142592Formal specification of the properties of an item or field of data in an eClinical trial. [CDISC ODM, CDISC CDASH]Item Definition
item generationC142630Establishing the content to be covered by the items in a PRO instrument, including generating item wording, evaluating the completeness of item coverage of the concepts of interest, and performing initial assessment of clarity and readability. NOTE: PRO instrument item generation is potentially incomplete without patient involvement. [from ISOQOL comments on PRO Draft Guidance]Patient-Reported Outcome Item Generation
item group definitionC142593The specification in an eClinical trial of a collection of items often clinically related to each other and useful to consider as an ensemble. NOTE: Item groups are likely to have greater granularity in analysis datasets using SDTM which can, for example, distinguish between different therapy types: study therapy, prior therapy, concomitant therapy, protocol forbidden therapies, rescue therapies. [ODM]Item Group Definition
Janus conceptual modelC142594A logical design for a data warehouse intended to integrate submission data, protocol descriptions, and analysis plans from clinical and animal studies into an FDA review environment that uses a set of validated, standards-based tools to allow reproducible cross-study, data mining, and retrospective comparative analysis. [FDA Study Data Standards]Janus Clinical Trials Repository Model
Janus study data repositoryC142595The Janus is a data repository for subject-level clinical and nonclinical study data submitted to FDA as part of a regulatory submission. NOTE: Sometimes written as JANUS, the term is not an acronym. [FDA Study Data Standards]Janus Study Data Repository
labelC41203package insert, patient package leafletDescription of a drug product/ device that includes: the indication, who should use it, adverse events, instructions for use, and safety information. NOTE: Labels must be approved by regulatory authorities. [FDA; SPL]Medical Product Label
labeling (content of)C54694All text, tables, and figures in labeling as described in regulations for a specific product (e.g., 21 CFR 201.56 and 201.57 for human prescription drugs; 201.66 for human over-the-counter drugs; 21 CFR 801 for medical devices; and 21 CFR 606.122 for blood products). See also structured product label.Labeling
laboratory (clinical)C142432A laboratory providing analyses of samples collected in clinical care or research.Clinical Laboratory
last subject in - date, time (LSI - date, time)C142596LPI - date, time;last patient in - date, timeThe date and/or date and time when a last subject to participate in a clinical trial is enrolled.Last Subject In Date Time
last subject in - identity (LSI - identity)C142597LPI - identity;last patient in - identityThe last subject enrolled in a clinical trial.Last Subject In Identity
last subject last visit - date, time (LSLV - date, time)C142598last subject out/complete (LSC/LPC or LSO/LPO) - date, time)The date and/or date and time when a last subject has reached a planned or achieved milestone representing the completion of the trial.Last Subject Last Visit Date Time
last subject last visit - identity (LSLV - identity)C142599LPC-dentity;LPO - identity;LSC - identity;LSO - identity;last subject complete - identity;last subject out - identityThe last subject to reach a planned or achieved milestone representing the completion of the trial.Last Subject Last Visit Identity
legal authenticationC142514A completion status in which a document has been signed manually or electronically by the individual who is legally responsible for that document. [HL7]Document Legally Authenticated
legally acceptable representativeC142600An individual or juridical or other body authorized under applicable law to consent, on behalf of a prospective subject, to the subject's participation in the clinical trial. [ICH, E6 Glossary]Legally Acceptable Representative
life-threatening adverse event/ experienceC84266Any adverse drug experience that places the patient or subject, in the view of the investigator, at immediate risk of death from the reaction as it occurred (i.e., it does not include a reaction that, had it occurred in a more severe form, might have caused death). [FDA 21 CFR 312.32; ICH-E2A]Life Threatening Adverse Event
longitudinal studyC15273Investigation in which data are collected from a number of subjects over a long period of time (a well-known example is the Framingham study).Longitudinal Study
low-interventional clinical trialC142601A clinical trial which fulfills all of the following conditions: (a) the investigational medicinal products, excluding placebos, are authorized; (b) according to the protocol of the clinical trial, (i) the investigational medicinal products are used in accordance with the terms of the marketing authorization; or (ii) the use of the investigational medicinal products is evidence-based and supported by published scientific evidence on the safety and efficacy of those investigational medicinal products in any of the Member States concerned; and (c) the additional diagnostic or monitoring procedures do not pose more than minimal additional risk or burden to the safety of the subjects compared to normal clinical practice in any Member State concerned. [REGULATION (EU) No 536/2014 Article 2.2.(3)]Low-interventional Clinical Trial
mappingC142485In the context of representing or exchanging data, connecting an item or symbol to a code or concept. Compare to translation.Data Mapping
marketing authorization holderC88074Organization or person that is permitted to market a medicinal product in a jurisdiction. [After ISO 11615:2017, 3.1.41]Marketing Authorization Holder
marketing authorization procedureC142602Formal procedure applied by a medicines regulatory agency to grant a marketing authorization, to amend an existing one, to extend its duration or to revoke it. [After ISO 11615:2017, 3.1.43]Marketing Authorization Procedure
marketing support trialsC142603Clinical studies that are designed to clarify therapeutic benefits of a marketed product or to show potential decision-makers the rationale for preferring one therapy over another.Marketing Support Trials
markupC63615Computer-processable annotations within a multimedia document. NOTE: in the context of the HL7 specification, markup syntax is according to the XML specification. [HL7]Markup
matched-pair designC142604A type of parallel trial design in which investigators identify pairs of subjects who are 'identical' with respect to relevant factors, then randomize them so that one receives Treatment a and the other Treatment B. See also pairing.Matched-Pair Design
meanC53319The sum of the values of all observations or data points divided by the number of observations; an arithmetical average.Mean
medianC28007The middle value in a data set; that is, just as many values are greater than the median and lower than the median value. (With an even number of values, the conventional median is halfway between the two middle values.)Median
medical monitorC51836A sponsor representative who has medical authority for the evaluation of the safety aspects of a clinical trial.Medical Monitor
medicinal productC142605Any substance or combination of substances that may be administered to human beings (or animals) for treating or preventing disease, or with the intent to make a medical diagnosis or to restore, correct or modify physiological functions. NOTE: 1. A Medicinal Product may contain one or more manufactured items and one or more pharmaceutical products. 2. In certain jurisdictions a Medicinal Product may also be defined as any substance or combination of substances which may be used to make a medical diagnosis. [After IDMP]Medicinal Product
medicinal product identifierC142606Unique identifier allocated to a medicinal product supplementary to any existing authorization number as ascribed by a medicines regulatory agency in a jurisdiction. NOTE: proposed by IDMP as a new universal identifier. [After ISO 11615:2017, 3.1.53]Medicinal Product Identifier
medicinal product nameC142607Name as authorized by a Medicines Regulatory Agency. NOTE: As a general principle, a marketing authorization is granted to a single Marketing Authorization Holder or sponsor who is responsible for placing a single Medicinal Product on the market. The marketing authorization contains the name of the Medicinal Product, which can refer to, for example, a single invented name or a scientific name [when available, the INN of the active substance(s)] accompanied by a trademark or other characteristics. Other characteristics of the name can refer to strength, pharmaceutical form, intended usage or an administration device, etc. [After ISO 11615:2017, 3.1.54]Medicinal Product Name
Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory agency (MHRA)C142608The UK government agency responsible for ensuring that medicines and medical devices work, and are acceptably safe. [MHRA]Medicines And Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency
mega-trialsC142609large sample trialMassive trials that test the advantages of therapeutic interventions by enrolling 10,000 or more subjects.Mega-Trial
memorandum of understanding (MOU)C142553A formal agreement between the Food and Drug administration (FDA) and federal, state, or local government agencies; academic institutions; and other entities. NOTE: The MOU constitutes an understanding between the parties but is a non-binding agreement. it is FDA's policy to enter into MOUs with other entities whenever there is a need to define lines of authority or responsibility, or to clarify cooperative procedures.FDA Memorandum of Understanding
message (HL7)C142486The atomic unit of data transferred between systems. It comprises a group of segments in a defined sequence, each message has a message type that defines its purpose. NOTE: For example, the Admission, Discharge and Transfer (ADT) Message type is used to transmit portions of a patient's ADT data from one system to another. in HL7, a three-character code contained within each message identifies its type. [HL7]Data Message
meta-analysisC17886The formal evaluation of the quantitative evidence from two or more trials bearing on the same question. NOTE: This most commonly involves the statistical combination of summary statistics from the various trials, but the term is sometimes also used to refer to the combination of the raw data. [from ICH E9 Glossary]Meta-Analysis
metabolismC19536The biochemical alteration of substances introduced into the body.Metabolic Process
metadataC52095Data that describe other data, particularly XML tags characterizing attributes of values in clinical data fields.Metadata
migrationC142726The act of moving a system or software product (including data) from an old to new operational environment in accordance with a software quality system. ISO/IEC/IEEE 12207:1995 5.5.5]System Migration
missing dataC142610Data not completed or corrupted in reports and case report forms, e.g., the data not captured when a subject withdraws from a trial. NOTE: Reviewers are concerned about missing data since patients who are not improved or who believe they have experienced side effects may be particularly prone to leave a trial, thus skewing the analysis of results if such analysis were to be done only on the subjects who had continued with the trial. Trial designs therefore specify plans for how such missing data will be treated in analysis. See also intention to treat. [FDA Guidance on Subject Withdrawal, 2008]Missing Data
modeC53320The most frequently occurring value in a data set.Mode
modelC16866A formal structure for representing and analyzing a process such as a clinical trial or the information pertaining to a restricted context (e.g., clinical trial data). [CDISC]Model
modemC50072From modulator/ demodulator; a device that converts digital data into analog data that can be transmitted via telephone or cable lines used for communications.Modem Device
