*The ClinicalTrials.gov Service Line has a website! Find guidance tailored to UW-Madison researchers, links to additional resources, and the latest news on ClinicalTrials.gov here: https://uwclinicaltrials.org/clinicaltrials-dot-gov/
ClinicalTrials.gov is a publicly available registry and results database of federally and privately supported clinical trials, and is supported by the U.S. National Library of Medicine. The purpose of ClinicalTrials.gov is to disclose to the public key information about clinical trials that are currently available or that have been conducted. All UW–Madison faculty, staff, and students conducting human subjects research on University premises are expected to follow federal registration and results reporting requirements regarding ClinicalTrial.gov.
See the below sections for registration requirements and information on creating, updating, and reporting results.
Registration Requirements for ClinicalTrials.gov
There are three distinct entities that require Principal Investigators (PIs) to register their studies on ClinicalTrials.gov (CT.gov): the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), the National Institutes of Health (NIH), and the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE). All three of these groups have different criteria for determining which studies must be registered on CT.gov, and it is important to carefully review the criteria that your study might fall under. PIs submitting their study to the HS IRB need to look at FDA, NIH, and ICMJE, and PIs using the MRR IRB only need to look at NIH and ICMJE.
If you have questions about the application of these registration requirements, please contact CT.gov Support using the information at the bottom of this page.
Additionally, the Center for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) requires the registration of most studies billing third parties for study related services. For more information on the CMS requirements, contact Zachary Tegtmeier at ztegtmeier@uwhealth.com.
Select each tab for more information on requirements for registration and results reporting.
FDA Requirements
The FDA requires study registration along with results and adverse event reporting for all phase II – IV interventional drug, biologic or device trials. This is a legal requirement (FDAAA 801); failing to register or report results for Applicable Clinical Trials (ACTs) in a timely manner can result in civil and significant monetary penalties.
Drug Trials
A study involving drugs (including biological products) is an “applicable clinical trial” if the following four criteria are met: (1) the study is a controlled; (2) clinical investigation; (3) other than a Phase I clinical investigation; (4) of a drug subject to section 505 of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (FDC Act) or section 351 of the Public Health Service Act (PHS Act).
- Controlled: An investigation is considered controlled if it is designed to permit a comparison of a test intervention with a control to provide a quantitative assessment of the drug effect. Controls included placebo concurrent control, does-comparison control, no intervention concurrent control, active intervention concurrent control, and historical control.
- A clinical investigation: A clinical investigation is “any experiment in which a drug is administered or dispensed to, or used involving, one or more human subjects.” This includes studies that in which subjects are assigned to specific interventions according to a study protocol, but would not include use of a marketed drug in the course of medical practice.
- Other than a Phase I clinical investigation: Phase I studies include the initial introduction of an investigational new drug into humans. The total number of subjects in Phase I studies may vary, but generally range from 20 to 80. Phase I studies are designed to determine metabolism and pharmacologic actions of the drugs in humans.
- A drug subject to section 505 of the FDC Act or section 351 of the PHS Act: A drug or biologic is considered subject to sections 505 or 351 if it is the subject of an approved new drug application (NDA) or biologics license application (BLA) OR if an approved NDA or BLA would be required in order for that drug or biologic to be legally marketed. Drugs being studied under an Investigational new drug application (IND) are considered subject to section 505. Drugs being studied in a clinical investigation can be the subject of section 505 or 351 even if the clinical investigation of that drug does not require an IND (e.g., falls within 21 CFR § 312.2(b)). This would include the investigation of drugs outside of their FDA approved indications.
Device Trial
A study involving a device is an “applicable clinical trial” if the following four criteria are met: (1) it is a prospective clinical study of health outcomes; (2) it compares an intervention with a device against a control in human subjects; (3) the studied device is subject to section 510(k), 515, or 520(m) of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (FDA Act); and (4) it is other than a small clinical trial to determine the feasibility of a device, or a clinical trial to test prototype devices where the primary outcome measure relates to feasibility and not health outcomes. Additionally, a study involving a device is an “applicable clinical trial” if it is a pediatric post-market surveillance of a device as required under section 522 of the FDC Act.
- A prospective clinical study of health outcomes: A study is “prospective” if it is not retrospective or, in other words, is one in which subjects are followed forward in time from a well-defined point. A “clinical study” of a device is any experiment in which a device is administered, dispensed to, or used involving one or more human subjects. The definition of a clinical study of a device would include studies in which subjects are assigned to a specific intervention in a clinical investigation according to a study protocol. A study involves “health outcomes” if the primary purpose is to evaluated a defined clinical outcome directly related to human health (e.g., evaluate the ability of a device to make a diagnosis of a disease or affect a particular condition).
- Comparing an intervention with a device against a control in human subjects: This criterion is met when a study compares differences in clinical outcomes (or diagnoses) between subjects who received an intervention that included a device and control subjects (who received other interventions or no intervention). The intervention may be with a device that has never been cleared or approved, or with an already marketed device whether or not the device has been cleared or approved for the indication being studied.
