On September 29-30, 2016, CTTI hosted a multi-stakeholder expert meeting to begin to develop recommendations for how to develop mobile technology–derived novel endpoints for use in clinical trials. Mobile technologies such as remote sensors have the potential to facilitate continuous, high-quality data acquisition not typically possible with traditional data collection methods. However, it is currently unclear how data from these devices may be used to generate novel endpoints for use in clinical trials.
Meeting attendees drafted four use cases to clarify the pathway for developing novel endpoints derived from data captured using mobile devices:
- Use of accelerometers to measure treatment benefit in heart failure, Parkinson’s disease, and muscular dystrophy trials
- Use of continuous glucose monitors to measure treatment benefit in diabetes trials
Highlights from this meeting are now available in the meeting summary. As a next step in the MCT Novel Endpoints Project, the team will use the evidence from these four use cases, along with findings from a systematic review that is underway, to inform general recommendations to help promote widespread adoption of mobile technologies in clinical trials.
Meeting attendees included investigators, patient representatives, engineers, algorithm experts, regulators, nonprofit consortia, and statisticians who had experience with the diseases and/or devices discussed.