monitorC41201Person employed by the sponsor or CRO who is responsible for determining that a trial is being conducted in accordance with the protocol and GCP guidance. NOTE: A monitor's duties may include, but are not limited to, helping to plan and initiate a trial, assessing the conduct of trials, and assisting in data analysis, interpretation, and extrapolation. Monitors work with the clinical research coordinator to check all data and documentation from the trial. [from ICH E6, 5.18] See also clinical research associate.Study Monitor
monitoringC142707The act of overseeing the progress of a clinical trial and of ensuring that it is conducted, recorded, and reported in accordance with the protocol, standard operating procedures (SOPs), good clinical practice (GCP), and the applicable regulatory requirement(s). [ICH E6 Glossary]Study Monitoring
monitoring planC115753A document that describes the strategy, methods, responsibilities, and requirements for monitoring the trial. NOTE: The term refers to the documented plan for site monitoring performed by the CRA(s). [After ICH E6(R2) Glossary, 1.64]Clinical Trial Monitoring Plan
monitoring reportC142708A written report from the monitor to the sponsor after each site visit and/or other trial-related communication according to the sponsor's SOPs. [ICH]Study Monitoring Report
monitoring visitC142709A visit to a study site to review the progress of a clinical study and to ensure protocol adherence, accuracy of data, safety of subjects, and compliance with regulatory requirements and good clinical practice guidelines. [from ICH E6, 5.18]Study Monitoring Visit
multicenter studyC142611See multicenter trial.Multi-Institutional Clinical Study
multicenter trialC16104Clinical trial conducted according to a single protocol but at more than one site and, therefore, carried out by more than one investigator. [ICH E9 Glossary] See investigator/ institution.Multi-Institutional Clinical Trial
n-of-1 studyC142614A trial in which an individual subject is administered a treatment repeatedly over a number of episodes to establish the treatment's effect in that person, often with the order of experimental and control treatments randomized.N-of-1 Study
natural languageC142612Language as used in ordinary communications among humans and distinguished from controlled terminologies and structured languages used exclusively for communication and interoperability among machines.Natural Language
NCI Enterprise Vocabulary Services (EVS)C43515A US national resource to house and maintain a number of health-related glossaries and controlled vocabularies under strict versioning. Provides resources and services to meet the National Cancer Institute's needs for controlled terminology, and to facilitate the standardization of terminology and information systems across the NCI and the larger biomedical community.NCI Enterprise Vocabulary Services
New Drug Application (NDA)C72899An application to FDA for a license to market a new drug in the United States.New Drug Application
new safety informationC142613With respect to a drug, information derived from a clinical trial, an adverse event report, a post-approval study, or peer-reviewed biomedical literature; data derived from the post-market risk identification and analysis system (REMS); or other scientific data regarding: (a) a serious risk or unexpected serious risk associated with use of the drug since the drug was approved, since the REMS was required or last assessed (b) the effectiveness of the approved REMS for the drug obtained since the last assessment of such strategy. [After 21 CFR, Part 505-1(b)]New Safety Information
nomenclatureC48298Application of naming conventions. Compare to vocabulary, terminology.Nomenclature
non-interventional studyC142615A study where the medicinal product(s) is (are) prescribed in the usual manner in accordance with the terms of the marketing authorization. The assignment of the patient to a particular therapeutic strategy is not decided in advance by a trial protocol but falls within current practice and the prescription of the medicine is clearly separated from the decision to include the patient in the study. No additional diagnostic or monitoring procedures shall be applied to the patients and epidemiological methods shall be used for the analysis of collected data. [Clinical Trial Directive EC/20/2001 definitions]Non-Interventional Study
nonclinical studyC48678Biomedical studies not performed on human subjects. [ICH E6 Glossary]Nonclinical Study
not approvable letterC142554An official communication from FDA to inform a sponsor of a marketing application that the important deficiencies described in the letter preclude approval unless corrected.FDA Not Approvable Letter
Notified Body (NB)C142545A private institution charged by the Competent Authority with verifying compliance of medical devices (not drugs) with the applicable Essential Requirements stated in the Medical Device Directive. This process, called Conformity Assessment, has EU-wide validity once completed by the NB.European Union Notified Body
null hypothesisC142616The assertion that no true association or difference in the study outcome or comparison of interest between comparison groups exists in the larger population from which the study samples are obtained. NOTE: A null hypothesis (for example, "subjects will experience no change in blood pressure as a result of administration of the test product") is used to rule out every possibility except the one the researcher is trying to prove, and is used because most statistical methods are less able to prove something true than to provide strong evidence that it is false. The assertion that no true association or difference in the study outcome or comparison of interest between comparison groups exists in the larger population from which the study samples are obtained. See also research hypothesis. [from AMA Manual of Style]Null Hypothesis
Nuremberg CodeC142617Code of ethics, set forth in 1947, for conducting human medical research.Nuremberg Code
objectiveC142450The reason for performing a trial in terms of the scientific questions to be answered by the analysis of data collected during the trial. NOTE: The primary objective is the main question to be answered and drives any statistical planning for the trial (e.g., calculation of the sample size to provide the appropriate power for statistical testing). Secondary objectives are goals of a trial that will provide further information on the use of the treatment.Clinical Trial Objective
objective measurementC142618A measurement of a physiological or medical variable such as blood glucose level that is obtained by a measuring device rather than a human judgment or assessment. See also outcome, patient-reported outcome; objective measures are observations (SDTM) and could be endpoints. Patient-reported outcomes are subjective measurements.Objective Measurement
observationC1165551. an assessment of patient condition or analysis of data collected on an individual patient or group of patients. 2. (SDTM) a discrete piece of information collected during a study. NOTE: observations (meaning 1) are required by protocol (e.g., require evaluation of patient or data by investigator/staff). such planned observations are typically distinguished from anecdotal comments noted during a clinical trial (which qualify as observations under meaning 2). See also variable. Referring to an ad hoc comment as an observation is colloquial. [1. CONSORT statement. 2. SDTM]Clinical Observation
observer assessmentC142619An assessment of patient condition made by an observer (investigator, nurse, clinician, family member, etc.). NOTE: Distinguished from self-assessment. The observer relies on his or her judgment to assess the subject. an interviewer simply capturing subject self assessments is not making an observer assessment. Compare to PRO, proxy assessment.Observer Assessment
observer-reported outcome (ObsRO)C142620A type of clinical outcome assessment. A measurement based on a report of observable signs, events or behaviors related to a patient's health condition by someone other than the patient or a health professional. [After FDA-NIH BEST Resource]Observer-reported Outcome
official protocol titleC132346scientific protocol titleThe formal descriptive name for the protocol sufficient to describe key elements of the study, aimed at a scientific audience. NOTE: The official protocol title should include the study acronym, if applicable [WHO ICTRP]. The official protocol title should be sufficiently different from other official protocol titles to create brevity with specificity [NIH Protocol Template].Official Protocol Title
ontologyC21270An explicit formal specification of how to represent relationships among objects, concepts, and other entities that belong to a particular domain of experience or knowledge. See also terminology.Ontology
open to enrollmentC142621The status of a study such that a subject can be enrolled into that study. NOTE: Registry terminology in common use is "open to recruitment"; however, recruitment can begin upon IRB approval of the site; whereas enrollment requires availability of study supplies, subject informed consent, etc., to allow participation of eligible subjects.Open To Enrollment
open-label studyC49659A trial in which subjects and investigators know which product each subject is receiving; opposite of a blinded or double-blind study. See blinding.Open Label Study
operational modelC142622The set of CDISC data standards (including ODM and LAB) used to capture and archive data from clinical trials.Operational Model
opinion (in relation to independent ethics committee)C142580The judgment and/or the advice provided by an independent ethics committee. [ICH E6 Glossary]Independent Ethics Committee Opinion
original dataC142623The first recorded study data values. NOTE: FDA is allowing original documents and the original data recorded on those documents to be replaced by copies provided that the copies have been verified as identical in content and meaning. (see FDA Compliance Policy Guide 7150.13). [Modified from CSUICI] See also certified copy, source.Original Data
outcomeC202001. events or experiences that clinicians or investigators examining the impact of an intervention or exposure measure because they believe such events or experiences may be influenced by the intervention or exposure. 2. (SDTM) The result of carrying out a mathematical or statistical procedure. NOTE: 1. such events and experiences are called clinical outcomes independently of whether they are part of the original question/protocol of the investigation. [1. Guyatt, G., Schunemann H., Dept. epidemiology & statistics, McMaster University-personal communication] See also variable; outcome can be a result of analysis; outcome is more general than endpoint in that it does not necessarily relate to a planned objective of the study.outcome. The measureable characteristic (clinical outcome assessment, biomarker) that is influenced or affected by an individual's baseline state or an intervention as in a clinical trial or other exposure. [BEST Resource]Outcome
outcome (of adverse event)C49489Refers to the resolution of an adverse event. NOTE: often denoted using a pick list from a controlled terminology such as: Recovered/resolved, recovering/ resolving, not recovered/not resolved, recovered/resolved with sequelae, fatal, or unknown. [SDTM events class of observation]Adverse Event Outcome
outcomes researchC15365Research concerned with benefits, financial costs, healthcare system usage, risks, and quality of life as well as their relation to therapeutic interventions. NOTE: Usually distinguished from research conducted solely to determine efficacy and safety. [Guyatt et al., 1993] See also pharmacoeconomics, quality of life.Outcomes Research
outliersC79083Values outside of an expected range.Outlier
p-valueC44185Study findings can also be assessed in terms of their statistical significance. The p-value represents the probability that the observed data (or a more extreme result) could have arisen by chance when the interventions did not differ. [CONSORT statement]P-Value
packagingC84731The material, both physical and informational, that contains or accompanies a marketed or investigational therapeutic agent once it is fully prepared for release to patients and/or subjects in clinical trialsPacking