- A device subject to section 510(k), 515, or 520(m) of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act: A device (including significant risk devices requiring an investigational device exemption (IDE); a non-significant risk device that is considered to have an approved IDE; or a device that is exempt from submission requirements) is subject to section 510(k), 515, or 520(m) of the FDC Act if any of the following is required before it may be legally marketed: (1) a finding of substantial equivalence under section 510(k) permitting the device to be marketed; (2) an order under section 515 of the FDC Act approving a premarket approval application for the device; or (3) a humanitarian device exemption under section 520(m) of the FDC Act.
- Other Than a Small Clinical Trial to Determine the Feasibility of a Device, or a Clinical Trial to Test Prototype Devices Where the Primary Outcome Measure Relates to Feasibility and Not to Health Outcomes: Studies designed primarily to determine the feasibility of a device or to test a prototype device are considered to be trials conducted to confirm the design and operating specifications of a device before beginning a full clinical trial. Feasibility studies are sometimes referred to as Phase 1 studies, pilot studies, prototype studies, or introductory trials. Feasibility studies are not considered applicable device clinical trials under the statutory definition.
For additional information on the FDA’s registration requirements, please download the National Institutes of Health’s Elaborations of Definitions of Responsible Party and Applicable Clinical Trial.
NIH Requirements
All NIH-funded (in whole or in part) clinical trials are expected to register and submit results information to ClinicalTrials.gov, as per the NIH Policy on Dissemination of NIH-Funded Clinical Trial Information for competing applications and contract proposals submitted on or after 18 January 2017. This includes phase 1 clinical trials and trials that do not involve any FDA regulated product such as trials involving only behavioral interventions. More information on the NIH’s registration and reporting requirements can be found on their website.
ICMJE Requirements
ICMJE requires study registration in a public trials registry as a condition of publishing in many peer-reviewed medical journals, including JAMA, NEJM, Annals of Internal Medicine, Lancet, etc. A study requires registration for ICMJE purposes if the following three criteria are met: (1) prospective assignment; (2) to a health-related intervention; (3) to study the cause-and-effect relationship between a health-related intervention and a health outcome.
Publication of interventional health outcome studies in journals adhering to the ICMJE Uniform Requirements for Manuscripts Submitted to Biomedical Journals is contingent on timely study registration. The ICMJE does not currently require results reporting.
- Prospective assignment: A study is “prospective” if it is not retrospective or, in other words, is one in which subjects are followed forward in time from a well-defined point.
- A health related intervention: Health related interventions are those activities used to modify a biomedical or health-related outcome. Examples include drugs, surgical procedures, devices, behavioral treatments, educational programs, dietary interventions; quality improvement interventions, and process-of-care changes.
- To study the cause-and-effect relationship between a health-related intervention and a health outcome: Health outcomes are any biomedical or health-related measures obtained in subjects, including pharmacokinetic measures and adverse events.
As of 1 July 2018 manuscripts submitted to ICMJE journals that report the results of clinical trials must contain a data sharing statement.
Clinical trials that begin enrolling participants on or after 1 January 2019 must include a data sharing plan on the study’s ClinicalTrials.gov page. If the data sharing plan changes after registration this should be reflected in the statement submitted and published with the manuscript, and updated in the registry record.
For additional information on the ICMJE’s registration requirements, please visit the ICMJE’s Clinical Trials Registration website, or refer to this Data Sharing tool.
Who is responsible for trial registration?
The study sponsor is generally responsible for trial registration and the sponsor must register all industry-sponsored trials.
However, the UW–Madison investigator is responsible for registration when one or more of the below conditions are met:
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- The trial is initiated by a UW–Madison investigator
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- The trial is a federally sponsored and UW–Madison is the only study site OR the study’s coordinating center
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- The UW–Madison investigator is the holder of an Investigational New Drug (IND) application for the agent being studied OR the IRB has determined that the agent being studied is IND exempt
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- The UW–Madison investigator is the holder of an Investigational Device Exemption (IDE) for the device being studied OR the IRB has made a non-significant risk (NSR) determination for the device being studied
For additional information on the responsibility for trial registration, please download the National Institutes of Health’s Elaborations of Definitions of Responsible Party and Applicable Clinical Trial.
When do you need to register your trial?
The FDA and NIH requires that all applicable clinical trials be registered within 21 days of the first subject’s enrollment, and ICMJE requires trials to be registered prior to the first subject’s enrollment.
However, the ClinicalTrials.gov registration process can involve multiple rounds of quality assurance comments and assignment of a National Clinical Trial (NCT) number can take up to two weeks (averaging 2-5 business days from submission). UW–Madison recommends starting the registration process as early as possible, incorporating it into your lab’s workflow as your study begins the IRB approval process. For additional information on the quality assurance review process, please download the FDA’s ClinicalTrials.gov Protocol Review Criteria. To make the process easier for researchers, UW-Madison has created a centralized ClinicalTrials.gov (CT.gov) service line. If you would like assistance with registration, maintenance, and/or results reporting process of your trial, please contact the UW Office of Clinical Trials ClinicalTrials.gov Specialists at CT.gov_HELP@clinicaltrials.wisc.edu.
