Advancing Clinical Trials in the Age of the COVID-19 Pandemic

The COVID-19 pandemic has turned our world upside down. Every aspect of our ways of life are experiencing unprecedented disruptions.

For the clinical trials community, we are seeing steep declines in patient enrollment and, in some cases, complete pauses of trials. A report from Medidata showed an 83 percent decrease in new patients entering trials in China in February 2020 compared to February 2019 and similar trends have been seen in other countries. In the first half of March this year, the U.S. has had a 62 percent decrease in new patients entering trials.

This pandemic has thrust clinical research into the limelight like never before and – while daunting and challenging – the scientific community is answering its collective call-to-duty with impressive vigor and determination. COVID-19 is literally changing the way the world does science.

Researchers and scientists are saying, according to the New York Times, “Never before have so many experts in so many countries focused simultaneously on a single scientific quest with so much urgency – exchanging information as it becomes available and launching clinical trials that rely on laboratories and hospitals from around the world.”

Developing a vaccine against COVID-19 and new treatments for those infected with the novel coronavirus is of paramount importance and we applaud those efforts. We must also do what we can to advance new and ongoing clinical trials for all medical products across all diseases and therapies in the age of the coronavirus pandemic. For some patients, participation in a clinical trial may be their last chance at extending or even saving their life. We owe them that chance.

On March 18, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) released guidance “to provide general considerations to assist sponsors in assuring the safety of trial participants, maintaining compliance with good clinical practice (GCP), and minimizing risks to trial integrity during the COVID-19 pandemic.” The European Medicines Agency (EMA) and Medicines & Healthcare products Regulatory Agency have also released similar guidance documents.

In response to the FDA’s new guidelines, the Clinical Trials Transformation Initiative, a leader in driving change across the clinical trials ecosystem, surveyed the research community about experiences and best practices on the conduct of clinical trials of medical products during the current COVID-19 crisis. The survey’s findings were presented along with shared experiences from a patient representative, academic medical center and independent IRB on a CTTI-hosted webinar on Mar. 31.

The survey’s findings, along with additional learnings from the webinar, identified the following best practices for conducting clinical trials during this pandemic:

  1. Keep Participants Informed
  2. Perform Ongoing Risk-benefit Assessment
  3. Communicate with IRB/IEC and Regulatory Authorities
  4. Pause (Most) New Study Starts & Enrollment
  5. Pivot to Remote Study Visits
  6. Switch to Remote Monitoring
  7. Document all changes with COVID-19 Tag

These best practices were released by CTTI this week as a free online resource.

During this pandemic, the clinical trials community is rising to meet the challenge upon us. Most immediately, we must respond to the urgent public health need to prevent, diagnose and treat COVID-19 and we must seize the unprecedented opportunity to collaborate and conduct clinical trials for a vaccine against this disease in the most efficient way possible. The clinical trials enterprise can also use this experience to adopt these more collaborative and innovative approaches as routine on a wider scale moving forward. Our ultimate goal is that we will drive for change that leads to further development of medical products currently under investigation and, as a result, saves lives.

This article was originally published by CTTI Executive Director Pamela Tenaerts on LinkedIn on 4/20/20.

CTTI to Host Webinar on Designing High-Quality COVID-19 Treatment Trials

As the research community races to identify safe and effective COVID-19 therapies, researchers are in need of accelerating trial design without sacrificing quality. The Clinical Trials Transformation Initiative (CTTI) will discuss designing high-quality COVID-19 treatment trials via a webinar Thursday, April 23 at 9:30 ET.

Speakers will include:

  • Janet Woodcock, FDA, CDER
  • Ed Cox, Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
  • Martin Landray, University of Oxford
  • John Marshall, WHO Clinical Characterization and Management Working Group, Unity Health CA
  • Karlin Schroeder, Parkinson’s Foundation
  • Fergus Sweeney, European Medicines Agency
  • Ann Meeker O’Connell, Vertex Pharmaceuticals

During the webinar, COVID-19 researchers will glean best practices for designing trials that are streamlined, high-quality, and minimize burdens on front-line hospital staff and study participants.

Webinar Recording Available: Listen to Best Practices on Conducting Clinical Trials during COVID-19

During March 23-27, CTTI collected experiences from stakeholders across the clinical trials ecosystem – including insights on safety considerations, remote study visits, remote consent, consulting with IRBs, and more – related to the FDA’s new guidance on the conduct of clinical trials of medical products during the current COVID-19 pandemic. A recording of the March 31 webinar discussing those findings and best practices is now available.

Pam Tenaerts, CTTI, and M. Khair ElZarrad, FDA, CDER, opened the webinar by welcoming attendees and recognizing the importance of multi-stakeholder input and collaboration to move us forward during this crisis.

Sara Calvert, CTTI, then gave an overview on findings from CTTI’s recent effort to collect experiences and insights from across the clinical trials ecosystem, including best practices gleaned from participants around:

  • Keeping participants informed
  • Performing ongoing risk assessment
  • Pausing (most) new study starts and enrollment
  • Pivoting to remote study visits
  • Switching to remote monitoring
  • Documenting with COVID-19 tag
  • Communicating with IRBs

Colleen Rouse, Cleveland Clinic; David Borasky, WCG; and Cindy Geoghegan, individual patient representative/caregiver; provided unique perspectives and concrete examples related to these best practices. Among the many insights, the presenters unanimously underscored that “ensuring the safety of trial participants is paramount” and communicating with patients is critical.

View a full slide deck from the webinar to read more from each presenter.

To stay up to date on all of CTTI’s work around COVID-19, including this effort and future ones, please sign up to receive our e-newsletter and follow us on LinkedIn and Twitter.

Webinar on Best Practices on Conducting Clinical Trials during COVID-19

This week, stakeholders from across the clinical trials ecosystem submitted experiences and insights related to the FDA’s new guidance on the conduct of clinical trials of medical products during the current COVID-19 pandemic. The Clinical Trials Transformation Initiative (CTTI) collated the feedback – including insights safety considerations, remote study visits, remote consent, consulting with IRBs, and more – and will share the findings and best practices via a webinar on Tuesday, March 31 at 11:15 a.m. ET.

M. Khair ElZarrad, FDA, CDER, will provide opening comments and a  full discussion on the findings, along with detailed examples of best practices, will be presented by:

  • David Borasky, WCG
  • Sara Calvert, CTTI
  • Cindy Geoghegan, Individual Patient Representative/Caregiver
  • Colleen Rouse, Cleveland Clinic
  • Pamela Tenaerts, CTTI

By exchanging best practices and insights, we can continue our important work to develop needed medical products during this situation, and perhaps even glean some opportunities to do clinical trials better, now and in the future.