
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
At first glance, responding to site-level findings seems simple—but when Edye and Darshan dug into the details, it became clear that the lines of responsibility blur fast. Here's how each side sees it:
Site Perspective:
Sites know the boots-on-the-ground reality. When a finding is made—especially during an external inspection like the FDA—they’re often the ones best positioned to analyze what went wrong.
The site team (usually led by QA or compliance professionals) needs to:
But here’s the challenge: responding without oversharing or accidentally implicating the sponsor/CRO can be tricky. Sites want autonomy, but also need alignment to avoid missteps.
Sponsor/CRO Perspective:
Sponsors and CROs carry the risk for the overall study. So if a site submits a response that reflects poorly on the sponsor—whether intentionally or not—that’s a problem.
From their perspective, they want:
The Real Answer: "It Depends"
Whether a finding is the site's responsibility or the sponsor’s comes down to the root cause:
Both Edye and Darshan agree: most findings land in a gray zone. That’s why collaboration, transparency, and clear communication are key.
Want more of these insights? Let us know—we’ve got more hot topics on deck.
Support the show
4.3
66 ratings
At first glance, responding to site-level findings seems simple—but when Edye and Darshan dug into the details, it became clear that the lines of responsibility blur fast. Here's how each side sees it:
Site Perspective:
Sites know the boots-on-the-ground reality. When a finding is made—especially during an external inspection like the FDA—they’re often the ones best positioned to analyze what went wrong.
The site team (usually led by QA or compliance professionals) needs to:
But here’s the challenge: responding without oversharing or accidentally implicating the sponsor/CRO can be tricky. Sites want autonomy, but also need alignment to avoid missteps.
Sponsor/CRO Perspective:
Sponsors and CROs carry the risk for the overall study. So if a site submits a response that reflects poorly on the sponsor—whether intentionally or not—that’s a problem.
From their perspective, they want:
The Real Answer: "It Depends"
Whether a finding is the site's responsibility or the sponsor’s comes down to the root cause:
Both Edye and Darshan agree: most findings land in a gray zone. That’s why collaboration, transparency, and clear communication are key.
Want more of these insights? Let us know—we’ve got more hot topics on deck.
Support the show
56,005 Listeners