• WCG’s eCOA portfolio and imaging analysis technology from NeuroRx are now part of Clario!

menu-close-icon
Your using an unsupported browser. Please update to a modern browser for a better experience.
Skip to content
Clario Clario
  • Solutions
    • eCOA Clinical Trials
      • eCOA Clinical Trials
      • eCOA Live
      • eCOA Multimedia
      • eCOA Rapid Start
      • eCOA Rater and Participant Training
      • eCOA Rescue Studies
      • Suicidal Ideation
    • Artificial Intelligence (AI)

      Discover Clario's AI solutions, where innovation meets expertise. Since 2018, we have revolutionized clinical trial endpoint analyses with more than 30 AI-enabled solutions across 600+ active trials, enhancing data quality and patient privacy while expediting data collection processes.

      Go to page
    • Cardiac Solutions
      • Cardiac Solutions
      • Arrhythmia Analysis
      • Blood Pressure Services
      • ECG — On-site to DCT and Phase I-IV
      • Phase I/TQT Cardiac Assessment
      • Regulatory Consultation and Statistical Analysis Expertise
    • Medical Imaging
      • Medical Imaging
      • Medical Imaging science team
      • Image Redact AI
      • Imaging Platform
      • Modalities
      • SMART Submit
    • Precision Motion
      • Precision Motion for Clinical Trials
      • Precision Motion for Research
      • Precision Motion: Scientific Publications
    • Respiratory Solutions
      • Respiratory Solutions
      • Site-Based Spirometry (FEV1, FVC, PEF, and more.)
      • Virtual Home Spirometry
      • Cough and Lung Sounds
      • Diffusing Capacity (DLCO)
    • Trial Enablement
      • Trial Enablement
      • Clinical Adjudication
      • Eligibility Solution
      • Reporting & Analytics
      • Source Document Manager
    • Decentralized Trials

      All the precision endpoint technology and services your virtual or hybrid trial needs to deliver more certain outcomes.

      Go to page
  • Therapeutic Areas
    • Cardiovascular & Metabolic
    • Neuroscience
    • Dermatology
    • Oncology
    • Gastroenterology
    • Ophthalmology
    • Hepatology
    • Respiratory Solutions
    • Infectious Diseases
    • Type 2 Diabetes and Obesity
    • Musculoskeletal
  • Resources
    • Blog Articles
    • Case Studies
    • Downloads
    • Events
    • External Publications
    • Webinars
  • About
    • The Clario Story
    • Careers
    • Corporate & Social Responsibility
    • Information Security
    • Leadership
    • Legal & Privacy
    • Newsroom
    • Scientific Expertise
    • Strategic Partnerships
    • Values & Culture
  • Support
    • Customer Support
    • In-Country Cardiac Safety Support
  • Solutions
    • eCOA Clinical Trials
      • eCOA Clinical Trials
      • eCOA Live
      • eCOA Multimedia
      • eCOA Rapid Start
      • eCOA Rater and Participant Training
      • eCOA Rescue Studies
      • Suicidal Ideation
    • Artificial Intelligence (AI)
    • Cardiac Solutions
      • Cardiac Solutions
      • Arrhythmia Analysis
      • Blood Pressure Services
      • ECG — On-site to DCT and Phase I-IV
      • Phase I/TQT Cardiac Assessment
      • Regulatory Consultation and Statistical Analysis Expertise
    • Medical Imaging
      • Medical Imaging
      • Medical Imaging science team
      • Image Redact AI
      • Imaging Platform
      • Modalities
      • SMART Submit
    • Precision Motion
      • Precision Motion for Clinical Trials
      • Precision Motion for Research
      • Precision Motion: Scientific Publications
    • Respiratory Solutions
      • Respiratory Solutions
      • Site-Based Spirometry (FEV1, FVC, PEF, and more.)
      • Virtual Home Spirometry
      • Cough and Lung Sounds
      • Diffusing Capacity (DLCO)
    • Trial Enablement
      • Trial Enablement
      • Clinical Adjudication
      • Eligibility Solution
      • Reporting & Analytics
      • Source Document Manager
    • Decentralized Trials
      • Decentralized Trials
  • Therapeutic Areas
    • Cardiovascular & Metabolic
    • Dermatology
    • Gastroenterology
    • Hepatology
    • Infectious Diseases
    • Musculoskeletal
    • Neuroscience
    • Oncology
    • Ophthalmology
    • Type 2 Diabetes and Obesity
    • Respiratory Solutions
  • Resources
    • Blog Articles
    • Case Studies
    • Downloads
    • Events
    • External Publications
    • Webinars
  • About
    • The Clario Story
    • Corporate & Social Responsibility
    • Information Security
    • Leadership
    • Legal & Privacy
    • Scientific Expertise
    • Strategic Partnerships
    • Values & Culture
  • Support
    • Customer Support
    • In-Country Cardiac Safety Support
  • Careers
    • Life at Clario
  • Newsroom
  • Login
  • Contact sales
    • Log in
    • Contact sales
  1. Home Resources Blog Articles Suicide risk assessment in clinical trial drug development: part 1

Suicide risk assessment in clinical trial drug development: part 1

Assessing the positive and negative effects of medications on suicide risk to protect study participants

Kelly Posner, Ph.D. – Professor of Psychiatry at Columbia University
John Greist, M.D. – Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health and CEO at Healthcare Technology Systems, Inc

Accurately assessing suicidal ideation and behavior (SIB) is critical and often required by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in clinical trials designed to assess the safety and efficacy of new pharmaceuticals. Assessing SIB is of particular concern to the FDA for any compound that crosses the blood-brain barrier. The electronic Columbia-Suicide Severity Rating Scale (eC-SSRS), completed by patients during clinical trial visits combined with clinician follow-up as needed, provides an easy and comprehensive method for assessing potential effects of medications on suicide risk. Before discussing SIB assessment methods further, it is important to understand why regulators began issuing guidance around suicide risk assessment during drug development.

