Please contact your nominees before you give us their names, to ascertain their availability and willingness to be appointed.
Trial Steering Committees and Study Steering Committees
All projects with an element of primary research are required to establish a Steering Committee. The following lists provide guidance on its role, constitution, composition, meeting requirements and primary reporting line. This information can be used as a template terms of reference.
The role of the Steering Committee
The role of the Steering Committee is to provide overall supervision for a project on behalf of the Project’s Sponsor and Funder and to ensure that it is conducted to the rigorous standards set out in the Department of Health’s Research Governance Framework for Health and Social Care and the Guidelines for Good Clinical Practice.
The day-to-day management of the project is the responsibility of the Chief Investigator, and as such the Chief Investigator may wish to set up a separate Project Management Group (PMG) to assist with this function.
The main features of the Steering Committee are as follows:
- To provide advice, through its Chair, to the project’s funder, sponsor, Chief Investigator, host institution, and contractor
- To concentrate on the project’s progress, adherence to the protocol, and patient safety (where appropriate), and to consider new information of relevance to the research question
- The rights, safety and well-being of the participants are the most important considerations and should prevail over the interests of science and society
- To ensure appropriate ethical and other approvals are obtained in line with the project plan
- To agree proposals for substantial protocol amendments and provide advice to the sponsor and funder regarding approvals of such amendments
- To provide advice to the investigators on all aspects of the project
Constitution of a Steering Committee
- The relevant NIHR Programme Director will review the nominees and appoint the Chair and members
- Independent members must make up a minimum of 75% of the Committee membership
- The minimum quoracy for any Steering Committee meeting to conduct business is 67% (two thirds) of the appointed membership
- Only appointed members will be entitled to vote (irrespective of their level of independence) and the Chair will have a casting vote
- The Chair and members must sign and maintain a log of potential conflicts and/or interests
- Attendance at Steering Committee meetings by non-members is at the discretion of the Chair
- The primary Steering Committee reporting line is via the Chair to the relevant NIHR Programme Director; however, communication is likely to be between the Chair and the NIHR Research Manager who has day to day responsibility for the project.
Please note: We advise you to keep the number of members on your Steering Committee to an easily manageable number, but preferably to no more than eight members in total.
Composition of the Steering Committee
- An Independent Chair (UK based and/or holding a substantive UK based appointment)
- An Independent statistician (where relevant)
- At least one Public member, preferably independent
- Others with clinical or other expertise relevant to the project, such as health economics, social care, public health etc.
- Ideally, the Steering Committee should invite observers, including representatives of the sponsor and research network to meetings
- An indication of any proposed overseas members should have been given at the full application stage and feedback on such proposals supplied following the Funding
- Committee’s consideration of the application.
Steering Committee meetings
- Although there may be periods when more frequent meetings are necessary, the Steering Committee should meet at least annually
- Where a Data Monitoring and Ethics Committee (DMEC) is required, Steering Committee meetings should be scheduled to follow shortly after their meetings so that reports from that group can be considered if appropriate
- Minutes of meetings should be sent to all members, the sponsor, and the funder, and be retained in the study master file
The responsibility for calling and organising Steering Committee meetings lies with the Chief Investigator, in association with the Chair.
The NIHR reserves the right to attend any meeting, therefore should be included in relevant invitations. In exceptional circumstances there may be occasions when the Project Sponsor or NIHR will organise and administer these meetings.
The Role of the Chair of the Steering Committee
The Chair of the Steering Committee is directly answerable to the relevant NIHR programme, as funder. The Chair’s responsibilities include:
- Liaising with the Chief Investigator to arrange a meeting to finalise the protocol and to set up a schedule of meetings to align with the project plan
- Establishing clear reporting lines to the Funder, Sponsor, etc.
- Being familiar with relevant guidance documents and with the role of the DMEC if appropriate.
