CTTI Project: Developing Novel Endpoints, Planning Decentralized Trials
Today the Clinical Trials Transformation Initiative (CTTI) announced a new online Digital Health Trials Hub featuring enhanced recommendations and additional resources.
CTTI Project: Developing Novel Endpoints, Planning Decentralized Trials
Today the Clinical Trials Transformation Initiative (CTTI) announced a new online Digital Health Trials Hub featuring enhanced recommendations and additional resources.
JULY 27, 2021 TO JULY 28, 2021
CTTI Project: Developing Novel Endpoints
Virtual Meeting
Day 1
Day 2
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.
SEPTEMBER 29, 2016 TO SEPTEMBER 30, 2016
CTTI Project: Developing Novel Endpoints
Meeting Objectives
Identify how to develop novel endpoints for use in clinical trials by writing the following use cases:
DoubleTree Silver Spring Hotel by Hilton, 8727 Colesville Rd, Silver Spring, Maryland
The views and opinions expressed in this presentation 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.
CTTI Project: Developing Novel Endpoints
CTTI Project: Developing Novel Endpoints and Planning Decentralized Trials
A new CTTI publication, published in Digital Biomarkers, investigates the challenges sponsors encounter when using digitally derived endpoints and offers potential solutions. Digital health technologies – including mobile apps, smart devices, sensors, and wearables – can capture robust data from participants’ daily lives. These digital tools allow researchers to collect data for novel endpoints that can provide a broader view of health and treatment effects using measures that matter to patients. Despite these benefits to clinical trial quality and efficiency, digitally derived endpoints are still underutilized as primary evidence in regulatory submissions.
To evaluate the barriers and challenges associated with digitally derived endpoints to support labeling claims, CTTI interviewed 20 sponsor representatives from 10 different organizations representing 11 individual clinical trials. During these interviews, conducted between November 2020 and March 2021, sponsor representatives were asked about their experiences related to digitally derived endpoints, their interactions with regulators, and the challenges they encountered. Based on these interviews, CTTI identified five key challenges to incorporating digitally derived endpoints in clinical trials:
CTTI shared these interview findings with the U.S. Food & Drug Administration (FDA) and the European Medicines Agency (EMA) and during a multi-stakeholder expert meeting. Through these discussions, CTTI drafted and refined a set of recommendations and tools for developing novel digitally derived endpoints as part of the Digital Health Trials Hub. These resources provide a robust toolkit for sponsors, investigators, and operational partners navigating the regulatory landscape around digitally derived endpoints.
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:
View the slide deck to read more.