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Responses to the Standard for Exchange of Nonclinical Data (SEND) in non-US countries

The Standard for the Exchange of Nonclinical Data (SEND), adopted by the US FDA, is part of a set of regulations and guidances requiring the submission of standardized electronic study data for nonclinical and clinical data submissions. SEND is the nonclinical implementation of SDTM (Study Data Tabu...

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Autores principales: Anzai, Takayuki, Kaminishi, Masamichi, Sato, Keizo, Kaufman, Laura, Iwata, Hijiri, Nakae, Dai
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Japanese Society of Toxicologic Pathology 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4444503/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26028814
http://dx.doi.org/10.1293/tox.2015-0007
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author Anzai, Takayuki
Kaminishi, Masamichi
Sato, Keizo
Kaufman, Laura
Iwata, Hijiri
Nakae, Dai
author_facet Anzai, Takayuki
Kaminishi, Masamichi
Sato, Keizo
Kaufman, Laura
Iwata, Hijiri
Nakae, Dai
author_sort Anzai, Takayuki
collection PubMed
description The Standard for the Exchange of Nonclinical Data (SEND), adopted by the US FDA, is part of a set of regulations and guidances requiring the submission of standardized electronic study data for nonclinical and clinical data submissions. SEND is the nonclinical implementation of SDTM (Study Data Tabulation Model), the standard electronic format for clinical regulatory submissions to FDA. SEND, SDTM, and the associated Controlled Terminology have been developed by CDISC (Clinical Data Interchange Standards Consortium). In order to successfully implement SEND, interdisciplinary contributions between sponsors and CROs, need a model for task allocation. This is being undertaken by the Pharmaceutical Users Software Exchange (PhUSE). Because SEND is currently the preferred submission format of the US FDA only and will become required by it starting in December 2016, only American academic societies and companies are actively involved. An exception to this is the INHAND initiative, which leads the way in standardizing terminology for toxicological pathology. On the other hand, international globalization of other clinical and nonclinical practices is not feasible because there are substantial differences between the US and non-US countries in CRO involvement in drug development. Thus, non-US countries must consider and develop approaches to SEND that meet their needs. This paper summarizes the activities of the major organizations involved in SEND development and implementation, discusses the effective use of SEND, and details a compliance scheme (research material of the Showa University School of Medicine) illustrating how pharmaceutical companies can complete a large amount of work up to an FDA application with the effective utilization of CROs and solution providers.
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spelling pubmed-44445032015-05-29 Responses to the Standard for Exchange of Nonclinical Data (SEND) in non-US countries Anzai, Takayuki Kaminishi, Masamichi Sato, Keizo Kaufman, Laura Iwata, Hijiri Nakae, Dai J Toxicol Pathol Review The Standard for the Exchange of Nonclinical Data (SEND), adopted by the US FDA, is part of a set of regulations and guidances requiring the submission of standardized electronic study data for nonclinical and clinical data submissions. SEND is the nonclinical implementation of SDTM (Study Data Tabulation Model), the standard electronic format for clinical regulatory submissions to FDA. SEND, SDTM, and the associated Controlled Terminology have been developed by CDISC (Clinical Data Interchange Standards Consortium). In order to successfully implement SEND, interdisciplinary contributions between sponsors and CROs, need a model for task allocation. This is being undertaken by the Pharmaceutical Users Software Exchange (PhUSE). Because SEND is currently the preferred submission format of the US FDA only and will become required by it starting in December 2016, only American academic societies and companies are actively involved. An exception to this is the INHAND initiative, which leads the way in standardizing terminology for toxicological pathology. On the other hand, international globalization of other clinical and nonclinical practices is not feasible because there are substantial differences between the US and non-US countries in CRO involvement in drug development. Thus, non-US countries must consider and develop approaches to SEND that meet their needs. This paper summarizes the activities of the major organizations involved in SEND development and implementation, discusses the effective use of SEND, and details a compliance scheme (research material of the Showa University School of Medicine) illustrating how pharmaceutical companies can complete a large amount of work up to an FDA application with the effective utilization of CROs and solution providers. Japanese Society of Toxicologic Pathology 2015-04-01 2015-04 /pmc/articles/PMC4444503/ /pubmed/26028814 http://dx.doi.org/10.1293/tox.2015-0007 Text en ©2015 The Japanese Society of Toxicologic Pathology http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial No Derivatives (by-nc-nd) License.
spellingShingle Review
Anzai, Takayuki
Kaminishi, Masamichi
Sato, Keizo
Kaufman, Laura
Iwata, Hijiri
Nakae, Dai
Responses to the Standard for Exchange of Nonclinical Data (SEND) in non-US countries
title Responses to the Standard for Exchange of Nonclinical Data (SEND) in non-US countries
title_full Responses to the Standard for Exchange of Nonclinical Data (SEND) in non-US countries
title_fullStr Responses to the Standard for Exchange of Nonclinical Data (SEND) in non-US countries
title_full_unstemmed Responses to the Standard for Exchange of Nonclinical Data (SEND) in non-US countries
title_short Responses to the Standard for Exchange of Nonclinical Data (SEND) in non-US countries
title_sort responses to the standard for exchange of nonclinical data (send) in non-us countries
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4444503/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26028814
http://dx.doi.org/10.1293/tox.2015-0007
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