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.

Meeting on the Long-Term Safety and Efficacy of Extended-Release and Long-Acting Opioid Analgesics for Chronic Pain

AUGUST 12, 2013 TO AUGUST 13, 2013

Meeting Background:

The purpose of this meeting, hosted by CTTI, is to facilitate a broad scientific discussion about optimal ways to generate additional evidence to help inform the safe and effective use of extended-release and long-acting opioid analgesics.

Meeting Objectives:

  • Engage multiple stakeholders in discussions around approaches to develop more evidence on the long-term safety and efficacy of extended-release and long-acting opioid analgesics for the treatment of chronic non-cancer pain
  • Review and discuss a proposed study to evaluate the long-term efficacy of opioids for the treatment of chronic non-cancer pain
  • Discuss strategies to assess the long-term safety of extended-release and long-acting opioid analgesics for the treatment of chronic non-cancer pain

Meeting Location:

Sheraton Silver Spring Hotel, Silver Spring, MD

Meeting Presentations:

Session 1: Evidence for the Efficacy of Opioid Analgesics for Chronic Pain

Session 2: Review of Proposed Efficacy Study

Session 3: Continued Discussion of Efficacy Study

Session 4: Existing Data Sources to Evaluate Opioid Analgesic Safety

Session 5: Gathering Additional Evidence on Opioid Analgesic Safety

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.

Pregnancy Testing in Clinical Trials Expert Meeting

JULY 15, 2013 TO JULY 16, 2013

CTTI Project: Pregnancy Testing

Meeting Background:

Designing a pregnancy testing protocol for a clinical trial requires balancing the performance characteristics of a given test, the baseline risk of pregnancy in a given subject population, the potential risks to the fetus from study interventions, and the effect of the testing protocol on overall study implementation in terms of burden to subjects, burden on staff, and direct costs. There are no published data on the consistency of sponsors, investigators, or institutional review boards (IRBs) in applying these criteria to designing and evaluating pregnancy testing protocols. However, anecdotal reports indicate that there is widespread variability.

Development of evidence-based guidance that explicitly considers the level of acceptable risk to suggest appropriate pregnancy testing protocols will ultimately improve protection of research subjects, reduce the risk of unintended fetal exposure, and reduce the workload of sponsors, investigators, IRBs, and other stakeholders in the clinical trial enterprise.

Meeting Objectives:

  • Present survey findings and computer simulation model results from the CTTI project entitled, Developing Rational Guidance for Pregnancy Testing in Clinical Trials
  • Discuss practices and challenges in assessing the acceptable risk of pregnancy and implementing a pregnancy testing protocol for a clinical trial
  • Solicit additional feedback and develop consensus on factors to consider when assessing acceptable risk of pregnancy in clinical trials

Meeting Location:

DoubleTree by Hilton Hotel, Bethesda, MD

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.

Expert Meeting on Large Simple Trials (LSTs)

MAY 13, 2013 TO MAY 14, 2013

CTTI Project: Large Simple Trials

Meeting Background:

The purpose of this meeting is to develop recommendations to facilitate and promote the adoption of LST designs for regulatory submissions or other purposes.

Meeting Objectives:

  • Discuss findings from a survey of practices
  • Discuss strategies that companies are using to implement LSTs
  • Discuss the challenges to LSTs

Meeting Location:

Hilton Washington DC/Rockville Hotel and Executive Center, Rockville, MD

Meeting Presentations:

Day 1 - Session 1: Landscape of LSTs

Day 1 - Session 2: Models of Approaches to LSTs 

Day 2

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.

Increasing Diversity in Clinical Trials Expert Meeting

OCTOBER 12 & 21, 2021

CTTI Project: Diversity

Meeting Objectives:

  • Present findings from project evidence generation: in-depth interviews with key decision-makers.
  • Refine a maturity model for organizational-level strategies to increase diversity in clinical trials.
  • Identify specific multi-stakeholder, portfolio-level strategies to increase the participation of underrepresented racial and ethnic minorities and women in clinical trials.

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.

ICH E6 Guideline for Good Clinical Practice – Update on Progress

MAY 18, 2021 TO MAY 19, 2021

CTTI Project: Informing the Update of ICH E6

On behalf of the International Council for Harmonisation (ICH), the ICH E6 Good Clinical Practice (GCP) Expert Working Group (EWG) held a free public web conference to provide an update on the progress to revise this important and impactful guideline. This web conference was convened by the Clinical Trials Transformation Initiative (CTTI).