Creating, Updating, and Reporting Results for Your ClinicalTrials.gov Record
Select each tab for more information.
Creating Your ClinicalTrials.gov Account
The University of Wisconsin is registered as an institution at ClinicalTrials.gov and has appointed ClinicalTrials.gov administrators to assist UW–Madison investigators or their designees in establishing their ClinicalTrials.gov accounts. To request a user login, send an email message to your assigned ClinicalTrials.gov administrator (see below) with your name, department, email address, and telephone number. You will then receive an email with a login name and a temporary password that will allow you to register your protocol.
- CT.gov Support, Office of Research Compliance (608) 890-1241 or ClinicalTrials.gov_Support@research.wisc.edu (for user account creation and general questions/support)
- Office of Clinical Trials, CT.gov_HELP@clinicaltrials.wisc.edu (for UW’s CT.gov service line)
Creating Your ClinicalTrials.gov Record
For a step-by-step explanation of how to register your study, visit ClinicalTrials.gov’s website on How to Register Your Study. And for an explanation of the data fields within ClinicalTrials.gov, visit ClinicalTrials.gov’s website on Data Elements Definitions.
Please complete the below data elements within ClinicalTrials.gov, as follows:
Unique Protocol ID: [Your UW IRB protocol number]
Responsible Party: “Sponsor”
Sponsor: “University of Wisconsin, Madison”
Owner: [Study PI]
Access List: [All other study team members who will be working with the CT.gov record]
The data element for “Responsible Party” should be listed as “Sponsor” for all investigator-initiated studies conducted by UW personnel to best align with the term as defined by the NIH and FDA, which includes the individual or entity who developed and initiated the protocol. The data element for “Sponsor” should be designated as “University of Wisconsin, Madison” as the registration requirements apply equally to the institution and the investigator. The study PI should be listed as the “Owner” as the individual responsible for the content and accuracy of the record. Completing the record in this way is done to ensure the investigator and institution comply with the applicable requirements and reduces the administration burden on investigators by allowing the institution to help guide record management. If your study team has been directed by a third party (e.g., industry sponsor, private foundation, etc.) to designate any other entity as the Sponsor or Responsible Party for a record maintained by UW-Madison, please contact the Office of Research Compliance at ClinicalTrials.gov_Support@research.wisc.edu.
Updating Your ClinicalTrials.gov Record
Once your trial is registered, the FDA requires that your ClinicalTrials.gov record be updated within 30 days of a change in recruitment status or completion date, and your Record Verification Date needs to be updated at least every 12 months. CT.gov records are intended to be dynamic and kept up to date to reflect the most recently IRB approved version of your study protocol; it should be updated whenever you receive IRB approval for a change to your protocol. For a further explanation of how to update your record, visit ClinicalTrials.gov’s website on How to Edit Your Study Record.
Consent Forms
The Revised Common Rule requires that federally funded studies meeting the definition of a clinical trial must post one IRB-approved informed consent form (ICF) that was used to enroll subjects to a publicly available website, such as ClinicalTrials.gov. The informed consent form must be posted after the trial is closed to enrollment, but no later than 60 days after the last study visit by any subject.
- This requirement only applies to studies that receive initial approval AFTER January 21, 2019 and previously approved studies that have transition to the Revised Common Rule. This requirement DOES NOT apply to studies approved prior to January 21, 2019 that have not transitioned to the requirements of the revised rule (most previously approved studies will not have transitioned).
- Regardless of how many ICF versions existed during the course of the study, only one ICF must be posted (even if the study was conducted at multiple sites). The study team can decide which ICF version is posted so long as the chosen version was used to enroll subjects.
- The ICF that is uploaded should be blank and un-redacted. In very rare instances, the funding agency may require redaction of certain portions of the ICF.
Results
Reporting Results for Your ClinicalTrials.gov Record: Results reporting is required for studies that meet the FDA registration requirements (“applicable clinical trials”) or receive any NIH funding. Results should not be reported when only the ICMJE registration requirements apply.
ClinicalTrials.gov has four results reporting modules:
For a step-by-step explanation of how to report results, visit ClinicalTrials.gov’s website on How to Submit Your Results. ClinicalTrials.gov also provides a very helpful Pre-Submission Checklist for results reporting.
When do you need to report results for your trial?
The FDA requires that the results of “applicable clinical trials” be reported within 12 months of the last subject’s last study visit, which should be listed in ClinicalTrials.gov as the study’s “primary completion date.” Failing to properly update the “primary completion date” during the study may lead the FDA to believe that results should be posted before the study is actually completed. For additional information on the “primary completion date” within in ClinicalTrials.gov, please see ClinicalTrials.gov Data Element Definitions.
If the clinical trial is NIH-funded in whole or in part, expectations for clinical trial summary results submission within 12 months of the last subject’s last study visit should be included in the terms and conditions of the award. Failure to comply with the terms and conditions of the NIH award may provide a basis for enforcement actions, including termination, consistent with 45 CFR 75.371 and/or other authorities, as appropriate. More information can be found on the NIH Policy and Regulation on ClinicalTrials.gov Registration and Reporting page.