pairingC142624matchingA method by which subjects are selected so that two subjects with similar characteristics (for example, weight, smoking habits) are assigned to a set, but one receives Treatment a and the other receives Treatment B. See also matched-pair design.Pairing
parallel trialC82639parallel design trial;parallel group trialSubjects are randomized to one of two or more differing treatment groups (usually investigational product and placebo) and usually receive the assigned treatment during the entire trial.Parallel Study
parameterC44175A variable in a model, or a variable that wholly or partially characterizes a probability distribution (mathematics and statistics). NOTE: in clinical trials the term is often used synonymously with 'variable' for factual information (age, date of recovery), measurements, and clinical assessments. it is most appropriately linked to statistical conventions and as a numeric characteristic of a population. Parameters are rarely known and are usually estimated by statistical computation from samples. Thus the term is narrower than variable. [Parexel Barnett; ADaM; HyperStat Online] See also variable, outcome.Parameter
participantC142710A person or entity with a role in healthcare or a clinical study. NOTE: Participants in a clinical trial may include subjects and study personnel. A subject participates as part of the group of people who are administered the therapeutic intervention or control. See also subject, patient.Study Participant
password agingC142626A practice applying to multi-user computer systems where the validity of a password expires after a certain pre-set period. NOTE: FDA requires that passwords that are part of electronic signatures be "periodically checked, recalled or revised," but does not mandate password aging. [After NIST, 21 CFR 11]Password Aging
patientC16960Person under a physician's care for a particular disease or condition. NOTE: A subject in a clinical trial is not necessarily a patient, but a patient in a clinical trial is a subject. See also subject, trial subject, healthy volunteer. Although often used interchangeably as a synonym for subject, a healthy volunteer is not a patient.Patient
patient fileC142627One that contains demographic, medical, and treatment information about a patient or subject. It may be paper- or computer-based or a mixture of computer and paper records.Patient File
patient-reported outcome (PRO)C95401A type of clinical outcome assessment. A measurement based on a report that comes directly from the patient (i.e., study subject) about the status of a patient's health condition without amendment or interpretation of the patient's response by a clinician or anyone else. NOTE: A PRO can be measured by self-report or by interview provided that the interviewer records only the patient's response. Symptoms or other unobservable concepts known only to the patient can only be measured by PRO measures. PROs can also assess the patient perspective on functioning or activities that may also be observable by others. [After BEST Resource]Patient Reported Outcome
per-protocol analysis setC142635The set of data generated by the subset of subjects who complied with the protocol sufficiently to ensure that these data would be likely to exhibit the effects of treatment according to the underlying scientific model. [ICH E9]Per-Protocol Analysis Set
performance outcome (PerfO)C142632A PerfO is a measurement based on a task(s) performed by a patient according to instructions that is administered by a health care professional. NOTE: Performance outcomes require patient cooperation and motivation. These include measures of gait speed (e.g., timed 25 foot walk test), memory recall, or other cognitive testing (e.g., digit symbol substitution test). [After 1. FDA Clinical Outcome Assessment (COA) Glossary; 2. FDA-NIH BEST Resource]Performance Outcome
performed activityC70900Clinical trial events as they actually occurred (as compared with events planned in the protocol).Performed Clinical Study Activity
period effectC142633An effect occurring during a period of a trial in which subjects are observed and no treatment is administered.Period Effect
permanent dataC142634Data that become or are intended to become part of an electronic record in relation to a regulatory submission. NOTE: Any changes made to such permanent data are recorded via an audit trail so that prior values are not obscured.Permanent Data
permissible valuesC41109Limited universe of options for data items. (e.g., drop-down menus, codelists, pick lists).Permissible Value
personally identifiable information (PII)C90492Any information about an individual maintained by an agency (or group) including but not limited to, education, financial transactions, medical history, and criminal or employment history, which can be used to distinguish or trace an individual's identity, such as name, social security number, date and place of birth, mother's maiden name, biometric records, etc., including any other personal information that is linked or linkable to an individual. Used in US [NIST Special publication 800-122]Personal Information
pharmaceutical productC42639Qualitative and quantitative composition of a medicinal product in the dose form authorized by the regulatory authority for administration to patients, and as represented with any corresponding regulated product information. NOTE: A medicinal product may contain one or more pharmaceutical products. In many instances, the pharmaceutical product is the manufactured item. However, there are instances where the manufactured item undergoes further preparation before being administered to the patient (as the pharmaceutical product). [After ISO 11615:2017, 3.1.60]Finished Pharmaceutical Product
pharmacodynamicsC15720Branch of pharmacology that studies reactions between drugs and living structures, including the physiological responses to pharmacological, biochemical, physiological, and therapeutic agents.Pharmacodynamics
pharmacoeconomicsC142636Branch of economics that applies cost-benefit, cost-utility, cost-minimization, and cost-effectiveness analyses to assess the utility of different pharmaceutical products or to compare drug therapy to other treatments.Pharmacoeconomics
pharmacogenetic testC68761An assay intended to study interindividual variations in DNA sequence related to drug absorption and disposition or drug action. Compare to pharmacogenomic test.Pharmacogenetic Test
pharmacogeneticsC16973Study of the way drugs interact with genetic makeup or the study of genetic response to a drug.Pharmacogenetics
pharmacogenomic testC68762An assay intended to study interindividual variations in whole genome or candidate gene maps, biomarkers, and alterations in gene expression or inactivation that may be correlated with pharmacological function and therapeutic response. Compare to pharmacogenetic test.Pharmacogenomic Test
pharmacogenomicsC20050Science that examines inherited variations in genes that dictate drug response and explores the ways such variations can be used to predict whether a person will respond favorably, adversely, or not at all to an investigational product.Pharmacogenomics
pharmacokineticsC15299Study of the processes of bodily absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion (ADME) of medicinal products.Pharmacokinetics
pharmacologyC16974Science that deals with the characteristics, effects, and uses of drugs and their interactions with living organisms.Pharmacology
pharmacovigilanceC142637Term used for adverse event monitoring and reporting. pharmacovigilance. Process and science of monitoring the safety of medicines and taking action to reduce the risks and increase the benefits of medicines. NOTE: Pharmacovigilance is a key public health function that comprises: collecting and managing data on the safety of medicines; looking at the data to detect 'signals' (any new or changing safety issue); evaluating the data and making decisions with regard to safety issues; acting to protect public health (including regulatory action);communicating with stakeholders; auditing of both the outcomes of action taken and the key processes involved. [After IDMP]Pharmacovigilance
phaseC48281One in a set of successive stages in a progression or sequence such as 1. a step in the progression of a therapy from initial experimental use in humans to postmarket evaluation. 2. a stage in the conduct of a clinical trial. NOTE: Clinical trials are generally categorized into four (sometimes five) phases. A therapeutic intervention may be evaluated in two or more phases simultaneously in different trials, and some trials may overlap two different phases. For meaning 1, see Phase 0-5. For meaning 2, see epoch.Trial Phase
phase 0C54721First-in-human trials, in a small number of subjects, that are conducted before Phase 1 trials and are intended to assess new candidate therapeutic and imaging agents. The study agent is administered at a low dose for a limited time, and there is no therapeutic or diagnostic intent. NOTE: FDA Guidance for Industry, Investigators, and Reviewers: Exploratory IND Studies, January 2006 classifies such studies as Phase 1. NOTE: A Phase 0 study might not include any drug delivery but may be an exploration of human material from a study (e.g., tissue samples or biomarker determinations). [Improving the Quality of Cancer Clinical Trials: Workshop summary-Proceedings of the National Cancer Policy Forum Workshop, improving the Quality of Cancer Clinical Trials (Washington, DC, Oct 2007)]Phase 0 Trial
phase 1C15600The initial introduction of an investigational new drug into humans. Phase 1 studies are typically closely monitored and may be conducted in patients or normal volunteer subjects. NOTE: These studies are designed to determine the metabolism and pharmacologic actions of the drug in humans, the side effects associated with increasing doses, and, if possible, to gain early evidence on effectiveness. During Phase 1, sufficient information about the drug's pharmacokinetics and pharmacological effects should be obtained to permit the design of well-controlled, scientifically valid Phase 2 studies. The total number of subjects and patients included in Phase 1 studies varies with the drug, but is generally in the range of 20 to 80. Phase 1 studies also include studies of drug metabolism, structure-activity relationships, and mechanism of action in humans, as well as studies in which investigational drugs are used as research tools to explore biological phenomena or disease processes. [after FDA CDER handbook, ICH E8]Phase I Trial
phase 2C15601Controlled clinical studies conducted to evaluate the effectiveness of the drug for a particular indication or indications in patients with the disease or condition under study and to determine the common short-term side effects and risks associated with the drug. NOTE: Phase 2 studies are typically well controlled, closely monitored, and conducted in a relatively small number of patients, usually involving no more than several hundred subjects. [after FDA CDER handbook, ICH E8]Phase II Trial
phase 2aC49686Controlled clinical studies that occur after the completion of Phase 1 studies and the first set of exposure-response studies in patients, and before beginning Phase 2B (i.e., patient dose-ranging trial) and Phase 3 clinical efficacy-safety studies. [FDA draft Guidance for industry end of Phase 2a meetings, 9/08].Phase IIa Trial
phase 3C15602Studies are expanded controlled and uncontrolled trials. They are performed after preliminary evidence suggesting effectiveness of the drug has been obtained and are intended to gather the additional information about effectiveness and safety that is needed to confirm efficacy and evaluate the overall benefit-risk relationship of the drug and to provide an adequate basis for physician labeling. NOTE: Phase 3 studies usually include from several hundred to several thousand subjects. [after FDA CDER handbook, ICH E8]Phase III Trial
phase 3BC49689A subcategory of Phase 3 trials done near the time of approval to elicit additional findings. NOTE: Dossier review may continue while associated Phase 3B trials are conducted. These trials may be required as a condition of regulatory authority approval.Phase IIIb Trial
