Vicki Barber
BSc (Hons) ; FIoB; PhD
OCTRU Operations Director and Interim Joint CTU Director
As a scientist by training I have had an interest in healthcare research since 1998 and trials since 2001. I undertook an undergraduate BSc Hons degree in Applied and Human Biology, and then a PhD in Pharmacology. I was then selected to be part of the first cohort of fellows in the Midlands MEDICI programme that taught entrepreneurship, commercialisation and business administration. I then combined all of these experiences to manage the first clinical trial of a one of the University of Oxford Spin Out Companies. This then led onto me being part of many trial teams, grant applications and feasibility studies.
To date, I have trial managed CTIMP (drug) trials and complex intervention trials in general medicine, intensive care, paediatrics and most recently in obstetrics. I directed the INFANT study, a multi-centre randomised controlled trial which recruited over 46,000 pregnant women in the second most expensive study (at the time) ever funded by the NIHR HTA programme.
I have been active in trial management for over a decade and have in the past contributed to the UK Trial Managers Network Trial Management Guide.
As the Operations Director of the Oxford Clinical Trials Research Unit (OCTRU) I oversee all collaborations and take an active role in senior project management of many of our trials.
I have research interests in trial efficiencies and the role that technology has in trials.
In March 2025, I was appointed as Joint Interim CTU Director
Recent publications
PD06-08 COMPARISON OF PROSTATE CANCER YIELD PER MRI TARGET LESION FOR LATP VERSUS TRUS PROSTATE BIOPSY: NEW INSIGHTS FROM THE TRANSLATE RANDOMISED CLINICAL TRIAL
Journal article
Ranasinha NMS. et al, (2026), Journal of Urology, 215
Cost Effectiveness of Local Anaesthetic Transperineal Versus Transrectal Biopsy: Results from the TRANSLATE Study.
Journal article
Little M. et al, (2026), Eur Urol Focus, 12, 227 - 236
Child and Parent Outcomes in the 2018-2019 DEPICT (Differences in Access to Emergency Pediatric Intensive Care and Care During Transport) Study: 12-Month Follow-Up Data.
Journal article
Alexander EC. et al, (2026), Pediatr Crit Care Med, 27, 166 - 175