By Jon Rhodes, M.S.
Senior Scientific Advisor
ABC Laboratories
www.abclabs.com
Senior Scientific Advisor
ABC Laboratories
www.abclabs.com
The pharmaceutical, agrichemical, chemical, and
biotechnology industries depend heavily on Contract Research Organizations
(CRO’s) to provide high quality, scientifically sound laboratory and
field-based services. And to do so with
minimal input from the Sponsoring organization on the routine aspects of study
design, conduct, and reporting. After
all, many CRO’s have decades of cumulative experience relative to experimental
design and execution as well as what regulators are likely to accept. In addition CRO’s have deep knowledge of
standard practices and individual registrant nuances that can be leveraged to
ensure high quality and regulatory acceptability. The overriding goal is to
ensure quality science while meeting challenging development timelines.
The basic expectations of a Contract Research Organization
have not changed:
• The CRO will conduct studies that satisfy
scientific regulatory requirements and customer reporting standards
• The CRO will ensure communication is proactive
and timely
• The CRO will offer proactive technical advice
and feedback based on practical experience
• The CRO will ensure consistency of approach
across all projects within the organization
Likewise the basic expectations of a Registrant have not
changed:
• The registrant will provide all study specific
information relative to desired project design and will provide deadlines for
deliverables
• The registrant will supply specific information
about the test material (if available) including analytes and analytical
methods, expected behavior of test material, expected toxicity, and any
specific requirements required to ensure consistency of testing strategy
• The registrant will provide technical advice and
feedback based on practical experience with the test material and experience of
approaches received from regulators
• The registrant will ensure timely communication
to the CRO relative to study plan and report reviews, responses to study
updates and suggestions/questions, and timeline changes
A lot of what makes a successful partnership isn’t strictly
science – communication and transparency are everything.