It seems as if everyone has their own way of designing case report forms (CRFs), which for study coordinators can mean encountering new expectations (good, bad, or indifferent) from study to study as well as the same things (truly necessary or not) across many studies. But each time, there's a bit of copying and pasting happening, in hope that lessons learned from prior studies will guide the development of future CRF content. But what if you could have a fail-proof process to ensure that the first draft of a CRF had 95% of the critical variables needed? Find out how using a statistics-driven approach to reverse engineer report tables can simplify CRF design. Cut out the noise by removing onerous and non-applicable checklist variables and focusing on only adding analyzable fields that make every single variable practical. During this talk, a research coordinator-turned-clinical research associate will also provide insight into how they contribute to the review process to ensure flow at the site is taken into consideration.
CEU: 1.00 ACRP
Speakers:
Eleanor Goblirsch, Clinical Research Associate, Bright Research
Robin Solinksky, BS, VP, Technology & Innovation, Bright Research
Watch a Sneak Peek into the Session Content: