Data & Documents
This chapter will cover:
- Data & document preparation
- Data & document requirements
- ALCOA++ principles
- Key considerations for data & document management
During an inspection, inspectors require access to all relevant documents for all studies or trials identified for inspection.
As simple as this sounds, documents need to be readily available, accessible, readable and usable, which means that it also needs to be understandable, verifiable, and ultimately trustworthy.
To ensure this, data and documents should have been prepared in compliance with good documents practice guidance, data integrity recommendations, and adhere to the ALCOA principles. This equips inspectors with the ability to question, verify, understand, and trust the data and documents.
As well as presenting factual accounts of activities and outputs, data and documents need to provide context and meaning if they are to have [evidential] value.
It is worth remembering that the integrity and reliability of (and trust in) data and documents arise as a consequence of a combination of technology, process, people, and culture: it is folly to focus solely on the data or documents themselves.
Elements such as traceability, audit trails, and other relevant metadata are critical to understanding the “who, what, why, where, when, and how” i.e., the story of the development of the data and documents as well as the conduct and progress of the study (or trial).
This helps prove compliance and establish the validity of the data, documents, and study or trial conduct.
When creating and managing data and documents, it is important to understand the purpose for which -and context in which -the data and documents are being created and will be used both during and after the study.
Click the elements below to view the key considerations to focus on: