Recording Now Available: CTTI Unveils New Tool for Embedding Clinical Trials into Clinical Practice

A recording of CTTI’s Feb. 29 webinar unveiling a new tool that aids in assessing the feasibility of embedding clinical trial elements into clinical practice is now available. 

The one-hour webinar included a welcome from CTTI Director of Projects Sara Calvert; a project overview from CTTI Senior Project Manager Lindsay Kehoe; a panel discussion focused on stakeholder perspectives related to the practical use of the tool; and a request for input on how to optimize the tool’s use.  

Embedding elements of clinical trials, such as patient identification, informed consent, and data acquisition, into routine care reduces duplication of trial and care activities and promotes the development of a learning health care system. This can naturally lead to better decision-making,  treatment options, and outcomes for patients.  

This tool is a part of CTTI’s Embedding Trials in Clinical Practice work, which aims to enable health care settings to participate in embedded trials and assists sponsors with their design and conduct.  

View the slide deck to learn more. 

CTTI to Launch New Embedding Trials Feasibility Assessment Tool

CTTI will host a free public webinar on Thursday, Feb. 29 at 12:00 p.m. EST to unveil a new tool for assessing the feasibility of embedding clinical trial elements into clinical practice.  

The webinar will include a welcome from Sara Calvert; a project overview from Lindsay Kehoe; a panel discussion that will focus on stakeholder perspectives related to the practical use of the tool; and an opportunity for you to help CTTI optimize its use. 

Embedding elements of clinical trials, such as patient identification, informed consent, and
data acquisition, into routine care reduces duplication of trial and care activities and promotes the
development of a learning health care system. This can naturally lead to better decision-making,
treatment options, and outcomes for patients. 

However, integrating interventional clinical trials into clinical practice is complex, and operational direction is needed. Supporting recently released recommendations, CTTI created a new tool that aims to aid sponsors involved in early planning and design of a clinical trial by providing insight into site readiness and feasibility of integrating trials into clinical practice. 

Register for the free 60-minute webinar. 

CTTI Holds Meeting to Discuss Strategies for Advancing the Use and Acceptance of Disease Progression Modeling (DPM) in Clinical Trial Design & Decision Making

The Clinical Trials Transformation Initiative (CTTI) held a multi-stakeholder expert meeting on March 6 to discuss strategies for advancing the use and acceptance of disease progression modeling (DPM) in clinical trial design and decision making. Meeting attendees discussed DPM and its current applications; explored opportunities, barriers, and best practices for advancing the use of DPM in clinical trial decision making; and proposed relevant metrics for monitoring and evaluating the recognition, value, and consistent use of DPM. CTTI will be using the ideas generated during this meeting and collecting case examples of DPM application in order to identify and catalog examples of how DPM can provide value for clinical trials – with the ultimate goal of developing and disseminating recommendations that address DPM best practices. 

The maturity and potential impact of model-informed drug development (MIDD) is recognized, but knowledge sharing and clear regulatory expectations are needed to realize its widespread use. FDA’s paired meeting program and the Fit-for-Purpose initiative are examples of programs that foster engagement and transparent communication but additional communication and pre-competitive collaboration is needed between the modeling industry, regulatory agencies, and the clinical community to advance consistent application of MIDD. 

During the meeting, attributes that allow for a successful application of DPM in a given context were discussed, leveraging the results from the CTTI DPM project team scoping review and expert panel presentations.  

  • Meeting attendees also discussed essential next steps for advancing the recognition,
    value, and use of DPM approaches, including the need to:
    ► Establish best practices and provide illustrative case examples.
    ► Develop a common language for disease progression modeling.
    ► Highlight the value and impact of DPM for a variety of stakeholders.
    ► Facilitate communication across stakeholders.
    ► Create metrics to monitor the changes in DPM acceptance and use within organizations and across the clinical trials enterprise (CTE). 

Overall, meeting attendees highlighted that the benefit of CTE-wide adoption of DPM would be faster, higher-quality drug development programs, and more diverse clinical trials. 

