CTTI Tackles 3 Issues in Clinical Trials with New Projects

At CTTI, we are continuously looking for practices that will increase the quality and efficiency of clinical trials. In 2014, three new topics have been added to our portfolio:

  1. Conducting Trials Using Data Registries: Demographic, disease, and outcome data collected in clinical observational registries often overlap with data gathered for clinical trials. Integrating clinical trials within observational data registries may offer opportunities to avoid duplicative data collection and increase efficiency while decreasing clinical trial costs. Objectives for this project include identifying upfront costs and operational adjustments required to utilize a data registry for a clinical trial, as well as recommending best practices for conducting randomized registry trials.
  2. Data Monitoring Committees (DMCs): As the use of DMCs has increased and evolved over the past 40 years, critical issues have emerged. A few of these issues include differences in DMC roles and responsibilities, which contributes to confusion and unclear expectations, as well as a lack of a clear plan for preparing the next generation of DMC members. Objectives for this project include understanding the current landscape of DMC use and conduct, clarifying the purpose of and rationale for using a DMC, and describing effective communication practices between independent DMCs and other trial stakeholders.
  3. Investigator Turnover: While an enormous amount of time and resources are spent initiating new investigators into the clinical trial process, there continues to be a high turnover rate for investigators. As many as 40% of investigators annually choose not to participate in another FDA-regulated trial. This high rate of attrition impacts site and overall trial performance. Objectives for this project include obtaining a more thorough understanding of the factors that influence investigators’ decisions to leave the clinical research practice, as well as defining the impact of investigator turnover on industry and society.

 

CTTI-Hosted Webinar Spotlights the Power of Collaborative Efforts in Rare Disease Areas

Webinar Video

The July edition of the CTTI-Hosted Webinar Series featured Sharon Hesterlee and Holly Peay, both of Parent Project Muscular Dystrophy. Titled “Patient Advocacy/Industry Partnerships to Accelerate Therapy Development,” this webinar provided an opportunity for Hesterlee and Peay to share several examples of collaborative efforts to advance the development of therapies for patients with Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy. Their stories show how engaging patient communities with their industry counterparts can result in real progress for those afflicted with this debilitating disease.

We invite you to watch a recording of this webinar, and we encourage you to share this resource with colleagues in the clinical trials enterprise.

 

CTTI-Hosted Webinar Spotlights Harvard’s Multi-Regional Clinical Trials Center

The March edition of the CTTI-Hosted Webinar Series featured Rebecca Li, Executive Director of the Multi-Regional Clinical Trials (MRCT) Center. She presented an update on MRCT programmatic activities, which focus on the following areas:

  • To improve the design, conduct, and oversight of multi-regional clinical trials, especially trials sited in or involving the developing world
  • To simplify research through the use of best practices
  • To foster respect for research participants, efficacy, safety and fairness in transnational, trans-cultural human subjects research.

At CTTI, we work with other initiatives to ensure complementary towards improving the clinical trials enterprise. We are pleased to share a recording of this webinar on our website.

Updated AACT Database Now Available on the CTTI Website

In an effort to characterize the U.S. clinical trials enterprise, CTTI’s State of Clinical Trials Project set out to facilitate the analyses of data in ClinicalTrials.gov, a registry of human clinical research studies hosted by the U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH) in collaboration with the FDA. The result of this project was the Aggregate Analysis of ClincalTrials.gov (AACT) Database, a restructured and reformatted relational database developed using publicly available and downloadable data from ClinicalTrials.gov. Since the original AACT was created in 2010, we’ve continued to regularly issue updated versions of the database.

The latest version of the AACT Database is now available on the CTTI website, along with the supporting documents. This dataset reflects data downloaded from ClinicalTrials.gov in March 2014. To assist users with interpretation of the data, a high level dictionary and a points to consider document are also located on the CTTI website. Previous versions of AACT are available as well.

CTTI-Hosted Webinar Spotlights Harvard’s Multi-Regional Clinical Trials Center

The March edition of the CTTI-Hosted Webinar Series featured Rebecca Li, Executive Director of the Multi-Regional Clinical Trials (MRCT) Center. She presented an update on MRCT programmatic activities, which focus on the following areas:

  • To improve the design, conduct, and oversight of multi-regional clinical trials, especially trials sited in or involving the developing world
  • To simplify research through the use of best practices
  • To foster respect for research participants, efficacy, safety and fairness in transnational, trans-cultural human subjects research.

At CTTI, we work with other initiatives to ensure complementary towards improving the clinical trials enterprise. We are pleased to share a recording of this webinar on our website.

 

CTTI Welcomes New Members ACI Clinical and Greenleaf Health

CTTI would like to welcome our two newest members, ACI Clinical and Greenleaf Health.

ACI Clinical specializes in managing and facilitating Endpoint Adjudication Committees and Data Monitoring Committees to enhance trial integrity and prepare data. Jonathan Seltzer will be representing ACI Clinical on CTTI’s Steering Committee. Greenleaf Health focuses on strategic regulatory consultation within the healthcare sector and will be represented by Rachel Sherman.

At CTTI, we pursue innovation through collaboration. By engaging all stakeholders in the clinical trial enterprise as equal partners, we analyze existing research impediments and recommend consensus-driven, actionable solutions that will lead to a more sustainable and effective clinical trial system. We look forward to the perspectives that ACI Clinical and Greenleaf Health promise to bring to CTTI’s collaborative environment.