phase 4C15603Post approval studies to delineate additional information about the drug's risks, benefits, and optimal use that may be requested by regulatory authorities in conjunction with marketing approval. NOTE: These studies could include, but would not be limited to, studying different doses or schedules of administration than were used in Phase 2 studies, use of the drug in other patient populations or other stages of the disease, or use of the drug over a longer period of time. [after FDA CDER handbook, ICH E8]Phase IV Trial
phase 5C47865Postmarketing surveillance is sometimes referred to as Phase 5. See also outcomes research.Phase V Trial
placeboC753A pharmaceutical preparation that does not contain the investigational agent. in blinded studies, it is generally prepared to be physically indistinguishable from the preparation containing the investigational product.Placebo
populationC17005Any finite or infinite collection of subjects from which a sample is drawn for a study to obtain estimates for values that would be obtained if the entire population were sampled. [AMA style Manual]Population Group
postmarketing commitment (PMC)C142639Studies and clinical trials that applicants have agreed to conduct, but that will generally not be considered as meeting statutory purposes (see postmarketing requirement) and so will not be required.Postmarketing Commitment
postmarketing requirement (pMR)C97025FDA-required postmarketing studies or clinical trials. [FDAAA; 21 CFR Part 314, subpart h; 21 CFR Part 601, subpart e]Post Marketing Requirement
postmarketing surveillanceC142640Ongoing safety monitoring of marketed drugs. See also Phase 4 studies, Phase 5 studies.Postmarketing Surveillance
pragmatic trialC142641Term used to describe a clinical study designed to examine the benefits of a product under real world conditions.Pragmatic Trial
pre-Market approval application (PMA)C70880An application to FDA for a license to market a new device in the United states.Premarket Approval Application
preambleC142555A section preceding the text of a final FDA regulation published in the Federal Register. NOTE: "The preamble is to contain a thorough and comprehensible explanation of the reasons for the Commissioner's decision on each issue" raised in comments submitted in response to the proposed regulation. [from 21CFR10.40]FDA Regulation Preamble
preclinical studiesC142642Animal studies that support Phase 1 safety and tolerance studies and must comply with good laboratory practice (GLP). NOTE: Data about a drug's activities and effects in animals help establish boundaries for safe use of the drug in subsequent human testing (clinical studies or trials).Preclinical Study
primary completion dateC142643The date that the final subject was examined or received an intervention for the purposes of final collection of data for the primary outcome [measure], whether the clinical trial concluded according to the pre-specified protocol or was terminated. NOTE: The primary completion date may or may not be the same as the study completion date. [ClinicalTrials.gov]Primary Completion Date
primary objectiveC85826The primary objective(s) is the main question to be answered and drives any statistical planning for the trial (e.g., calculation of the sample size to provide the appro�priate power for statistical testing). [ICH E6 6.3] See also objective.Trial Primary Objective
primary variableC142644primary endpoint, outcomeAn outcome variable specified in the protocol to be of greatest importance to the primary objective of the trial, usually the one used in the sample size calculation. NOTE: Differences between groups in the primary and secondary variable(s) are believed to be the result of the group-specific interventions. [PR Project; CONSORT Statement] See also primary objective.Primary Variable
PROMISC102988NIH-sponsored project for the development and evaluation of PRO item banks and computer adaptive testing for pain, fatigue, physical function, social function, and emotional well-being. [NIH]Patient Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System
proprietary nameC71898brand nameA commercial name granted by a naming authority for use in marketing a drug/device product. [SPL]Proprietary Name
prospective studyC142646Investigation in which a group of subjects is recruited and monitored in accordance with criteria described in a protocol.Prospective Study
protected personal data (PPD)C142647Any information relating to an identified or identifiable natural person (data subject); an identifiable person is one who can be identified directly or indirectly, in particular by reference to an identification number or to one or more factors specific to his/her physical, psychological, mental, economic, cultural or social identity. Used in Europe [EU Directive 95/46/EC]Protected Personal Data
protocolC142451study protocolA document that describes the objective(s), design, methodology, statistical considerations, and organization of a trial. The protocol usually also gives the background and rationale for the trial, but these could be provided in other protocol referenced documents. Throughout the ICH GCP Guideline the term protocol refers to protocol and protocol amendments. NOTE: Present usage can refer to any of three distinct entities: 1) the plan (i.e., content) of a protocol, 2) the protocol document, and 3) a series of tests or treatments (as in oncology). [ICH E6 Glossary]Clinical Trial Protocol
protocol amendment(s)C132347A written description of a change(s) to or formal clarification of a protocol. NOTE: If a protocol modification is substantial, it may require notification to the regulatory authority. For example, substantial impacts on the safety or rights of the subjects or on the reliability and robustness of the data generated in the clinical trial. [ICH E3; ICH E6 (R2) Glossary 1.45]Protocol Amendment
protocol approval (Sponsor)C142648Sponsor action at the completion of protocol development that is marked when the signature of the last reviewer on the protocol approval form has been obtained, signifying that all reviewer changes to the protocol have been incorporated. NOTE: Approval by the sponsor usually initiates secondary approvals by IRBs, regulatory authorities, and sites. Protocol amendments usually also require a cycle of approval by sponsor and study staff prior to taking effect.Protocol Approval by Sponsor
protocol deviationC50996A variation from processes or procedures defined in a protocol. Deviations usually do not preclude the overall evaluability of subject data for either efficacy or safety, and are often acknowledged and accepted in advance by the sponsor. NOTE: Good clinical practice recommends that deviations be summarized by site and by category as part of the report of study results so that the possible importance of the deviations to the findings of the study can be assessed. Compare to protocol violation. [See ICH E3]Protocol Deviation
Protocol Identifying NumberC132299Any of one or more unique codes that refers to a specific protocol. NOTE: There may be multiple numbers (National number, coop group number). [PR Project; EudraCT]Protocol Identifier
protocol referenced documentsC142650Protocol referenced documents that optionally supplement the ICH GCP recommended sections of a protocol giving background information and rationale for the trial. [from ICH E6 1.44] See also protocol.Protocol Referenced Documents
protocol violationC142185A significant departure from processes or procedures that were required by the protocol. Violations often result in data that are not deemed evaluable for a per-protocol analysis, and may require that the subject(s) who violate the protocol be discontinued from the study. Compare to protocol deviation.Protocol Violation
proxy (as an origin of outcome measures)C142651A proposed standardized qualifier variable to describe the origin of observations of the Findings class resulting from outcomes measures. Proxy describes outcome data furnished by someone other than the patient and distinguishes the origin of the outcome from a self-report (PRO) directly from the patient. NOTE: The term proxy helps qualify outcomes measures that record feelings and symptoms reported by the patient but not recorded directly. [CDISC (extension of SDTM based on Table 2 Patrick, D.L., 2003)] See also observer assessment.Proxy Data Origin
proxy respondentC142652Someone other than the patient who is responding about the patient on behalf of the patient, not as an observer. [Patrick, D.L., 2003; DIA ePRO Workgroup] Compare to observer assessment.Proxy Respondent
proxy-reported outcomeC142653A measurement based on a report by someone other than the patient reporting as if he or she is the patient. NOTE: A proxy-reported outcome is not a patient-reported outcome (PRO). FDA does not consider a proxy-reported outcome as a valid endpoint. [After FDA Clinical Outcome Assessment (COA) Glossary]Proxy-reported Outcome
pseudonymizationC142654A privacy preservation technique that both replaces the direct association with a data subject and adds an association between a particular set of characteristics relating to the data subject and one or more pseudonyms. Typically, psuedonymization is implemented by replacing direct identifiers (like the subject's name) with a pseudonym such as a randomly generated value. [ISO/TS 25237:2008]Pseudonymization
psychometric reliabilityC142655reliability, psychometricThe degree to which a psychometric 'instrument' is free from random error either by testing the homogeneity of content on multi-item tests with internal consistency evaluation or testing the degree to which the instrument yields stable scores over time. NOTE: Reliability pertains to questions concerning whether an instrument is accurate, repeatable, sensitive. Reliability is distinguished from validation, which answers whether the instrument (e.g., questionnaire) actually measure the selected "construct" (latent variable). For example a balance (scale) is easily understood as a possibly valid instrument to measure body weight. Its reliability would be assessed by measuring the sensitivity, repeatability and accuracy of the balance. The validity of using the balance for a particular purpose could then be established by comparing the measured reliability to the reliability required for that purpose. [After Patrick, D.L., 2003] Compare to psychometric validation; see also validation; instrument.Psychometric Instrument Reliability
psychometric validationC142656validity, psychometricThe specialized process of validating questionnaires used in outcomes research to show that they measure what they purport to measure. NOTE: Several types of validity are distinguished. For example, [Guyatt et al., 1993; DIA ePRO Workgroup] See also validation; compare to psychometric reliability.Psychometric Validation
psychometricsC17034The science of assessing the measurement characteristics of scales that assess human psychological characteristics.Psychometrics
public protocol titleC94105brief protocol title;short protocol titleA brief description intended for the lay public in easily understood language. NOTE: Public title may also be referred to as "brief title." [Segen's Medical Dictionary]Study Protocol Document Version Public Title
qualitative variableC142657One that cannot be measured on a continuum and represented in quantitative relation to a scale (race or sex, for example). Data that fit into discrete categories according to their attributes.Qualitative Variable
quality assurance (QA)C15381All those planned and systematic actions that are established to ensure that the trial is performed and the data are generated, documented (recorded), and reported in compliance with good clinical practice (GCP) and the applicable regulatory requirement(s). [ICH]Quality Assurance
quality control (QC)C15311The operational techniques and activities undertaken within the quality assurance system to verify that the requirements for quality of the trial related activities have been fulfilled. [ICH]Quality Control
quality of life (QoL)C17047A broad ranging concept that incorporates an individual's physical health, psychological state, level of independence, social relationships, personal beliefs, and their relationships to salient features of the environment. NOTE: Quality of life is one way to measure the benefits or negative impacts of an "improvement" measured in terms of a physiological or psychological symptom. QoL research seeks to quantify what an intervention means to a patient's sense that their life has changed. NOTE: See also definition from FDA eCOA Glossary. [WHO Group, 1994]Quality of Life
quantitative variableC142658One that can be measured and reported numerically to reflect a quantity or amount, ideally on a continuum.Quantitative Variable
queryC142480A request for clarification on a data item collected for a clinical trial; specifically a request from a sponsor or sponsor's representative to an investigator to resolve an error or inconsistency discovered during data review.Data Item Query
query managementC142481Ongoing process of data review, discrepancy generation, and resolving errors and inconsistencies that arise in the entry and transcription of clinical trial data.Data Item Query Management
query resolutionC142482The closure of a query usually based on information contained in a data clarification.Data Item Query Resolution
questionnaireC17048A set of questions or items shown to a respondent in order to get answers for research purposes. [PRO Draft Guidance] See also instrument, survey.Questionnaire
radiopharmaceutical medicinal productC142659Any medicinal product which, when ready for use, contains one or more radionuclides (radioactive isotopes) included for a medicinal purpose. [DIRECTIVE 2001/83/EC Article 1.(11)]Radiopharmaceutical Medicinal Product
random allocationC142660Assignment of subjects to treatment (or control) groups in an unpredictable way. NOTE: in a blinded study, assignment sequences are concealed, but available for disclosure in the event a subject has an adverse experience.Random Allocation
random number tableC142661Table of numbers with no apparent pattern used in the selection of random samples for clinical trials.Random Number Table
random sampleC142662Members of a population selected by a method designed to ensure that each person in the target group has an equal chance of selection.Random Sample Population
randomizationC25196The process of assigning trial subjects to treatment or control groups using an element of chance to determine the assignments in order to reduce bias. NOTE: Unequal randomization is used to allocate subjects into groups at a differential rate; for example, three subjects may be assigned to a treatment group for every one assigned to the control group. [ICH E6 1.48] See also balanced study.Randomization
raw dataC142663Data as originally collected. Distinct from derived. Raw data includes records of original observations, measurements, and activities (such as laboratory notes, evaluations, data recorded by automated instruments) without conclusions or interpretations. Researcher's records of subjects/patients, such as patient medical charts, hospital records, X-rays, and attending physician's notes. NOTE: These records may or may not accompany an application to a Regulatory authority, but must be kept in the researcher's file. See also eSource, source data, source documents.Raw Data
RCRIMC142666Regulated Clinical Research and information Management, which is a Technical Committee within HL7 (an acronym pronounced "arcrim").Regulated Clinical Research and Information Management
reconstruction (of a study)C142712For eClinical trials FDA expects archival trial records to support review of the data as well as the processes used for obtaining and managing the data so that the trustworthiness of results obtained can be evaluated. NOTE: Reconstruction from records should support evaluation of the operation and validity of computerized systems and the conformance of the systems to applicable regulations during design and execution of the trial as well as during the period of record retention. [from CSUCT VI D, 21 CFR Parts 11, 312]Study Reconstruction
recruitment (investigators)C142590Process used by sponsors to identify, select, and arrange for investigators to serve in a clinical study.Investigator Recruitment Process
recruitment (subjects)C78343Process used by investigators to find and enroll appropriate subjects (those selected on the basis of the protocol's inclusion and exclusion criteria) into a clinical study.Recruitment
recruitment periodC142664Time period during which subjects are or are planned to be enrolled in a clinical trialRecruitment Period
recruitment targetC142665Number of subjects that must be recruited as candidates for enrollment into a study to meet the requirements of the protocol. in multicenter studies, each investigator has a recruitment target.Recruitment Target
Reference information Model (RIM)C80496An information model used as the ultimate defining reference for all HL7 standards. [HL7]Reference Information Model
registryC93453A data bank of information on clinical trials for drugs for serious or life-threatening diseases and conditions. NOTE: The registry should contain basic information about each trial sufficient to inform interested subjects (and their healthcare practitioners) how to enroll in the trial. [FDAMA 113]Study Registry
regulatory applicationC70868Application made to a health authority to investigate, market, or license a new product or indication.Regulatory Application
regulatory authoritiesC88081health authorityBodies having the power to regulate. NOTE: In the ICH GCP guideline the term includes the authorities that review submitted clinical data and those that conduct inspections. These bodies are sometimes referred to as competent authorities. [ICH]Regulatory Authority
repeat ruleC142667Guide for repeating activities specified in protocol, including such features as the number of cycles and the criteria for stopping.Repeat Activity Until Rule
replacementC142738The act of enrolling a clinical trial subject to compensate for the withdrawal of another.Trial Subject Replacement
research hypothesisC142668The proposition that a study sets out to support (or disprove); for example, "blood pressure will be lowered by [specific endpoint] in subjects who receive the test product." See also null hypothesis.Research Hypothesis
residual riskC142669In assessing the risk of re-identifying a trial participant, the risk that remains after controls are taken into account (the net risk or after controls). [Institute of Medicine report, Appendix B]Residual Risk
response optionC142670One of several choices to be available for selection in response to a prompt, question or instruction (i.e., a stem) in a PRO item. See also common data element, stem.Response Option
result synopsisC115629The brief report prepared by biostatisticians summarizing primary (and secondary) efficacy results and key demographic information.Clinical Study Report Synopsis
results posting (results submission)C142671The process of submitting and updating summary information about the results of a clinical study to a structured, publicly accessible, Web-based results database, such as the ClinicalTrials.gov results database. [ClinicalTrials.gov]Results Posting
results posting date (results submission date)C142672The date and time the summary information about the results of the clinical study are submitted to a structured, publicly accessible, Web-based results database, such as the ClinicalTrials.gov results database. [ClinicalTrials.gov]Results Posting Date
retrospectiveC142673Capture of clinical trial data is retrospective when it is recalled from memory rather than captured contemporaneously in real-time. NOTE: Retrospective capture is important in PROs because of "recall bias" and other errors documented in psychological research comparing contemporaneous self-reported assessments and those that rely on recall from memory.Retrospective Data Capture
riskC142718In clinical trials, the probability of harm or discomfort for subjects. NOTE: Acceptable risk differs depending on the condition for which a product is being tested. A product for sore throat, for example, will be expected to have a low incidence of troubling side effects. However, the possibility of unpleasant side effects may be an acceptable risk when testing a promising treatment for a life-threatening illness.Subject Risk
risk based monitoringC142674A systematic, prioritized, risk-based approach to monitoring clinical trials. [After ICH E6(R2), 5.18.3]Risk Based Monitoring
role (CDISC classifier)C142414Classifier for variables that describe "observations" in the SDTM. Role is a metadata attribute that determines the type of information conveyed by an observation-describing variable and standardizes rules for using the describing variable. [SDTM]CDISC Classifier Role
route of administration (ROA)C38114Path by which the pharmaceutical product is taken into or makes contact with the body. [After ISO 11615:2017, 3.1.76]Route of Administration
SAFEC142675BioPharma(TM) Digital Identity and Signature Standard.SAFE-Biopharma Standard
safetyC60828Relative freedom from harm. In clinical trials, this refers to an absence of harmful side effects resulting from use of the product and may be assessed by laboratory testing of biological samples, special tests and procedures, psychiatric evaluation, and/or physical examination of subjects.Safety
safety and tolerabilityC142676The safety of a medical product concerns the medical risk to the subject, usually assessed in a clinical trial by laboratory tests (including clinical chemistry and hematology), vital signs, clinical adverse events (diseases, signs, and symptoms), and other special safety tests (e.g., ECGs, ophthalmology). The tolerability of the medical product represents the degree to which overt adverse effects can be tolerated by the subject. [ICH E9]Safety and Tolerability
sample sizeC53190A subset of a larger population, selected for investigation to draw conclusions or make estimates about the larger population.Sample Size
sample size adjustmentC142677An interim check conducted on blinded data to validate the sample size calculations or reevaluate the sample size.Sample Size Adjustment
sample size calculationC115467A statistical calculation to determine the number of subjects required for the primary analysis, which should be large enough to provide a reliable answer to the questions addressed and should be determined by the primary objective of the trial. [After ICH E9, 3.5]Sample Size Calculation
schedule of activitiesC132349A standardized representation of planned clinical trial activities including interventions (e.g., administering drug, surgery) and study administrative activities (e.g., obtaining informed consent, distributing clinical trial material and diaries, randomization) as well as assessments. See also schedule of assessments.Schedule of Activities
schedule of assessmentsC142678A tabular representation of planned protocol events and activities, in sequence. [after E3 Annexes IIIa and IIIb] Compare to study design schematic.Schedule Of Assessments
screen failureC49628Potential subject who did not meet one or more criteria required for participation in a trial. See also screening of subjects.Trial Screen Failure
screen/screening (of substances)C142721Screening is the process by which substances are evaluated in a battery of tests or assays (screens) designed to detect a specific biological property or activity. It can be conducted on a random basis in which substances are tested without any preselection criteria or on a targeted basis in which information on a substance with known activity and structure is used as a basis for selecting other similar substances on which to run the battery of tests. [SQA]Substance Screening
screening (of sites)C142689Determining the suitability of an investigative site and personnel to participate in a clinical trial.Site Screening
screening (of subjects)C48262A process of active consideration of potential subjects for enrollment in a trial. See also screen failure.Trial Screening