Recording Now Available: CTTI Webinar Unveiling New Recommendations on Embedding Clinical Trials into Clinical Practice

A recording of CTTI’s December 15 webinar unveiling the new recommendations on embedding clinical trials into clinical practice is now available. 

The one-hour webinar includes a welcome from Sally Okun, CTTI Executive Director; a keynote
presentation from Robert M. Califf, U.S. Food & Drug Administration; a project overview from Matthew Roe, AstraZeneca; and a panel discussion moderated by Lindsay Kehoe, CTTI Senior Project Manager. The panel discussion, which focused on stakeholder perspectives related to the
integration of the new recommendations, included: Sam Bozzette, National Institutes of Health;
Lara Jehi, Cleveland Clinic; Holly Robertson, Medidata; and Alandra Weaver, Crohn’s & Colitis
Foundation. 

The goal of creating these recommendations for embedding elements of clinical trials into care is to reduce trial inefficiencies and enable faster, more representative, evidence generation that improves patient care. The recommendations were developed for trials of drugs, devices, and biologics in close collaboration with stakeholders across the clinical trials enterprise. The first phase involved gathering input through qualitative, in-depth interviews with designers and implementers of interventional clinical trials that are embedded into clinical practice. The recommendations were drafted and refined with input from a multi-stakeholder project team and through Expert Meetings. 

View the slide deck to read more. 

CTTI Unveils New Recommendations for Embedding Clinical Trials into Clinical Practice

 

 

CTTI today released new recommendations for embedding clinical trials into clinical practice. The goal is to have care inform research and research inform care, which will enable higher quality, more efficient, and more representative evidence for care. When clinical trials have elements embedded into health care delivery, the trials are more accessible to patients, can be conducted in close alignment with clinical workflows, and may use existing infrastructure and data sources for research. This is in contrast to the status quo where research data is collected separately from a clinical care setting, and may therefore produce results that do not reflect the real-world performance of medical products in the populations that will use them.

“We hope that by creating these recommendations for embedding elements of clinical trials into clinical practice, we can reduce trial inefficiencies and enable faster, more representative, evidence generation that improves patient care,” said Lindsay Kehoe, CTTI Senior Project Manager. “Higher quality, safer, more efficient care benefits everyone.”

The case for embedding elements of clinical trials into clinical practice is clear: we have inadequate evidence for care, lack of representativeness of most Americans and health care settings, and an underperforming emergency response mechanism for national health crises. By facilitating the integration of randomized, interventional trial elements into clinical care, we may create efficiencies that help provide much needed evidence faster. Elements that can be embedded include eligibility and patient identification, informed consent, randomization, intervention, trial data acquisition, and evidence integration.

The recommendations were developed for trials of drugs, devices, and biologics in close collaboration with stakeholders across the clinical trials enterprise. The first phase involved gathering input through qualitative, in-depth interviews with designers and implementers of interventional clinical trials that are embedded into clinical practice. The recommendations were drafted and refined with input from a multi-stakeholder project team and through Expert Meetings.

More information on the Trials in Clinical Practice project can be found on CTTI’s website.

CTTI to Launch New Recommendations for Embedding Clinical Trials into Clinical Practice

CTTI will host a free public webinar on Thurs., Dec. 15 to unveil new recommendations for embedding clinical trials into clinical practice.  

The webinar will include a welcome from Sally Okun, CTTI Executive Director; a keynote
presentation from a special guest with the FDA; a project overview from Matthew Roe,
AstraZeneca; and a panel discussion moderated by Lindsay Kehoe, CTTI Senior Project
Manager. The panel discussion, which will focus on stakeholder perspectives related to the
integration of the new recommendations, includes: Sam Bozzette, National Institutes of Health;
Lara Jehi, Cleveland Clinic; Holly Robertson, Medidata; and Alandra Weaver, Crohn’s & Colitis
Foundation. 

Embedding elements of clinical trials, such as randomization, administration of study drug, and
data acquisition, into routine care reduces duplication of trial and care activities and promotes the
development of a learning health care system. This will naturally lead to better decision-making,
treatment options, and outcomes for patients. 