- Providing an independent, experienced opinion if conflicts arise between the needs of the research team, the funder, the sponsor, the participating organisations and/or any other agencies
- Leading the Steering Committee to provide regular, impartial oversight of the study, especially to identify and pre-empt problems
- Ensuring that changes to the protocol are debated and endorsed by the Steering Committee; letters of endorsement should be made available to the project team when requesting approval from the funder and sponsor for matters such as changes to protocol
- Being available to provide independent advice as required, not just when Steering Committee meetings are scheduled
- Commenting on any extension requests and, where appropriate, providing a letter to the funder commenting on whether the extension request is supported or otherwise by the independent members of the Committee.
- Commenting in detail (when appropriate) regarding the continuation, extension or termination of the project.
Note: The Steering Committee Chair does not need to be a content expert but needs to ensure that sufficient content expertise is available for the group to perform its oversight function effectively.
Data Monitoring and Ethics Committee (DMEC)
The formation of a Data Monitoring and Ethics Committee (DMEC) is needed when there are particular risk factors involved in a study.
Most projects with an element of primary research are required to establish a DMEC. The following lists provide guidance on the role, constitution, composition and meeting requirements for a DMEC. This information can be used as a template terms of reference.
The role of the DMEC
The Data Monitoring and Ethics Committee's main role is as follows:
- It is the only body involved in a trial that has access to the unblinded comparative data
- The role of its members is to monitor these data and make recommendations to the Steering Committee on whether there are any ethical or safety reasons why the trial should not continue
- The safety, rights and well-being of the trial participants are paramount
- The DMEC considers the need for any interim analysis advising the Steering Committee regarding the release of data and/or information
- The DMEC may be asked by the Steering Committee, Project Sponsor or Project Funder to consider data emerging from other related studies
- There are also rare occasions when the DMEC chair might be asked by the Project Funder, through the chair of the Steering Committee, to provide advice based on a confidential interim or futility analysis if serious concerns are raised about the viability of the study or if the research team are requesting significant extensions
- Criteria should be agreed at which continuation of the trial is considered futile and the DMEC would only indicate if these had been passed or not as this would limit the potential for un-blinding.
Constitution of a DMEC
- The relevant NIHR Programme Director will review the nominees and appoint the Chair and members
- Only appointed members will be entitled to vote and the Chair will have a casting vote
- The minimum quoracy for a meeting to conduct business is 67% (two thirds) of appointed members
- The Chair and members must sign and maintain a log of potential conflicts and/or interests
- Attendance at DMEC meetings by non-members is at the discretion of the Chair
- The primary DMEC reporting line is via the Chair to the Steering Committee.
Composition of a DMEC
- All DMEC members are to be independent (with at least one member being UK based and/or holding a substantive UK based appointment)
- Membership of the DMEC should be small (3- 4 members) and comprise experts in the field, e.g. a clinician with experience in the relevant area and expert trial statistician.
DMEC Meetings
- Responsibility for calling and organising DMEC meetings lies with the Chief Investigator, in association with the Chair of the DMEC. The project team should provide the DMEC with a comprehensive report, the content of which should be agreed in advance by the Chair of the DMEC
- The DMEC should meet at least annually, or more often as appropriate, and meetings should be timed so that reports can be fed into the Steering Committee
- Minutes of meetings should be sent to all members, the sponsor, the funder, and the Steering Committee, and a copy should be placed in the study master file. It should be noted that the minutes may have ‘in camera’ items redacted from some copies.
Independence
Independence in terms of the Data Monitoring and Ethics Committee, is defined as follows:
- Not part of the same institution as any of the applicants or members of the project team
- Not part of the same institution that is acting as a recruitment or investigative centre, including Patient Identification Centres (PIC), identifying and referring patients to a recruitment or investigative centre
(In both cases above ‘not part of the same institution’ means holding neither a substantive nor honorary contract or title with said institution) - Not related to any of the applicants or project team members
- No other perceived conflicts of interest
- For the Chair only; not an applicant on a rival proposal
It is recognised that independence status of individual members of the above committees may change during the duration of the project, and it is the responsibility of the Chief Investigator to ensure that the funder is notified of such changes.