screening trialsC71485Trials conducted to detect persons with early, mild, and asymptomatic disease.Screening Study
scriptC96999A program or a sequence of instructions that are interpreted or carried out by another program or by a person.Script
secondary objectiveC85827See objective.Trial Secondary Objective
secondary sponsorC142679Additional individuals, organizations or other legal persons, if any, that have agreed with the primary sponsor to take on responsibilities of sponsorship. [WHO, CTR item 6]Secondary Sponsor
secondary variableC142680The primary outcome is the outcome of greatest importance. Data on secondary outcomes are used to evaluate additional effects of the intervention. [CONSORT statement] See also outcome, endpoint.Secondary Variable
self-evident changeC142681A data discrepancy that can be easily and obviously resolved on the basis of existing information on the CRF (e.g., obvious spelling errors or the patient is known to be a male and a date of last pregnancy is provided). See also discrepancy.Self-Evident Change
semanticC54194In the context of a technical specification, semantic refers to the meaning of an element as distinct from its syntax. syntax can change without affecting semantics. [HL7]Semantics
semantic interoperabilityC142682The ability of data shared by systems to be understood at the level of fully defined domain concepts. [ISO 18308]Semantic Interoperability
sensitive dataC142683Any data that, in the event of re-identification, would harm a patient in terms of employability, reputation, insurability, or self-esteem or results in loss of income. NOTE: Examples include history of alcoholism, drug abuse, risky behavior, or venereal disease. [HIPAA]Sensitive Data
serious adverse drug reactionC142685Adverse drug reaction that at any dose of the drug: results in death, is life-threatening, requires inpatient hospitalization or prolongation of existing hospitalization, results in persistent or significant disability/ incapacity, or is a congenital anomaly/ birth defect. NOTE: FDA 21 CFR 310.305 defines an adverse drug experience to include any adverse event, "whether or not considered to be drug-related." CDISC recognizes that current usage incorporates the concept of causality. [1. WHO Technical Report 498(1972); 2. After ICH E2A, B] See ICH E6 definition and serious and severe definitions.Serious Adverse Drug Reaction
serious adverse event (SAE)C41335Adverse event that: results in death, is life-threatening, requires inpatient hospitalization or prolongation of existing hospitalization, results in persistent or significant disability/ incapacity, or is a congenital anomaly/ birth defect. NOTE: For further information, see the ICH Guideline for Clinical safety Data Management: Definitions and standards for expedited Reporting. [After ICH E2A, B] Compare to serious adverse drug reaction.Serious Adverse Event
serious adverse experience (SAE)C142686Any experience that suggests a significant hazard, contra-indication, side effect or precaution. See also serious adverse event.Serious Adverse Experience
serious riskC142687Risk of a serious adverse drug experience. [505-1(b) of FD&C Act (21 USC. 355-1(b)]Serious Risk
serverC48297A computer that controls a central repository of data, files, and/ or applications that can be accessed and/or manipulated in some manner by client computers. NOTE: A file server hosts files for use by client machines. A web server supports browser-based use of central applications.Server
severeC70667An adjective for grading intensity on a relative scale describing a symptom, outcome or event. Note: The term 'severe' is often used to describe the intensity (severity) of a specific event (as in mild, moderate, or severe myocardial infarction); the event itself, however, may be of relatively minor medical significance (such as severe headache). This is not the same as 'serious,' which is based on patient/event outcome or action criteria usually associated with events that pose a threat to a patient's life or functioning. Seriousness (not severity) serves as a guide for defining regulatory reporting obligations. [After ICH E2A, B] See also serious adverse event and serious adverse drug reaction.Severe
sexC28421Phenotypic expression of chromosomal makeup that defines a study subject as male, female, or other. Compare to gender.Sex
side effectsC2861Any actions or effects of a drug or treatment other than the intended effect. negative or adverse effects may include headache, nausea, hair loss, skin irritation, or other physical problems. experimental drugs must be evaluated for both immediate and long-term side effects. See also adverse reaction.Side Effect
signal of a serious riskC142688Information related to a serious adverse drug experience associated with use of a drug and derived from-(a) a clinical trial; (b) adverse event reports; (c) a post-approval study; (d) peer-reviewed biomedical literature; (e) data derived from the post-market REMs. [505-1(b) of FD&C Act (21 USC. 355-1(b)]Signal of a Serious Risk
single-blind studyC28233single-masked studyA study in which one party, either the investigator or the subject, does not know which medication or placebo is administered to the subject; also called single-masked study. See also blind study, double-blind study, triple-blind study.Single Blind Study
site investigatorC51873A person responsible for the conduct of the clinical trial at a trial site. if a trial is conducted by a team of individuals at a trial site, the investigator is the responsible leader of the team and may be called the principal investigator. [ICH E6 1.35. 2.] See also investigator.Site Investigator
social circumstancesC20188A set of concepts that results from or is influenced by criteria or activities associated with the social environment of a person. [NCI]Social Circumstances
softwareC17146Computer programs, procedures, rules, and any associated documentation pertaining to the operation of a system.Computer Program
software validationC142690Confirmation by examination and provision of objective evidence that software specifications conform to user needs and intended uses, and that the particular requirements implemented through software can be consistently fulfilled. NOTE: Validating software thus should include evaluation of the suitability of the specifications to "ensure user needs and intended uses can be fulfilled on a consistent basis" (21 CFR 820.20). General Principles of software Validation; Final Guidance for industry and FDA staff, Jan 11, 2002. ISOIEC/IEEE 12207:1995 3.35; 21 CFR 820.20; 21 CFR 11.10(a); ISO 9000-3; Huber, l. (1999) See also validation, verification. Verification usually concerns confirmation that specified requirements have been met, but typically refers to the tracing of requirements and evidence of conformance in the individual phases or modules rather than suitability of the complete product. Validation is, "the evaluation of software at the end of the software development process to ensure compliance with the user requirements" (ANSI/ASQC A3-1978) and should not be thought of as an "end-to-end" verification.Software Validation
software verificationC91996The process that provides objective evidence that the design outputs of a particular phase of the software development life cycle meet all of the specified requirements for that phase. NOTE: Software verification looks for consistency, completeness, and correctness of the software and its supporting documentation, as it is being developed, and provides support for a subsequent conclusion that software is validated [After 1. FDA General Principles of Software Validation; 2. ANSI/ASQC A3-1978; 3. ISO/IEC 17025:2017]Device Software Verification Evaluation Method
sourceC256831. The specific permanent record(s) upon which a user will rely for the reconstruction and evaluation of a clinical investigation. 2. Sometimes used as shorthand for source documents and/or source data. NOTE: Accuracy, suitability, and trustworthiness are not defining attributes of "source." The term identifies records planned (designated by the protocol) or referenced as the ones that provide the information underlying the analyses and findings of a clinical investigation. See also original data, certified copy. [After ICH E6, CSUICI]Source
source dataC125442All information in original records and certified copies of original records of clinical findings, observations, or other activities in a clinical trial necessary for the reconstruction and evaluation of the trial. Source data are contained in source documents (original records or certified copies). [ICH E6; CSUCT]Clinical Trial Source Data
source data verificationC142752The process of ensuring that data that have been derived from source data accurately represent the source data.Source Data Verification
source document verification (SDV)C142693The process by which the information reported by an investigator is compared with the source records or original records to ensure that it is complete, accurate, and valid. [Schuyl and Engel, 1999; Khosla et al., Indian J. Pharm 32:180-186, 2000] See also data validation.Source Document Verification
source documentsC142692Original documents, data, and records (e.g., hospital records, clinical and office charts, laboratory notes, memoranda, subjects' diaries or evaluation checklists, pharmacy dispensing records, recorded data from automated instruments, copies or transcriptions certified after verification as being accurate copies, microfiches, photographic negatives, microfilm or magnetic media, x-rays, subject files, and records kept at the pharmacy, at the laboratories, and at medicotechnical departments involved in the clinical trial). See also eSource document, source, original data, certified copy. [ICH; CSUICI]Source Document
special populationsC18101Subsets of study populations of particular interest included in clinical trials to ensure that their specific characteristics are considered in interpretation of data (e.g., geriatric). [FDA]Special Population
specified substanceC142694Substance defined by groups of elements that describes multi-substance materials or specifies further information on substances relevant to the description of Medicinal Products. NOTE: This could include grade, units of measure, physical form, constituents, manufacturer, critical manufacturing processes (e.g. extraction, synthetic or recombinant processes), specification and the analytical methods used to determine whether a substance is in compliance with a specification. [After ISO 11615:2017, 3.1.77]Specified Substance
sponsorC70793An individual, company, institution, or organization that takes responsibility for the initiation, management, and/or financing of a clinical trial. NOTE: If there is also a secondary sponsor, the responsible entity would be considered the primary sponsor. A corporation or agency whose employees conduct the investigation is considered a sponsor and the employees are considered investigators. [After ICH E6, WHO, 21 CFR 50.3 (e), and after IDMP] See also secondary sponsor.Clinical Study Sponsor
sponsor-investigatorC142695An individual who both initiates and conducts, alone or with others, a clinical trial and under whose immediate direction the investigational product is administered to, dispensed to, or used by a subject. NOTE: The term does not include any person other than an individual (i.e., it does not include a corporation or an agency). The obligations of a sponsor-investigator include both those of a sponsor and those of an investigator. [21 CFR 50.3f] [ICH]Sponsor-Investigator
standardC81893Criterion or specification established by authority or consensus for 1. measuring performance or quality; 2. specifying conventions that support interchange of common materials and information. NOTE: CDISC standards exist to support the exchange of clinical data, for example, at both the syntactic and semantic levels. See interoperability.Standard
standard deviationC53322Indicator of the relative variability of a variable around its mean; the square root of the variance.Standard Deviation
standard of careC94396A guideline for medical management and treatment.Best Practice
