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Clinical research is the step in the translational research pathway where humans first get involved. All experiments involving humans are called either “clinical trials” or “clinical studies”. This clinical research process is an improvement over the old days, when researchers depended on accidental discoveries. Nowadays, they thoroughly plan and carefully conduct research. At the same time, medical treatment has progressed from the simple relief of symptoms to understanding how diseases do what they do. In some cases, research can lead to the actual curing of diseases.
Clinical trials are prospective biomedical or behavioral research studies of human subjects that are designed to answer specific questions about biomedical or behavioral interventions (drugs, treatments, devices, or new ways of using known drugs, treatments, or devices). Clinical trials are used to determine whether new biomedical or behavioral interventions are safe, efficacious, and effective.
Biomedical clinical trials of an experimental drug, treatment, device, or behavioral intervention may proceed through four phases:
There are many safeguards in place to help keep research safe, including eligibility criteria and review by an Institutional Review Board (IRB). Watch the video to learn more:
How is research made safe (2.5 min)
If research involves a drug, device, or procedure, the FDA must first approve the research before testing can be done in humans.
If a drug is found to work in humans (i.e., it is “effective”) without serious side effects (i.e., it is “safe”), it still has to go through more approval by the FDA before it finally becomes available for doctors and patients to use.
It takes many people for success!
Clinical research studies are designed to be informative and safe. The following videos explain some of the common elements, including who can participate, control groups and randomization, seen in research studies.
What is a control group? (2 min)
All clinical trials have guidelines that explain who can participate. The guidelines are based on factors such as age, medical history, illness, and current medication. These factors are used to identify appropriate people to participate, and keep them safe.
Clinical trials also often need people who are free from disease or illness to serve as "healthy subjects" or CONTROLS—people who are compared to the research participants who actually have the disease or illness that is being studied.
For ways to volunteer for a research study, please click here.
A clinical researcher or his/her colleague explains the study to you, and answers all your questions. This is the “informed” part.
Be sure that you have answers to the following questions before giving consent:
Also, make sure that:
There are many reasons that people decide to get involved in research. Watch the following videos to see a few stories.
NIH Clinical Research Trials and You - Personal Stories
“Seniors Making a Difference” (10 min) English
“¿Por qué debemos participar en studios de investigación?" (10 min) (Español)
(“Why should we participate in Research Studies?”) (10 min) Spanish
You can view easy-to-understand videos about clinical research on our Educational Videos section below. Plus you can look up unfamiliar words in our Clinical Research Glossary found below as well. You can always send an email to ctri-community@ucsd.edu and we may be able to help.
Translational research is research aimed at translating results in basic research into results that directly benefit humans. Scientists have ideas about something they would like to test out, and they seek resources for experiments. Most experiments start in the laboratory and this is called “basic research”. Many new treatments are tested in animals before any humans are permitted to try them out. And even then, many types of experiments need to be done before a new medical device or treatment is approved for regular use by your doctor and other clinicians. The phrase “translational research” is all the steps in this process.
Even after a new medical treatment is available for use, translational research is not always complete because researchers try to get feedback from patients and their doctors and try to make the treatment even better. Promoting the new treatment to patients, health insurance companies, public health departments, and doctors is often also part of “translational research".
Translational research involves moving knowledge and discovery gained from the basic sciences to its application in clinical and community settings. This concept is often summarized by the phrases "bench-to-bedside" and "bedside-to-community" research.
For translational research to be successful, communication must be bi-directional. In other words, many different people have to talk—and listen—to each other: basic researchers and clinical researchers; clinical researchers and human volunteers; patients and their doctors in their communities; and community doctors and clinical researchers.
The ACTRI is part of a national Clinical and Translational Science Award (CTSA) consortium created to accelerate laboratory discoveries into treatments for patients by facilitating research resources for all investigators. The CTSA program is led by the National Institutes of Health's National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (NCATS).
The main goal of the ACTRI is to make our research discoveries more rapid, effective, and useful to the general public. We improve health care by providing scientists and community leaders with resources and information, and we encourage interactions between all those different people mentioned above. We also offer many educational programs for scientists, students, and the public. Those are some of the ways we try to help speed up the translation of great ideas into great therapies.
In order to evaluate and improve our efforts to advance translational research, the ACTRI has adapted and embraced the multi-T phase concept of translational research, described below.
Research Phase | Definition | Type of Research | Examples |
---|---|---|---|
T0 |
Identification of opportunities and approaches to health problem. |
Basic research question | Are there specific gene mutations associated with breast cancer? |
T1 |
Discovery of candidate health application | Phase I and II clinical trials; observational studies | Is there an association between BRCA mutations and breast cancer? |
T2 |
Health application to evidence-based practice guidelines | Phase III clinical trials; observational studies; evidence synthesis and guidelines development | What is the positive predictive value of BRCA mutations in at-risk women? |
T3 |
Practice guidelines to health practices | Dissemination research; implementation research; diffusion research Phase IV clinical trials | What proportion of women who meet the family history criteria are tested for BRCA and what are the barriers to testing? |
T4 |
Practice to population health impact | Outcomes research (includes many disciplines); population monitoring of morbidity, mortality, benefits, and risks studies |
Does BRCA testing in asymptomatic women reduce breast cancer incidence or improve outcomes? |
Adverse event: any unexpected change in health or any side effect that occurs in a person while they are still under the effect of a treatment in a clinical trial. All adverse events must be reported to an institutional review board, whether they are serious or minor.
Assent: a child’s consent to participate in a clinical trial.
Blinded study: a study done in such a way that the study participants do not know whether they are getting a placebo (an inactive substance) or a drug, but the study team does know. If the study is comparing two different doses or two different medications, then the human participants do not know which they are getting. In a “double-blinded study”, neither the study participant nor the investigator know which treatment any one study participant is getting. That information is revealed only once the treatment is over.
Clinical investigation or ‘clinical research’ or ‘clinical study’ or ‘clinical trial’: research that either directly involves human participants or uses materials of human origin (for example, blood) to test the safety and/or effectiveness of drugs, medical devices, procedures, or preventions.
Confidentiality: the assurance that a participant’s information will be kept secret and that access to that information is limited to authorized persons.
Control group: the group of participants who resemble the experimental group, (for example, they are in the same age range) but who do not receive the experimental treatment. Changes are measured in both the treatment group and this group, to compare the effect of the new drug, medical device, procedure, or prevention.
Data: series of recorded observations, measurements, or facts (about the participant).
Effectiveness/efficacy: whether a new drug or treatment works. An effective drug or prevention will improve health or successfully prevent a disease.
Experimental drug or device: see Investigational drug or device.
Experimental group: the group of subjects exposed to the new, researched treatment. This group is often compared to a ‘control group’, the subjects who are are not exposed to that treatment.
FDA (Food and Drug Administration): an agency of the United States federal government that approves or disapproves new drugs and devices.
Human subject: a participant who volunteers to be in a clinical study.
Informed consent: a patient’s written consent to participate in a clinical study after fully discussing with the researchers all the relevant health-related facts and the risks involved.
Institutional Review Board, “IRB”: a committee that has been formally designated to protect the people involved in research. This board must review and approve each clinical study that involves humans subjects, with the aim to protect each person’s safety, rights, privacy and welfare.
Investigation: see Clinical investigation
Investigational drug/device: a new medical drug and/or device that has been tested in a laboratory but has not yet been approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to be legally sold and used by health care providers and/or patients.
Investigators: These are researchers. They are scientists who manage clinical studies. The lead investigator of a study is also called the “Principal Investigator.”
Participant: also known as a "human subject", a person who volunteers to be in a research experiment.
Placebo: a substance that has no therapeutic effect but is given merely to satisfy a patient who supposes it could be a medicine. Other names for placebos include ‘dummy pill’ or ‘sugar pill’.
Procedure: In health care, this can be a test (such as taking blood to measure cholesterol) or a treatment (like surgery or an injection of a drug). In research, a trial's protocol describes the procedures (tests and/or treatments) carried out on or by the participants and/or investigators.
Protected health information (PHI): any information about a participant’s health history or status. By law, this is required to be kept confidential.
Protocol: a written plan for carrying out a clinical study. A protocol includes what will be done, when, and how.
Randomization: Mixing up the types of participants in enrolled into an experimental group or a control group, so that it will be fair to compare the two groups. For example, if the experimental group had a lot more elderly people than the control group, and the test drug didn't work in the experimental group, it wouldn't be fair to conclude that the drug didn't work, because there might be something in elderly people's metabolism to prevent the drug from working well. So a mix of people should go into the group that gets the drug, and a mix of people should go into the control group.
Randomized controlled trial (RCT): a scientific experiment that tests a new treatment or device by randomly dividing participants to receive either the treatment under investigation, or a control condition that does not receive the investigated treatment.
Research: gathering of information to help increase our knowledge. Clinical research involves human volunteers. Sometimes clinical research tests drugs or devices or procedures in human participants; but research always involves measuring something--for example, whether blood pressure went down in participants receiving a new drug, and whether it stayed the same in the participants (controls) who didn't receive the drug.
Researcher: a person who carries out an investigation (another word that can be used for “investigator”).
Sponsor: a person, organization, company, institution, or government agency that provides funds (money) or other resources for a clinical study.
Study: see Clinical investigation
Study Coordinator: a key member of the research team who works for the principal investigator, or lead researcher. He/she is the person who is usually responsible for the daily activities of the clinical study.
Subject: subject or ‘human subject’ is a term describing the person who volunteers to be in a research experiment. Also called a research participant.
Trial: see ‘clinical investigation’
Volunteer: a person who willingly participates in a clinical study.
ACTRI has developed a new roadmap tool to guide Principal Investigators and study team members through the process of activating clinical trials and/ or research studies at UCSD.
This comprehensive tool provides a step-by step approach to this complex process and has the advantage of offering additional resources such as links, notes, request forms, and documents to guide our users in a one-stop-shop.
Whether used as standard operating procedure or for training purposes, this resource is part of the vision of the ACTRI to facilitate research for faculty and study teams at UCSD.
To explore the map above and learn about each individual step: https://us.promapp.com/ucsd/Process/Minimode/Permalink/BZqb0MGBGcWuAASCHhqHTx
For information or questions about the Roadmap or help with navigating research at UCSD, contact crsi-navigator@health.ucsd.edu.
The UC San Diego Research Ethics Program offers a variety of courses, workshops, and seminars. The topics covered are those associated with responsible conduct of research (RCR), which include, for example, conflict of interest, mentor/mentee responsibilities, data management and research subject protections (see: NIH RCR requirements). In addition, education may focus on more specialized topics including, for example, digital health (e.g., artificial intelligence, predictive analytics), gene editing and stem cell research.
Research is strengthened through the conduct of both normative analysis and empirical research designed to study and inform best practices. Our research has received extra and intramural support for over 20 years. Current research is carried out with support from the National Institutes of Health, National Science Foundation and Patient Centered Outcomes Research Institute. Areas of interest include: 1- creating/testing decision-making tools to support ethical AI/digital health research; 2- fostering ethical and responsible research environments, 3- informing participant communications including informed consent and return of results, and 4- developing ethically sourced health data repositories.