What data and documents are needed to estimate the cost of a clinical study? How to properly plan a non-commercial study budget?
Preparing a realistic cost estimate requires more than just market knowledge — it depends on access to complete study documentation and precise project assumptions. Each budget component should be based on facts rather than intuition.
The starting point is the clinical protocol or protocol synopsis. This document contains all key financial inputs: number of sites, planned number of patients, visit schedule, medical procedures, laboratory analyses and endpoints. These elements determine the scope of CRO services, staffing needs, activity timelines and required resources.
Another important document is a preliminary project management plan or its assumptions — defining which activities will be performed by the sponsor and which will be outsourced (CRO, central labs, translations, archiving, pharmacovigilance). To receive an accurate quote, the sponsor should specify the exact activities to be handled by the CRO and include quantitative assumptions (e.g., number of monitoring visits, number of system updates, number of planned deliverables). Without clear task allocation, the quote may be imprecise or contain double counting.
For non-commercial studies, it is essential to consider the financing rules (e.g., ABM grants, university grants, EU funding). Each funding mechanism has its own principles for cost eligibility, reporting and salary limits. Ensuring early compliance with these rules prevents costly revisions later.
Additional useful data include the average site fees (per-patient budgets), monitoring costs, audit fees, eCRF/eTMF systems, logistics, sample transport and study materials. Estimated study timelines also affect the budget — market rates, inflation and resource availability change over time.
In non-commercial studies, sponsors often underestimate administrative costs, documentation updates, reporting activities and audit preparations. A CRO experienced in publicly funded projects helps build a comprehensive, transparent and regulation-compliant budget tailored to the sponsor’s capabilities.
A well-designed non-commercial study budget is both a financial document and a risk management tool — anticipating challenges, ensuring contingency funds and maintaining financial stability throughout the study.
If you are preparing a new project, send us a brief description — within 1–2 business days we will propose an online meeting and highlight the areas worth addressing at the planning stage.