Ennov eTMF Archive
Secure Trial Master File Retention and Retrieval

Control your trial documentation. Stay inspection-ready.

The Trial Master File Archive Challenge​

Sponsors do not always need an active eTMF for ongoing document filing and QC. In many outsourced models, the CRO manages the TMF during the trial, then delivers the TMF to the sponsor at closeout. From that point forward, the sponsor has a long-term obligation to retain the TMF securely and keep it accessible for audits, inspections, and internal reference, often for many years, and in some cases decades.

In this phase, the requirements are simple but critical. A TMF archive must preserve record integrity, limit access to authorized users, and support reliable retrieval when documentation is requested. For some organizations, a full-featured eTMF may be more functionality than they need for long-term retention, which is why TMF archiving and secure TMF archiving become a distinct use case with its own priorities.

A Simple, Inspectable TMF Archive

Ennov’s TMF archive is designed to make archived Trial Master File content easy to search, review, and retrieve during audits and inspections. Inspectors and study teams can navigate an archive structure aligned to the TMF Reference Model, filter document lists by key metadata, and use search to find the right record quickly. Features like favorites and recently viewed lists help reviewers move efficiently through high-volume TMF content.

Access can be controlled based on the scope of an inspection, so reviewers see only what they are authorized to view. You can also maintain visibility into which documents were accessed and in what order, supporting traceability during inspection activity.

Documents can be migrated into the TMF archive using common TMF metadata, such as study, country, site, and artifact type, to populate the archive structure. The archive can also retain additional attributes, such as document date, expiration date, topic or subject, and other configurable metadata fields, helping improve retrieval over long retention periods.

Because the solution is purpose-built for TMF archiving, validation can be completed efficiently. Ennov provides a validation and user acceptance package to reduce burden on your teams while supporting long-term use and inspection readiness.

Core Capabilities

Key Features

Efficiently & Securely Capture & Manage Clinical Trial Information

The Ennov Clinical suite consists of Clinical Data Management applications as well as Clinical Trial Management applications that are available for deployment in the cloud or on premises.

Why Choose Ennov

Over 500,000 users trust Ennov

Providing you freedom of choice

Cloud-based or On Premises

Multi-Platform

ISO 9001 & 27001 Certified

Electronic Trial Master File Software FAQs

What is a TMF archive?

eTMF software (electronic Trial Master File software) helps clinical teams manage essential TMF documents in a structured, inspection-ready way throughout a trial. It centralizes filing, QC, completeness oversight, and role-based access so sponsors, CROs, and sites can maintain control and visibility across TMF health.

A TMF archive is a system designed for long-term retention and retrieval of Trial Master File content after study closeout. It helps sponsors preserve records securely, control access over time, and retrieve the right documents quickly for audits, inspections, and internal reference.

TMF archiving is used to store closed or inactive TMF content for years, sometimes decades, while maintaining record integrity and access control. It reduces reliance on shared drives, exported folders, or legacy storage, and makes it easier to respond when documentation is requested during an inspection.

Secure TMF archiving means keeping archived TMF records protected with controlled access, traceable history, and governance over who can view or retrieve content. It should help preserve record integrity and support inspection readiness years after a trial ends.

 

A TMF archive should let you control what an inspector can access based on the scope of an inspection. That includes limiting access to specific studies, countries, sites, or document types, while maintaining traceability of what was viewed and when.

Look for structured metadata, strong search and filtering, controlled access, and audit-ready traceability. You should also evaluate how the archive supports long retention periods, how easily it can ingest TMF transfers from CROs or other systems, and how consistently it preserves context for retrieval.

 

In many outsourced models, the CRO manages the TMF during the trial and transfers it to the sponsor at closeout. A TMF archive helps the sponsor retain that delivered TMF securely and keep it accessible over time, without needing the same operational setup required for active TMF management.

Yes. A TMF archive is commonly used when sponsors need to retain TMF content from multiple sources, including CRO deliveries and legacy platforms. In the broader eTMF market, long-term archival and TMF transfer capability is considered an important requirement.

A TMF archive helps audits and inspections by making it easier to retrieve the correct document version with context and traceability. It supports inspection readiness after closeout by preserving structured access control and an audit-ready record of archived content.

 

Some organizations evaluate archives in the context of transfer standards used for regulated TMF record exchange. For example, the market increasingly references EMS (Exchange Mechanism Standard) in relation to compliant TMF transfers.

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