Hematology and Oncology, The Aga Khan University Hospital, Nairobi, Kenya.
The Aga Khan University Hospital, Nairobi, Kenya
BMJ Glob Health. 2024 Jan 24;9(1):e013727. doi: 10.1136/bmjgh-2023-013727.
Less than 1% of all clinical trials are conducted in Africa. In 2019, only six of 26 oncology clinical trials conducted in Africa were conducted in countries with subjects of African ancestry. There are multiple barriers that hinder the conduct of cancer clinical trials in Africa. Time to trial activation (TTA) is the administrative and regulatory process required before a study can be activated-an important metric and often a major barrier for site selection. In Kenya, TTA involves review by Institutional Review Board (IRB), Pharmacy and Poisons Board, National Commission for Science, Technology and Innovation and Ministry of Health, all in a sequential fashion. We performed a prospective review of TTA for all clinical trials initiated and began enrolment at the Aga Khan University-Clinical Research Unit between June 2020 and November 2022. TTA was defined as total time from submission of study documents (to regulatory bodies) to site activation by the sponsor. A total of 12 studies were submitted for regulatory review. Eleven (nine industry sponsored and two investigator initiated) were approved for activation. Three were COVID-19-related studies and eight were non-COVID-19-related studies. Mean TTA for COVID-related studies was 80 days (range 40-120). Mean TTA for non-COVID-related studies was 259 days (range 190-399). This TTA difference was statistically significant (p=0.02). TTA remains a significant barrier to the efficient regulatory approval of and subsequent conduct of clinical trials in Africa. COVID-19 pandemic revealed that parallel processing and expedited review of clinical trials allows efficient TTA without compromising human subject safety or data integrity. These lessons need to be applied to all clinical trials in order for African sites to become competitive and contribute data from African patients to global knowledge.
在所有临床试验中,只有不到 1%是在非洲进行的。2019 年,在非洲开展的 26 项肿瘤学临床试验中,仅有 6 项是在有非洲人后裔作为研究对象的国家开展的。有许多障碍阻碍了非洲开展癌症临床试验。试验启动时间(TTA)是在研究可以启动之前所需的行政和监管程序,这是一个重要的衡量标准,也是选择试验地点的主要障碍。在肯尼亚,TTA 涉及机构审查委员会(IRB)、药剂和毒药委员会、国家科学、技术和创新委员会以及卫生部的审查,所有这些都是按顺序进行的。我们对 2020 年 6 月至 2022 年 11 月期间在 Aga Khan 大学临床研究中心启动并开始招募的所有临床试验的 TTA 进行了前瞻性审查。TTA 定义为从向监管机构提交研究文件到赞助商激活试验地点的总时间。共有 12 项研究提交给监管部门审查。其中 11 项(9 项为工业赞助,2 项为研究者发起)获得批准启动。其中 3 项为与 COVID-19 相关的研究,8 项为非 COVID-19 相关的研究。与 COVID-19 相关研究的 TTA 平均为 80 天(范围为 40-120 天)。非 COVID-19 相关研究的 TTA 平均为 259 天(范围为 190-399 天)。这种 TTA 差异具有统计学意义(p=0.02)。TTA 仍然是非洲高效监管审批和随后开展临床试验的一个重大障碍。COVID-19 大流行表明,平行处理和加速临床试验审查可以在不影响人类受试者安全或数据完整性的情况下实现高效的 TTA。为了使非洲试验点具有竞争力,并为全球知识贡献来自非洲患者的数据,这些经验教训需要应用于所有临床试验。