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Findings
FDA considers electronic records and signatures to be equivalent to paper records and handwritten signatures when they meet the requirements of 21 CFR part 11. Advances in technology, including Digital Health Technologies (DHTs) and cloud computing, necessitate updated guidance on ensuring the authenticity, integrity, and confidentiality of electronic data in clinical investigations. Records submitted to the FDA under predicate rules (e.g., marketing applications) are subject to part 11. FDA does not intend to assess the compliance of external Real-World Data (RWD) sources like Electronic Health Record (EHR) systems with part 11, but the sponsor remains responsible for the quality and integrity of all submitted data.

Recommendations
Risk-Based Validation: Regulated entities should use a risk-based approach to validation for all electronic systems deployed, proportionate to the risks to participant safety and reliability of trial results. Validation must cover system functionality, trial-specific configurations, customizations, and interoperability.
Data Retention & Audit Trails: Electronic records must be retained for the applicable period in a secure and traceable manner. Audit trails must capture all changes (old/new value, user ID, date/time) and should be protected from modification.
Security & Access Controls: Logical and physical access controls (e.g., strong login credentials, multi-factor authentication) must limit system access to authorized users based on a documented risk assessment. Security safeguards (e.g., encryption, antivirus) must be in place to protect data at rest and in transit.
DHT Use: DHTs should be selected and validated to be fit for purpose. The data originator (person, system, or DHT itself) must be associated with every data element as part of the audit trail. The final location of source data for inspection is the durable electronic data repository, not the individual DHT.
Outsourcing: Regulated entities must have a written agreement with IT service providers (including for cloud computing) detailing roles, responsibilities, and the service provider’s ability to provide data integrity and security safeguards. The sponsor must maintain oversight.

Regulatory Considerations
FDA does not certify electronic systems or signature methods; they are evaluated during inspection. Users of electronic signatures must submit a letter of non-repudiation to the FDA certifying that the electronic signature is the legally binding equivalent of a handwritten signature. Security breaches impacting participant safety or privacy should be reported to the IRB and FDA in a timely manner.