However, integrating interventional clinical trials into health care settings is challenging and
complex, and operational direction is needed. As part of the Trials in Clinical Practice project,
CTTI has conducted in-depth interviews with study designers and implementers, gathered case
examples, and is now ready to share the recommendations it’s created to facilitate the integration
of randomized, interventional trial elements into clinical care; including, but not limited to, trials of
drugs, devices, and biologics intended for regulatory review. 

The free 60-minute webinar will begin at 12:00pm EST and registration is not required. 

CTTI Holds Meeting to Discuss Conducting Trials as Part of Clinical Practice

The Clinical Trials Transformation Initiative (CTTI) held a multi-stakeholder Expert Meeting on September 21 to discuss embedding aspects or elements of trials into clinical practice. The goal is to have care inform research and research inform care, therefore, CTTI created a set of recommendations to facilitate the integration of randomized, interventional trial elements into clinical care. Although trials and key initiatives are already paving the way, including the ACTIV-6 Study, the RECOVERY Trial, the Coalition for Advancing Clinical Trials at the Point of Care (ACT@POC), and the National Patient-centered Outcomes Research Network (PCORnet), challenges remain in driving change and measuring the impact of this change. At the Trials in Clinical Practice Expert Meeting, held in Washington, D.C., participants identified pain points of embedding trial elements, shared how CTTI recommendations can overcome those pain points, and brainstormed ways to measure implementation of the recommendations.  

Dr. Janet Woodcock, Principal Deputy Commissioner of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, reiterated the imperatives for conducting trials as part of clinical practice, indicating that we have inadequate evidence for care, lack of representativeness of most Americans and health care settings, and an underperforming emergency response mechanism for national health crises. 

Meeting attendees identified some important themes: 

  • The ability to embed aspects of a trial (eligibility and patient identification, informed consent, randomization, intervention, trial data acquisition, and evidence integration) will depend on a variety of factors:  
    • Aligning trial design with clinical workflow to minimize provider and patient burden 
    • Ensuring site readiness with appropriately trained staff and technology resources 
    • Defining clear channels of accountability 
    • Raising awareness of the value of research and its subsequent impact on care.  
  • Technology and reusable networks can help overcome some of the barriers, as can changes in culture and policy and good partnerships with patient groups, health system leaders, and IT leaders. 
  • CTTI recommendations provide design and operational clarity to embed trial elements, but their adoption will require engagement with health care providers, technology support, and ways to measure progress. 

Meeting attendees also discussed how to measure whether adoption of CTTI Trials in Clinical Practice recommendations is improving the quality and efficiency of trials.  

Initial themes fell into two camps:  

  1. Measures of progress in clinical trial quality 
  2. Measures of progress towards a learning health care system.

To assess progress of clinical trial quality, measures might include:  

  • improved enrollment/retention rate 
  • whether trials have enrolled reflective and representative populations that align with those being cared for 
  • participant and health care provider satisfaction/experience with research.  

To assess progress at the learning health system level, measures might include: 

  • whether embedded trials are producing impactful, reliable results that are integrated into clinical decision making 
  • the proportion of practices in the health care ecosystem that are involved in research 
  • changes in reimbursement policies 
  • involvement of medical journals that report on elements embedded into care. 

CTTI Holds Meeting to Discuss Embedding Clinical Trials in Health Care Settings

The Clinical Trials Transformation Initiative (CTTI) held a multi-stakeholder Expert Meeting on May 11 to discuss recommendations for embedding elements of clinical trials into routine care. Different elements of clinical trials can be embedded into care, such as randomization, administration of study drug, and data acquisition. While this can promote the development of a learning health care system—where research will inform practice and practice will inform research—achieving this is complicated, and clarity is needed about how to operationalize the integration. Leaders and key stakeholders from across the clinical trials community participated in the meeting to help refine the recommendations and begin to strategize their implementation of them. 

Meeting attendees identified some important themes: 

  • Alignment of research and care is needed. Data collected during routine care should be good enough to support both high quality care and research.  