standard operating procedures (SOPs)C48443Detailed, written instructions to achieve uniformity of the performance of a specific function. [ICH]Standard Operating Procedure
standard treatmentC142696A treatment currently in wide use and approved by FDA or other health authority, considered to be effective in the treatment of a specific disease or condition.Standard Treatment
statistical analysis planC115761A document that contains a more technical and detailed elaboration of the principal features of the analysis described in the protocol, and includes detailed procedures for executing the statistical analysis of the primary and secondary variables and other data. [ICH E9]Statistical Analysis Plan
statistical distributionC53206A group of ordered values; the frequencies or relative frequencies of all possible values of a characteristic. [AMA Manual of Style]Statistical Distribution
statistical methodC19044The particular mathematical tests and techniques that are to be used to evaluate the clinical data in a trial. [ICH E9; from the Center for Advancement of Clinical Research]Statistical Technique
statistical significanceC61040State that applies when a hypothesis is rejected. Whether or not a given result is significant depends on the significance level adopted. For example, one may say "significant at the 5% level." This implies that when the null hypothesis is true there is only a 1 in 20 chance of rejecting it.Statistical Significance
stemC142628The prompt, question, or instruction in a PRO item. See also response option, item.Patient Reported Outcome Stem
stochasticC142697Involving a random variable; involving chance or probability.Stochastic
stopping rulesC142698A statistical criterion that, when met by the accumulating data, indicates that the trial can or should be stopped early to avoid putting participants at risk unnecessarily or because the intervention effect is so great that further data collection is unnecessary.Stopping Rules
stratificationC25689Grouping defined by important prognostic factors measured at baseline. [ICH E9]Stratification
structured dataC142699Structured health record information is divided into discrete fields, and may be enumerated, numeric, or codified. examples of structured health information include: patient address (non-codified, but discrete field); diastolic blood pressure (numeric); coded result observation; coded diagnosis; patient risk assessment questionnaire with multiple-choice answers. Context may determine whether or not data are unstructured, e.g., a progress note might be standardized and structured in some eHR-s (e.g., subjective/objective/ assessment/Plan) but unstructured in others. [HL7 eHR-s FM Glossary of Terms, 2010].Structured Data
structured product label (SPL)C142700The structured product labeling (SPL) specification is an HL7 ANSI-approved document markup standard that specifies the structure and semantics for the exchange of product information. [HL7]Structured Product Labeling
study completionC70756As defined in the protocol, the point at which all protocol-required activities have been executed. NOTE: According to EU CTR, this should be a clear and unambiguous definition of the end of the clinical trial in question and, if it is not the date of the last visit of the last subject, a specification of the estimated end date and a justification thereof should be included. [REGULATION (EU) No 536/2014 Article 2.26]Study Completed
study completion dateC142702The date on which the final data for a clinical study were collected because the last study participant made the final visit to the study location (that is, last subject, last visit, or as otherwise defined in the study protocol). NOTE: See also study completion date data element on ClinicalTrials.gov.Study Completion Date
study coordinatorC51880See clinical research coordinator.Study Coordinator
study descriptionC142704Representation of key elements of study (e.g., control, blinding, gender, dose, indication, configuration).Study Description
study designC15320Plan for the precise procedure to be followed in a clinical trial, including planned and actual timing of events, choice of control group, method of allocating treatments, blinding methods; assigns a subject to pass through one or more epochs in the course of a trial. specific design elements (e.g., crossover, parallel, dose-escalation) [Modified from Pocock, Clinical Trials: a Practical approach] See Trial Design Model. See also, arm, epoch, and visit.Study Design
study design rationaleC142705Reason for choosing the particular study design.Study Design Rationale
study design schematicC93682Schematic diagram (not tabular) of study design, procedures, and stages. [example: ICH E3 annexes iiia and iiib] Compare to schedule of assessments.Study Schematic
study initiation date (date of first enrollment)C139171Date and/or date and time of first subject enrollment into a study, as verifiable by a convention that is consistent with authoritative regulatory criteria. Compare to study start date. [Modified from ICH E3]Date of First Enrollment into Study
study populationC70833Defined by protocol inclusion/exclusion criteria.Study Population
study publication dateC142711The date of the publication of scientific articles or abstracts about a clinical study. NOTE: Institute of Medicine (IOM) Report: The committee noted support for open and free access to scientific publications immediately upon publication, as well as the requirement of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to make a summary of clinical trial results available to the public. [ClinicalTrials.gov]Study Publication Date
study report completion dateC142713The date at which the study report is considered final and will not be subject to any further change prior to submission. NOTE: For interventional studies of adults the study report completion date should be one year from the end of the LPLV, or end of study; for pediatric interventional studies this date should be six months. For non-interventional studies the study report completion date should be one year from the end of the LPLV, end of study, or end of data collection. [EU CTR]Study Report Completion Date
study startC142714The formal recognition of the beginning of a clinical trial that is referred to in the clinical study report.Study Start
study start dateC69208The date of formal recognition of the beginning of a clinical trial that is referred to in the clinical study report. NOTE: For example, The date that enrollment to the protocol begins. See study initiation date. [ClinicalTrials.gov]Study Start Date
study treatmentC41161See investigational intervention.Protocol Agent
study variableC142192A term used in trial design to denote a variable to be captured on the CRF. See also variable.Study Variable
sub-investigatorC54622Any member of the clinical trial team designated and supervised by the investigator at a trial site to perform critical trial-related procedures and/or to make important trial-related decisions (e.g., associates, residents, research fellows). [ICH] See also investigator.Subinvestigator
subject completionC70735The case where a subject ceases active participation in a trial because the subject has, or is presumed to have followed all appropriate conditions of a protocol.Subject Completed Participation in Study
subject data eventC142717A subject visit or other encounter where subject data are collected, generated, or reviewed. [SDTM]Subject Data Event
subject identification codeC70731A unique identifier assigned by the investigator to each trial subject to protect the subject's identity and used in lieu of the subject's name when the investigator reports adverse events and/or other trial-related data. [ICH]Clinical Trial Subject Unique Identifier
subject trial contactC142638Any activity, anticipated in the study protocol, involving a subject and pertaining to collection of data. See visit.Planned Trial Subject Contact
subject-reported outcome (SRO)C21089An outcome reported directly by a subject in a clinical trial. [Patrick, D.l., 2003] See also patient-reported outcome (PRO).Patient Self-Report
submission modelC142496A set of data standards (including SDTM, ADaM, and define.xml) for representing data that are submitted to regulatory authorities to support product marketing applications. NOTE: CDISC submission data consist of: tabulations that represent the essential data collected about patients; analysis data structured to support analysis and interpretation; and metadata descriptions.Data Submission Model
superiority trialC142722A trial with the primary objective of showing that the response to the investigational product is superior to a comparative agent (active or placebo control). [ICH E9]Superiority Trial
supplierC142459An organization that enters into a contract with the acquirer for the supply of a system, software product, or software service under the terms of a contract. [ISO/IEC/IEEE 12207:1995 3.30]Computer System or Software Supplier
supporting variablesC142723See variable. [FDA Drug Review Glossary]Supporting Variable
surrogate markerC142724A measurement of a drug's biological activity that substitutes for a clinical endpoint such as death or pain relief.Surrogate Marker
surrogate variableC142725A variable that provides an indirect measurement of effect in situations where direct measurement of clinical effect is not feasible or practical. [ICH E9]Surrogate Variable
surveyC17176Any means (e.g., questionnaire, diary, interview script, group of items) that is used to collect PRO data. NOTE: survey refers to the content of the group of items and does not necessarily include the training and scoring documents generally not seen by respondents. [from ISOQOL comments on PRO Guidance] Compare to instrument.Survey
synopsisC68836Brief overview prepared at the conclusion of a study as a routine part of a regulatory submission, summarizing the study plan and results; includes numerical summary of efficacy and safety results, study objective, criteria for inclusion, methodology, etc. [after ICH E3]Synopsis
syntacticC54277The order, format, content of clinical trial data and/or documents as distinct from their meaning. NOTE: Syntactic interoperability is achieved when information is correctly exchanged between two systems according to structured rules whether or not sensible meaning is preserved. See also semantic, semantic interoperability.Syntax
systemC25700People, machines, software, applications, and/or methods organized to accomplish a set of specific functions or objectives. [ANSI]System
t-testC53231A statistical test used to compare the means of two groups of test data.t-Test
table of roles and responsibilitiesC125429A cumulative record documenting operational access and authorizations of study personnel to electronic systems used in eClinical trials.Clinical Trial Roles and Responsibilities Matrix
tabulation datasetC142727A dataset structured in a tabular format. NOTE: The CDISC Study Data Tabulation Model (SDTM) defines standards for tabulation datasets that fulfill FDA requirements for submitting clinical trial data.Tabulation Dataset
target enrollmentC49692The number of subjects in a class or group (including the total for the entire trial) intended to be enrolled in a trial to reach the planned sample size. Target enrollments are set so that statistical and scientific objectives of a trial will have a likelihood of being met as determined by agreement, algorithm, or other specified process.Planned Subject Number
target populationC142728Population of patients to which the indication of a medicinal product applies. NOTE: The term applies to investigational and authorized medicinal products. [After ISO 11615.2012]Target Study Population
technology providerC142729technology vendorA person, company, or other entity who develops, produces, and sells software applications and/or hardware for use in conducting clinical trials and/or in analyzing clinical trial data and or submitting clinical trial information for regulatory approval.Technology Provider
termC45559One or more words designating something. NOTE: In a controlled vocabulary, terms are considered to refer to an underlying concept having a single meaning. Concepts may be linked to several synonymous terms.Term
