Creates ICH E3-compliant clinical study reports with required sections and data presentation. Use when writing CSRs, formatting study reports, or preparing regulatory submissions.
The Clinical Study Report (CSR) is the definitive regulatory document for a completed clinical trial and a required component of CTD Module 5 in NDA/BLA/MAA submissions. ICH E3 defines the structure, and regulators evaluate the CSR's completeness and accuracy as a measure of data integrity. A deficient CSR generates FDA information requests, delays review timelines, and can undermine an entire submission. This skill encodes the ICH E3 section-by-section writing workflow with current FDA and EMA expectations.
Checkpoint A — Intake and Scoping
Required Intake Questions
What is the study number, phase, and therapeutic area?
Is this a full CSR, abbreviated CSR, or synoptic CSR?
What is the regulatory pathway (NDA 505(b)(1), 505(b)(2), BLA, MAA)?
What is the finalized and locked Statistical Analysis Plan (SAP) version?
Are all TLFs (tables, listings, figures) finalized and QC-complete?
Has the database been locked and the data management report finalized?
What medical writing style guide applies (AMA, sponsor-specific)?
Verwandte Skills
What are the individual study reports included in the submission (for cross-referencing)?
Are there any FDA or EMA deficiency letters or meeting minutes affecting this report?
What is the target completion date for the CSR?
Required Source Documents
Protocol and all amendments
Statistical Analysis Plan (final locked version)
Final TLFs (tables, listings, figures)
SDTM and ADaM datasets with define.xml
Investigator's Brochure (current edition)
Data Management Report
Medical Monitor's safety review
DSMB reports and recommendations (if applicable)
Protocol deviation log
Participant narratives for deaths, SAEs, and discontinuations due to AEs
Step 1 — Build the ICH E3 Section Structure
Create the report using the mandatory ICH E3 structure. Key sections:
Section
Title
Key Content
1
Title Page
Study number, compound, indication, sponsor, report date
2
Synopsis
3-5 page structured summary (not an abstract — a standalone summary)
3
Table of Contents
All sections, tables, figures, appendices with page numbers
4
List of Abbreviations
Every abbreviation used in the report
5
Ethics
IRB/IEC approvals, consent process, compliance with GCP
6
Investigators and Study Sites
List of all investigators, sites, and enrollment per site
7
Introduction
Background, rationale, development context
8
Study Objectives
Primary, secondary, exploratory — verbatim from protocol
9
Investigational Plan
Study design, population, treatments, endpoints, statistical methods
Study population: Disposition (screened, randomized, completed, discontinued with reasons)
Efficacy results: Primary endpoint result with CI and p-value; key secondary results
Safety results: Overview of AE profile; SAEs and deaths summary
Conclusions: 2-3 sentences on efficacy and safety conclusions
The synopsis must be self-contained — a reader should understand the study without reading the full CSR.
Step 3 — Write the Efficacy Section (Section 11)
Structure the efficacy evaluation:
Analysis populations: Define and justify each population used; present disposition table
Primary endpoint analysis: Present the pre-specified analysis exactly as in the SAP; include the primary TLF, LS means or proportions, CI, p-value, and effect size
Sensitivity analyses: Present each planned sensitivity analysis and whether it supports the primary conclusion
Missing data: Describe extent of missing data by arm and visit; present sensitivity analyses for missing data (tipping point, pattern mixture)
Secondary endpoints: Present in hierarchical order per multiplicity plan; clearly state whether each met statistical significance accounting for the adjustment
Subgroup analyses: Forest plots for pre-specified subgroups (sex, age, race, region, baseline severity); report interaction p-values; do not claim subgroup effects without pre-specification
Exploratory analyses: Clearly label as hypothesis-generating; present without formal inferential statements
Step 4 — Write the Safety Section (Section 12)
Structure the safety evaluation per ICH E3 and FDA safety-reporting expectations:
Extent of exposure: Duration, dose levels, total participant-years of exposure per arm
Adverse events: Overall AE incidence; table by SOC and PT (≥X% in any arm); treatment-related AEs; AEs leading to discontinuation
Deaths and serious adverse events: Individual narratives for all deaths; SAE summary table; narratives for treatment-related SAEs
Adverse events of special interest: Protocol-defined AESIs with detailed analysis
Laboratory evaluations: Shift tables (baseline → worst post-baseline); PCS values; Hy's Law analysis with eDISH plot
Vital signs and ECG: Summarize by visit with clinically notable values flagged
Safety conclusions: Integrated narrative of the safety profile; characterize the most common AEs, serious risks, and any signals requiring further monitoring
Step 5 — Write the Discussion and Conclusions (Section 13)
This section provides the interpretive framework:
Efficacy interpretation: Place primary-endpoint results in context of clinical meaningfulness and prior studies; discuss consistency across sensitivity analyses and subgroups
Safety interpretation: Characterize the safety profile relative to the therapeutic area and comparator; identify new safety signals vs. known class effects
Benefit-risk assessment: Synthesize efficacy and safety findings into an overall benefit-risk statement for the target population
Study limitations: Address design limitations, missing data impact, generalizability considerations
Conclusions: Concise summary of key findings and implications for the development program
Step 6 — Compile Appendices (Section 16)
ICH E3 specifies the following appendix structure:
16.1: Protocol and protocol amendments (with dates)
16.2: Sample CRF (annotated with SDTM mapping is current best practice)
16.3: IRB/IEC approvals and consent forms (list of all sites with approval dates)
16.4: List of investigators and qualifications
16.5: Randomization scheme documentation (not the actual list, which is kept separately)
Additional appendices as needed:
Individual participant data listings for safety (deaths, SAEs, discontinuations)