Regulatory & Compliance

Federal regulations require the appropriate conduct of clinical research to ensure the relevance and rigor of research while protecting human subject research participants.  The Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) through the Office of Human Research Protections (OHRP) mandates the appropriate review and approval of all human subject research.  Additionally, the Food and Drug Administration has numerous regulations and guidance documents for investigators related to responsibilities for conducting FDA regulated research.  Investigators must have a thorough understanding of their roles and responsibilities. Research professionals are continuously challenged by the evolving regulatory landscape and the increased risk associated with the complexity of research protocols.

The CTSC can provide investigators with awareness of regulatory requirements and acceptable standards for the conduct of clinical trials and the protection of human subjects.  A primary goal of regulatory and compliance is to help reduce regulatory burden for investigators. We can help investigators understand the function of the FDA and investigator responsibilities for those pursuing or holding Investigational New Drug (IND) applications or Investigational Device Exemptions (IDE) or those investigators conducting research under and IND or IDE.

Clinical investigators, view the January 2016 NIH policy for Single IRB:

IRB approval, IRB exemption or a “non-human subjects” research determination made by the IRB is required prior to the CTSA providing services for research involving human subjects, data and/or specimens. 

ǿմý IRB

The CTSC supports high quality, reproducible research across the spectrum of clinical and translational sciences by identifying efficient and cost effective ways in which to promote adherence to regulatory requirements and overall responsible conduct of research by:

  1. Harmonizing cross institutional policies and infrastructure to improve the quality of human subject protections and promote a clear culture of responsibility among CTSC investigators. 
  2. Streamlining regulatory review process to promote research collaboration, which will facilitate translation of scientific ideas to clinical practice. 
  3. Providing innovative educational opportunities in Regulatory Sciences to complement and extend existing CTSC Regulatory offerings to all members of the translational workforce.

All CTSC partner institutions have robust research compliance programs and offices, and offer a full range of training on compliance topics such as:

  • The Scientist as a Responsible Member of Society
  • Conflict of Interest Disclosures
  • Safe Laboratory Practices
  • Human Subjects Protection
  • Mentor/Mentee Responsibilities
  • IND/IDE processes
  • Collaborative Team Research
  • Peer Review
  • Responsible Conduct of Research
  • Data Acquisition, Management
  • Research Misconduct
  • Responsible Authorship & Publication

ǿմý Compliance Program

ǿմý's Continuing Research Education Credit (CREC) Program provides investigators documented training in the protection of human subjects in research. The program is available to human subjects researchers at University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center, The MetroHealth System, ǿմý, Louis Stokes Cleveland VA Medical Center, and The Cleveland Clinic. The Collaborative Institutional Training Initiative (CITI) is a training service to which the University subscribes. CITI provides comprehensive online educational programs in multiple areas including the protection of human subjects in research.

The NIH requires Responsible Conduct of Research (RCR) training at all CTSA institutions. Responsible Conduct of Research Guide to read an article about RCR training within the CTSA network entitled: "Instruction in the Responsible Conduct of Research: An Inventory of Programs and Materials within CTSAs."

SMART IRB

SMART IRB is a platform designed to ease common challenges and burdens associated with initiating multisite research and provide a roadmap for institutions to implement the NIH Single IRB Review policy. Through a flexible master IRB reliance agreement, standard operating procedures, and complementary tools and resources, SMART IRB supports and encourages collaboration and harmonization across the nation.

Online Resources

For online help, such as SOP manuals, policies and FAQs visit the .