New Publication Addresses Rising Antibiotic Resistance and Clinical Trial Design

On June 23, 2014, an article titled Hierarchical nested trial design (HNTD) for demonstrating treatment efficacy of new antibacterial drugs in patient populations with emerging bacterial resistance was published online in Statistics in Medicine. This article describes a novel clinical trial model to determine efficacy of antibacterial drugs in trial populations with emerging antibiotic-resistant bacterial infections.

Authors Mohammad Hugue and colleagues cite the CTTI-hosted Statistical Issues Think Tank where they and other experts were able to exchange ideas that in part lead to the development of the model.

For more information on this meeting, including the list of attendees, agenda, presentations, and background summary, CLICK HERE.

Consortium Approaches at the 2014 BIO International Convention

This week, the 2014 BIO International Convention will be held in San Diego, California. On Thursday, June 26, CTTI’s Director of Stakeholder Engagement Bray Patrick-Lake will be speaking in a breakout session, titled A Consortium Approach to Enhancing Productivity in Clinical Trials, along with Steve Cummings of UCSF, Dalvir Gill of TransCelerate Biopharma, John Orloff of Merck Serono, and moderator Gergory Keenan of AstraZeneca and MedIummune.

This panel will explore work being done with the pharmaceutical industry to speed up and improve the end-to-end clinical trials process and emerging issues where a consortium approach can help the pharmaceutical industry be more productive. (myBio.com)

If you are planning to attend the 2014 BIO International Convention, we look forward to seeing you at this session.

Date: Thursday June 26, 2014

Time: 1:00 PM – 2:00 PM PST

Location: Room 31A

Session ID: 2436

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CTTI’s #DIA2014 Posters Available Online

On June 15-19, the DIA hosted their 50th Annual Meeting (also known as #DIA2014) in San Diego, CA. Several CTTI members and staff attended the conference, and were involved with panels, workshops and poster presentations. We are now pleased to share the posters from this event on our website:

  1. A Collaboration to Facilitate the Development of Antibacterial Agents for Unmet Need: Streamlining Clinical Trial Protocols
    Abstract Summary: This collaboration includes the participation of a multi-disciplinary working group led by CTTI. Several meetings and workshops were held to gain a wider understanding of issues, several solutions using a Quality by Design approach were proposed.
    Presenter: Gary Noel, MD, Senior Director for Janssen Research and Development
  2. Good Clinical Practice (GCP) Training: Identifying Key Elements and Strategies for Increasing Training Efficiency
    Abstract Summary: CTTI convened a multidisciplinary working group involving partners from academia, industry, and government to develop recommendations for streamlining current GCP training efforts.
    Presenter: Jonathan Seltzer, MD, MA, MBA, FACC, President and CEO for Applied Clinical Intelligence, LLC

We would like to thank our colleagues in attendance at #DIA2014 who contributed to this successful conference, and we look forward to seeing you at #DIA2015.

Invent the Future with CTTI at DIA 2014 50th Annual Meeting

On June 15-19, the DIA is hosting their 50th Annual Meeting in San Diego, CA. The tagline for this year’s event, Celebrate the Past – Invent the Future, resonates closely with one of CTTI’s own strategic approaches: helping to shape the clinical trials enterprise of the future.

During this week of forward-thinking discussions, we look forward to connecting with many of you. Several CTTI representatives will be presenting, and CTTI will also host a pre-conference tutorial. Specifically, we look forward to sharing our work on quality by design, patient recruitment, antibacterial drug development, and good clinical practice. Below is a schedule of opportunities to hear more about these topics at the conference.

Sunday June 15, 2014

9:00 AM – 5:00 PM – Quality by Design, from Theory to Practice

  • Event Information: Pre-Conference Tutorial TUT44 (*Advanced Registration Required)
  • Presenters: Ann Meeker-O’Connell, Jean Mulinde, John Alexander
Tuesday June 17, 2014

7:15 AM – 4:00 PM – A Collaboration to Facilitate the Development of Antibacterial Agents for Unmet Need: Streamlining Clinical Trial Protocols

  • Event Information: Poster – W30 located in the Sails Pavilion
  • Presenter: Charles Knirsch

8:00 AM – 9:30 AM – Updated Strategies for Effective Recruitment of Patients in Clinical Trials

  • Event Information: Panelist Session #201 located in Room 1B
  • Presenters: Elizabeth Mahon (Chairperson); Margo Michaels, Jonca Bull (Panelists)

1:30 PM – 3:00 PM – Collaborating to Streamline Drug Development: Case Studies of What Works (and What Doesn’t)

  • Event Information: Panelist Session #259 located in Room 2
  • Presenters: Douglas Peddicord (Chairperson); Dalvir Gill, Christine Pierre, Pamela Tenaerts, Ann Meeker-O’Connell (Panelists)
Wednesday June 18, 2014

7:15 AM – 4:00 PM – Good Clinical Practice (GCP) Training: Identifying Key Elements and Strategies for Increasing Training Efficiency

  • Event Information: Poster – T03 located in the Sails Pavilion
  • Presenter: Jonathan Seltzer

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