Kelly Posner headshot

“Drug development trials must assess the positive and negative effects of medications on suicide risk to protect study participants taking medications entering broad general use after regulatory approval.”

Kelly Posner, PhD – Professor of Psychiatry at Columbia University

This first installment of a two-part series offers a cautionary tale illustrating the importance of Clinical Outcome Assessments (COAs) like the patient-reported eC-SSRS.

Before the present systematic assessment of SIB during drug development trials existed, a smoking cessation drug received FDA approval for use in 2006. It was a highly effective treatment and widely used almost immediately following approval. In 2009, following reports of serious neuropsychiatric events including but not limited to depression, suicidal ideation, suicide attempt and completed suicide, the FDA issued a “black box” warning regarding depression and suicide risk. As a result, use of the drug for smoking cessation decreased rapidly by approximately 50%.

FDA guidance on prospective assessment of suicidal ideation and behavior

In 2012, consistent with the experience with the smoking cessation drug, the FDA published Guidance for Industry Suicidal Ideation and Behavior: Prospective Assessment of Occurrence in Clinical Trials.2 The guidance described several issues and methods involved for assessing suicide risk during drug development:

“The purpose of this guidance is to assist sponsors in prospectively assessing the occurrence of treatment-emergent suicidal ideation and behavior in clinical trials of drug and biological products.

There are two reasons for prospectively assessing suicidal ideation and behavior in clinical trials. The first is to ensure that patients in clinical trials who are experiencing suicidal ideation and behavior are properly recognized, and adequately treated. The second is to ensure the collection of more timely (i.e., closer to the event) and more complete data on suicidal ideation and behavior than have been collected in the past so that increased suicidal ideation and behavior in individual trials and in pooled analyses are easier to detect. This is important whether or not a particular drug is known to be associated with treatment-emergent suicidal ideation and behavior.

Collection of such data will also provide scientifically sound evidence to evaluate concerns about a possible association with suicidal ideation and behavior for a drug that is based only on individual case reports.”

In response to the 2012 FDA guidance and other FDA requirements, the maker of the smoking cessation drug reported results of an 8000-patient post-marketing randomized controlled trial (RCT) in late 2016. The study findings resulted in the removal of the FDA boxed warning.1 But for the drug manufacturer, the seven-year recovery process came with enormous costs, including study expenses, lost sales, and perhaps most importantly, lost opportunities to benefit patients seeking to stop smoking.

In Part 2 of this series, Drs. Greist, Mundt and Posner will discuss how technologies, such as the patient-reported eC-SSRS, can help accurately evaluate suicidal ideation and behavior (SIB) in clinical trials, protecting both patients and drug development efforts of pharmaceutical companies. In the meantime, to learn more about how and when to monitor SIB effectively, contact our eCOA Science Team or visit Clario’s eC-SSRS webpage.

Prioritizing patient safety with precision and care

Addressing suicidal ideation in clinical trials demands meticulous attention and scientific rigor. At Clario, our eCOA solutions are designed to ensure accurate, real-time data collection, enabling immediate and informed interventions.

Learn more

References

1 Anthenelli PM, Benowitz NL, West R, et al. Neuropsychiatric safety and efficacy of varenicline, bupropion, and nicotine patch in smokers with and without psychiatric disorders (EAGLES): a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled clinical trial. Lancet. 2016 Jun 18;387(10037):2507-20. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(16)30272-0. Epub 2016 Apr 22.
2 U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Food and Drug Administration Center for Drug Evaluation and Research. Guidance for Industry Suicidal Ideation and Behavior: Prospective Assessment of Occurrence in Clinical Trials. In: Products DoP, ed. Revision 1 ed. Rockville, MD: Food and Drug Administration; August 2012.


Back to articles
Share
Twitter Facebook LinkedIn

Latest articles

See all articles
Article

Researcher spotlight: Josefa Domingos

Precision Motion

Read
Article

Transforming clinical trials with AI

SCOPE speaking session

Read
Article

Researcher spotlight: Lori Quinn

Precision Motion

Read
Clario logo
    • Solutions
    • Therapeutic Areas
    • About
    • Resources
    • Careers
    • Newsroom
  • Get in touch

    • Contact
    • Support
    • Customer portal

Follow us

Twitter LinkedIn Glassdoor
×

Contact sales

If you are looking for a partner to help you generate the richest clinical evidence with the right clinical trial technology, please fill in the form below.


Not what you're looking for?

Please visit our Contact Page for customer support, office locations, or media contacts.

  • © 2025 Clario

    • Legal and Privacy Terms
    • Information Security
    • Cookie Policy
    • Impressum