Recent CTTI Publication Reviews Current Applications and Future Opportunities for Disease Progression Modeling

CTTI News | October 17, 2024

Topics Included: Innovative Trials, Regulatory Submissions + Approvals

new CTTI publication, published in Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics, reviews current applications of disease progression modeling (DPM) and opportunities to advance the awareness and value of DPM in clinical trials. Use of modeling and simulation during drug development, otherwise known as model-informed drug development (MIDD), can help researchers make informed decisions when planning and executing clinical trials. DPM is one form of MIDD that integrates multiple types of data from various sources – including translational, clinical trial, and real-world data – to optimize trial design and execution and support regulatory decision-making. The potential of DPM has yet to be fully realized.  

To advance the use of disease progression modeling for decision making in clinical trials and medical product development, CTTI assembled a diverse project team, conducted a scoping literature review to identify current DPM applications, and shared these results at a multi-partner Expert Meeting with representatives from academia, data/tech organizations, government, the medical product industry, patients, and trade/professional organizations. They discussed the value of disease progression modeling and identified key areas that need to be addressed to incorporate DPM approaches more effectively in medical product development and regulatory decision-making. 

The paper presents the scoping review results, opportunities to increase uptake identified at the Expert Meeting, and proposes key questions that medical product developers and regulators may use to inform clinical development strategy and optimize trial design with disease progression models.

New CTTI Recommendations Provide Path for More Efficient Clinical Trials Using Clinical Registries

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CTTI Project: Registry Trials

Newly released recommendations from the Clinical Trials Transformation Initiative (CTTI) have the potential to streamline clinical trials by using registry information. Registries are data collection tools typically used to better understand long-term trends in a specific population, such as patients with a particular disease or patients exposed to a certain treatment.

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CTTI Releases Recommendations for Engaging Patients and Sites in Mobile Clinical Trials

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CTTI Project: Preparing a Site

During a public webinar today, the Clinical Trials Transformation Initiative (CTTI) will release new recommendations and resources for engaging patients and research sites when planning and conducting mobile clinical trials. By doing so, sponsors, contract research organizations, and other stakeholders can maximize the opportunities of mobile technologies to advance the development of new medical products.

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CTTI Seeks to Speed Use of Mobile Technology in Clinical Trials through Novel Endpoint Recommendations

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CTTI Project: Developing Novel Endpoints

Mobile technologies hold enormous promise for clinical research, but uncertainty about how to use the data captured by these devices has slowed progress. CTTI's newly released recommendations and tools aim to change this by providing a pathway for using information gathered from mobile technologies to accelerate the development and evaluation of urgently needed therapies.

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Obtaining Novel Endpoint Reliability and Acceptance Expert Meeting

The views and opinions expressed in these presentations are those of the individual presenter and should not be attributed to the Clinical Trials Transformation Initiative, or any organization with which the presenter is employed or affiliated.