At a recent Society of Quality Assurance (SQA) conference, a particular panel focused on unusual audit questions – a topic that has stayed with me since.
The questions were not unusual at all, but rather a potential signal of where the industry may be headed. Sponsors, auditors, and regulators – all of us – are pushing beyond traditional compliance checklists and into a new era defined by Artificial Intelligence (AI) governance and how AI will be incorporated into clinical trial design and execution.
Whether you are in the role of CEO, Quality Lead, Study Monitor, Biostatistician, or any role involved in running or contributing to clinical trials, these insights are not theoretical. They represent immediate areas of risk and opportunity for implementation.
While AI usage in clinical trials is not new, is the industry truly ready? Do we really understand how to operationalize and apply the concept of AI governance in clinical trials?
How to Operationalize AI Governance
As this is no longer optional, here are my takeaways from the conference, as well as some suggestions:
Now is the time to make a fundamental shift. AI is no longer treated as a behind-the-scenes efficiency tool – it is now part of the regulated ecosystem.
The Time is Now – Where to Begin
If AI may influence decisions about data, and processes, it must be governed, transparent, and auditable. While it seems many organizations are behind in formalizing their governance plan, this creates a gap that will increasingly surface during health authority inspections. In other words, we must begin to integrate the principles agreed upon by FDA and EMA regarding AI practices published in January 2026 as an industry.
Begin with the following discussions with your teams:
The unifying idea across AI in clinical trials must be treated as a regulated, lifecycle-managed system whose rigor scales with its impact on patient safety and regulatory decisions.
The future of Good Clinical Practice compliance isn’t about answering harder questions during an audit. It’s about embedding proactive practices into daily activities so those questions are easy to answer down the road.
Curious about how AI can support your clinical trial oversight? Begin the conversation now.