termination (of subject)C142719Now considered nonstandard. See discontinuation.Subject Termination
termination (of trial)C142739Premature discontinuation of a trial prior to plan. [EU Clinical Trial Directive]Trial Termination
terminologyC142730Set of concepts, designations, and relationships for a specialized subject area. NOTE: In the context of clinical research in human subjects, a standardized, finite set of terms (e.g., CDISC Terminology, MedDRA codes) that denote patient findings, circumstances, events, and interventions. See also glossary, vocabulary. Contrast with nomenclature.Terminology
therapeutic interventionC49236See intervention.Therapeutic Procedure
tokenC67478Physical key that provides access to a secure electronic system or location.Token
transcriptionC142497Process of transforming dictated or otherwise documented information from one storage medium to another. NOTE: often refers explicitly to data that is manually transcribed from source docs or measuring devices to CRFs or to eCRFs.Data Transcription
transition ruleC82567A guide that governs the allocation of subjects to operational options at a discrete decision point or branch (e.g., assignment to a particular arm, discontinuation) within a clinical trial plan. See branch.Transition Rule
translationC80450Converting information from one natural language to another while preserving meaning. Compare to mapping.Translation
transmitC142499To transfer data, usually electronically. NOTE: In eClinical investigations data are commonly transmitted from subjects to clinical study sites, within or among clinical study sites, contract research organizations, data management centers, and sponsors, or to regulatory authorities. [modified from CSUICI].Data Transmission
treatment benefitC142731The impact of treatment as measured by survival or a COA of how patients feel or function. Direct evidence of treatment benefit is derived from clinical trial effectiveness endpoints that measure survival or a meaningful aspect of how a patient feels or functions in daily life. NOTE: Treatment benefit can be demonstrated by an advantage in either effectiveness or safety, or both. [After FDA Clinical Outcome Assessment (COA) Glossary]Treatment Benefit
treatment-emergent adverse eventC142733An event that emerges during treatment, having been absent pretreatment, or worsens relative to the pretreatment state. [ICH E9]Treatment-Emergent Adverse Event
trial design elementC142735A basic building block for time within a clinical trial comprising the following characteristics: a description of what happens to the subject during the element; a definition of the start of the element; a rule for ending the element.[CDISC PRM Project] See also epoch.Trial Design Element
Trial Design ModelC142736Defines a standard structure for representing the planned sequence of events and the treatment plan of a trial. NOTE: A component of the SDTM that builds upon elements, arms epochs, visits; suitable also for syntactic interpretation by machines. [CDISC] See study design.Trial Design Model
trial monitoringC15789Oversight of quality of study conduct and statistical interim analysis. [ICH E9]Clinical Trials, Monitoring
trial siteC85838Synonym for investigative site, investigator site, site, site of the trial, study site. [ICH E6]Clinical Trial Site
trial statisticianC142737A statistician who has a combination of education/ training and experience sufficient to implement the principles in the ICH E9 guidance and who is responsible for the statistical aspects of the trial. [ICH E9]Trial Statistician
triple-blind studyC66959A study in which knowledge of the treatment assignment(s) is concealed from the people who organize and analyze the data of a study as well as from subjects and investigators.Triple Blind Study
trustworthy (electronic records)C142740An attribute of records (data and documents) and signatures submitted to regulatory agencies referring to their suitability for making scientific findings of safety and efficacy that underlie public policy decisions pertaining to market authorization. Two key dimensions that determine the trustworthiness of eClinical trial data are data quality and data integrity. [after 21CFR Part 11]Trustworthy Electronic Record
type 1 (or type I) errorC45726false positiveError made when a null hypothesis is rejected but is actually true.False Positive
type 2 (or type II) errorC93283false negativeError made when an alternative hypothesis is rejected when it is actually true.False Negative
type 3 (or type III) errorC142741Some statisticians use this designation for an error made when calling the less effective treatment the more effective treatment.Type 3 Error
type of comparisonC142576How treatment arms will be compared (e.g., safety, efficacy, PK/PD). May also include comparison to data from other studies or sources (e.g., historical control). [ICH E9, EudraCT (p.18)]ICH Type Of Comparison
unblindingC142742Identification of the treatment code of a subject or grouped results in studies where the treatment assignment is unknown to the subject and investigators.Unblinding
unequal randomizationC142743See randomization.Unequal Randomization
unexpected adverse drug reactionC142744An adverse drug reaction, whose nature, severity, specificity, or outcome is not consistent with the term or description used in the applicable product information (e.g., IB for an unapproved investigational product or PI/summary of product characteristics for an approved product, and/or scientific literature). [After ICH E6 (R2)]Unexpected Adverse Drug Reaction
unexpected serious riskC142745A serious adverse drug experience that is not listed in the labeling of a drug, or that may be symptomatically or pathophysiologically related to an adverse drug experience identified in the labeling, but differs because of greater severity, specificity, or prevalence. [505-1(b) of FD&C Act (21 USC. 355-1(b)Unexpected Serious Risk
uniform resource locator (URl)C42743Address of a web page, for example, appliedclinicaltrialsonline.com.Uniform Resource Locator
use caseC81930An explicit scenario designed to help in determining whether a system/process is capable of performing the functions required for a particular use. a use case might describe, for example, how a study coordinator would use a tablet computer to capture medical history data.Use Case
user site testing (UST)C142746Any testing that takes place outside of the developer's controlled environment. NOTE: Terms such as beta test, site validation, user acceptance test, installation verification, and installation testing have all been used to describe user site testing. User site testing encompasses all of these and any other testing that takes place outside of the developer's controlled environment. [from General Principles of software Validation; Final Guidance, section 5.2.6]User Site Testing
validC717561. Sound 2. Well grounded on principles of evidence. 3. able to withstand criticism or objection. [FDA Glossary of Computerized System and Software Development Terminology]Valid
validationC16237validityProcess of establishing suitability to purpose. NOTE: Validation is accomplished by planning how to measure and/or evaluate suitability to purpose; then executing the plan and documenting the results. [ICH E6] See also software validation.Validation
variableC54166Any entity that varies; any attribute, phenomenon, or event that can have different qualitative or quantitative values.Variable
varianceC48918A measure of the variability in a sample or population. It is calculated as the mean squared deviation (MSD) of the individual values from their common mean. In calculating the MSD, the divisor n is commonly used for a population variance and the divisor n-1 for a sample variance.Variance
verificationC45513The act of reviewing, inspecting, testing, checking, auditing, or otherwise establishing and documenting whether items, processes, services, or documents conform to specified requirements. Compare to validation where suitability to purpose is also established.Verification
verification of dataC142501The checking of data for correctness or compliance with applicable standards, rules, and conventions. [FDA Glossary of Computerized system and software Development Terminology] See also source document verification (SDV).Data Verification
visitC39564A clinical encounter that encompasses planned and unplanned trial interventions, procedures, and assessments that may be performed on a subject. A visit has a start and an end, each described with a rule. [CDISC Trial Design Project]Patient Visit
vocabularyC92442Terms that function in general reference to concepts that apply over a variety of languages are words, and their totality is a vocabulary. See also controlled vocabulary, terminology.Vocabulary
vulnerable subjectsC142747Individuals whose willingness to volunteer in a clinical trial may be unduly influenced by the expectation, whether justified or not, of benefits associated with participation, or of a retaliatory response from senior members of a hierarchy in case of refusal to participate. Examples are members of a group with a hierarchical structure, such as medical, pharmacy, dental, and nursing students, subordinate hospital and laboratory personnel, employees of the pharmaceutical industry, members of the armed forces, and persons kept in detention. Other vulnerable subjects include patients with incurable diseases, persons in nursing homes, unemployed or impoverished persons, patients in emergency situations, ethnic minority groups, homeless persons, nomads, refugees, minors, and those incapable of giving consent. [ICH]Vulnerable Subjects
Warning LetterC142556A written communication from FDA notifying an individual or firm that the agency considers one or more products, practices, processes, or other activities to be in violation of the Federal FD&C Act, or other acts, and that failure of the responsible party to take appropriate and prompt action to correct and prevent any future repeat of the violation may result in administrative and/or regulatory enforcement action without further notice. [FDA]FDA Warning Letter
washout periodC42872A period in a clinical study during which subjects receive no treatment for the indication under study and the effects of a previous treatment are eliminated (or assumed to be eliminated).Washout Period
web browserC142748A computer program that interprets HTML and other Internet languages and protocols and displays web pages on a computer monitor.Web Browser
web pageC142749A single page on a website, such as a home page.Web Page
web serverC142750A computer server that delivers HTML pages or files over the World Wide Web. See also server.Web Server
websiteC67518A collection of web pages and other files. A site can consist of a single web page, thousands of pages, or custom created pages that draw on a database associated with the site.Web Site
weightingC48192An adjustment in a value based on scientific observations within the data.Importance Weight
well-being (of the trial subjects)C142720The physical and mental integrity of the subjects participating in a clinical trial. [ICH]Subject Well-Being
withdrawalC49634The subject-initiated act of discontinuing participation in a clinical study. NOTE: Withdrawal can range from the subject's complete withdrawal from study procedures and follow-up activities, to the subject's withdrawal from study-related interventions while the subject permits continued access to his/her medical records or identifiable information. Note that according to FDA regulations, when a subject withdraws from a study, the data collected on the subject to the point of withdrawal remain part of the study database and may not be removed. See also discontinuation.Withdrawal by Subject
within-subject differencesC67498In a crossover trial, variability in each subject is used to assess treatment differences.Intra Subject Variability
World Wide WebC20461All the resources and users on the Internet that are using HTTP protocols. Also called the web and www.World Wide Web
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