We would do well to clearly identify the high level of alignment needed for patient care and research.      Researchers need to get less special about themselves. We want to identify consequential decisions, when that decision occurs, why it matters, and when and how will we measure the consequences of that decision. Those three goals are 100% identical between research and care.” – Health Care System Provider

  • We need transparency about roles and responsibilities. Embedding research into care will involve many stakeholders, including investigators, research sponsors, health care providers, regulatory bodies, operational technology providers, clinical research organizations, patient advocacy groups, health system leaders, funders, payers and, of course, patients. 

     “The front-line troops carrying out embedded trials – patients and clinicians – need to see a compelling research question or need that is personally valuable in the context of everything else they are trying to do. Some of that can be done by deep embedding in their environment to understand their needs.” – Funder 

  • There is important work ahead of us. Meeting attendees provided feedback on the set of draft recommendations and suggested new tools to help implement the recommendations such as a decision tree tool to evaluate what trial elements could be embedded, a workflow support tool to clarify the kind of support needed to embed trial elements, and a list of technology examples that have or could enable embedding.  

CTTI is now using these findings—along with other research results and multi-stakeholder discussions—to refine recommendations and develop resources for release in late 2022. The project team will host another expert meeting on this topic in September. 

Recent CTTI Publication Explores Educational Strategies for Increasing Use of Anticoagulants Among AFib Patients

A new CTTI publication from collaborators including CTTI investigates the impact of educational mailings in increasing the use of oral blood thinners among patients with atrial fibrillation (AFib). For many of these patients, use of blood thinners can reduce their stroke risk by about 70%. Despite current guideline recommendations, only about half of eligible patients with AFib are routinely taking blood thinners, and patient interviews have revealed that patients are undereducated about stroke risk and the potential benefits of preventative blood thinner use. To explore solutions to this educational gap, the IMplementation of a randomized controlled trial to imProve treatment with oral AntiCoagulanTs in patients with Atrial Fibrillation (IMPACT-AFib) identified and sent educational mailings to a subset of eligible patients enrolled in health plans that participate in the FDA’s Sentinel System. The resulting paper, published in JAMA Network Open, found that these mailings were only minimally successful in increasing blood thinner use among AFib patients. These results indicate that more intensive educational interventions may be needed to address this problem. 

This trial was the first ever to leverage the FDA-Catalyst System, which combines data from interactions with patients and/or providers with data from the Sentinel Infrastructure. The collaboration included Aetna, Duke Clinical Research Institute, the Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute’s Department of Population Medicine, Harvard Pilgrim Health Care, HealthCore Anthem, Humana, Optum, and the FDA 

Recording Now Available: CTTI Webinar Introducing New Digital Health Trials Hub

A recording of CTTI’s April 6 public webinar introducing the new Digital Health Trials Hub is now available. The one-hour webinar includes presentations from Megan Doyle, Amgen, and Jörg Goldhahn, ETH Zurich; a stakeholder panel featuring Phil Green, CTTI, Elizabeth Kunkoski, FDA, Jeremy Wyatt, ActiGraph, and Reem Yunis, Medable; and a Q&A session moderated by Lindsay Kehoe, CTTI.

CTTI’s Digital Health Trials Hub features new and enhanced resources to help sponsors, investigators, CROs, and technology providers design and run quality, patient-centered clinical trials. The new Hub resources include significantly updated recommendations, revised reference documents, a Question Bank for Identifying Meaningful Outcome Measures, and a Process Map for the development of digitally derived endpoints. These resources are the culmination of CTTI’s 2021 Digital Health Trials work, which highlighted importance of early stakeholder engagement and flexible, tailored approaches to trial design and conduct.

The materials in the new Hub are broken down into six core areas of Digital Health Trial design and conduct:

  • Developing Novel Endpoints
  • Planning Decentralized Trials
  • Selecting & Testing Digital Health Technology
  • Managing Data
  • Interacting with Regulators
  • Supporting Sites

View the slide deck to read more.