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Module 1: Lesson 1

Learn how to translate quality by design and proportionality principles into actionable risk-based quality management, with practical guidance on risk identification, assessment, control, and ongoing review.
The principles are established. Quality should be built in from the start. Oversight should be proportionate to actual risks and data importance. Critical to quality factors deserve focused attention. But principles, however elegantly articulated, do not implement themselves. The question that confronts every clinical trial team is practical: How do we actually do this?
Risk-Based Quality Management, or RBQM, is the answer ICH E6(R3) provides. RBQM is not a new concept invented by the revised guideline—thoughtful sponsors and investigators have practiced elements of it for years. What E6(R3) does is formalize RBQM as the expected approach, requiring that sponsors move beyond intuitive risk management toward systematic, documented processes.
For site personnel, understanding RBQM matters even though the sponsor bears primary responsibility for its implementation. The risk assessments that shape how a trial is monitored, the critical to quality factors that receive enhanced attention, the ongoing reviews that may trigger changes in oversight—all of these affect how investigators and coordinators experience the trial day to day. And in many cases, sites contribute directly to risk identification and mitigation. RBQM works best when it is a collaborative endeavor.
By the end of this lesson, you will be able to:
Good Clinical Practice (GCP)
Full course · ICH E6(R3) Principles
Free Lesson Preview
Module 1: Lesson 1

Learn how to translate quality by design and proportionality principles into actionable risk-based quality management, with practical guidance on risk identification, assessment, control, and ongoing review.
The principles are established. Quality should be built in from the start. Oversight should be proportionate to actual risks and data importance. Critical to quality factors deserve focused attention. But principles, however elegantly articulated, do not implement themselves. The question that confronts every clinical trial team is practical: How do we actually do this?
Risk-Based Quality Management, or RBQM, is the answer ICH E6(R3) provides. RBQM is not a new concept invented by the revised guideline—thoughtful sponsors and investigators have practiced elements of it for years. What E6(R3) does is formalize RBQM as the expected approach, requiring that sponsors move beyond intuitive risk management toward systematic, documented processes.
For site personnel, understanding RBQM matters even though the sponsor bears primary responsibility for its implementation. The risk assessments that shape how a trial is monitored, the critical to quality factors that receive enhanced attention, the ongoing reviews that may trigger changes in oversight—all of these affect how investigators and coordinators experience the trial day to day. And in many cases, sites contribute directly to risk identification and mitigation. RBQM works best when it is a collaborative endeavor.
By the end of this lesson, you will be able to:
Good Clinical Practice (GCP)
Full course · ICH E6(R3) Principles
You're already ahead of most
This lesson is part of a complete GCP certification track — 2 courses, quizzes, a final exam, and a certificate recognized by 18+ trial sponsors. It's entirely free.
Start your GCP certificateYou're already ahead of most
This lesson is part of a complete GCP certification track — 2 courses, quizzes, a final exam, and a certificate recognized by 18+ trial sponsors. It's entirely free.
Start your GCP certificate