The EWG held two similar meetings on Tuesday, May 18, 2021 (8-11 a.m. EDT) and Wednesday, May 19, 2021 (6-9 pm JST) to reach a broad global audience across time zones. As you will note on the agenda, the same topics were presented each day with speakers from different regions to represent the global effort. All information and presentations was provided in English.

Recorded presentations of the public web conferences are available above.

Meeting Materials:

Video: ICH Guideline Development Process

Watch May 18 Web Conference

Watch May 19 Web Conference

 

Presentations:

Session 1 – General Introduction

Session 2 – E6(R3) GCP Expert Working Group (EWG) Vision & Engagement

Session 3 – Principles & Stakeholder Reflections

Full Web Conference Slide Deck

 

Additional Meeting Details:

ICH E6 GCP is the international ethical, scientific, and quality standard for the conduct of clinical trials for the development of new drugs and biologics involving human participants that are intended to support regulatory applications. Due to the wide impact of this important guideline, the ICH Management Committee is taking this unique step to provide a status update on the revisions to the guideline.

In this web conference, members of the ICH E6 EWG discussed the work-in-progress to develop principles and annexes for ICH E6 GCP (third version or E6(R3)) that are intended to be responsive across clinical trial types and settings and to remain relevant as technology and methodologies advance. The draft, work-in-progress principles that were made public by the ICH on April 19, 2021, are designed to be flexible and applicable to a broad range of clinical trials. View the principles on the ICH website. The EWG is not taking public comments on the principles at this stage. However, once the ICH E6 guideline achieves step 3 of the ICH guideline development process, the EWG will invite and consider public input.

The EWG also discussed its plans and approaches to update the guideline in general and its engagement efforts with a variety of stakeholders that greatly enriched the discussions of the EWG. As part of these continued efforts to engage with stakeholders, the web conference included presentations from stakeholders on their vision and aspiration for clinical trial design and conduct that are responsive to the needs of the community.

View the full conference agenda here. For additional information on the ICH E6 revision efforts, please see the Reflection Paper on Renovation of Good Clinical Practice and the Concept Paper. For further information on the engagement approach, please see the published outline of the ICH E6 engagement proposal. Other materials, including the current guideline, "ICH E6(R2): Guideline for Good Clinical Practice," the business plan, work plan, an expert list, and reports of prior public engagements are available on the ICH website: https://www.ich.org/page/efficacy-guidelines.

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.

Master Protocol 2019 Expert Meeting

OCTOBER 22, 2019 TO OCTOBER 23, 2019

CTTI Project: Master Protocol Studies

Meeting Overview:
The purpose of the meeting was to explore and develop strategies to address common challenges related to the design and implementation of master protocols, including:

  • Mapping the pre-planning, planning, and execution processes of a master protocol trial.
  • Strategizing solutions to common roadblocks related to the pre-planning, planning, and execution of a master protocol study.
  • Identifying and prioritizing the creation of tools to support the adoption of emerging best practices outlined by CTTI’s roadmap.

Meeting Materials:

Meeting Agenda

Meeting Summary

Roadmap

Participant List

Full Presentation Set - Day 1

Full Presentation Set - Day 2

Welcoming Remarks & Meeting Overview

Session I: Landscape Review

Session II: Building Capacity for Innovation

Session III: Small Group Breakout Sessions

Session IV: Tool Identification

Session V: Next Steps & Closing Comments

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.

Expert Meeting: CTTI IND Safety Advancement Project

JULY 21, 2015 TO JULY 22, 2015

CTTI Project: Safety Reporting

Meeting Objectives

  • Present findings and conclusions from the project evidence gathering activities
  • Discuss opportunities for improving the efficiency and value of the expedited IND safety reporting process
  • Understand opportunities for educating stakeholders on expedited IND safety reporting best practices

Meeting Location:

DoubleTree by Hilton Hotel Washington, D.C., Silver Spring, MD

Meeting Presentations:

Click here to view the presentation slides from this meeting.

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.

Enhancing the Incorporation of Patient Perspectives in Clinical Trials

MARCH 18, 2019

CTTI Project: Patient Engagement

Meeting Overview:
CTTI and the FDA held this workshop in order to:

  • Seek ideas for best practices and key considerations for enhancing the incorporation of patient perspectives on clinical trial access, design, conduct, and post-trial follow-up
  • Gather input from patients, caregivers, industry, academic researchers, and expert practitioners on the challenges and barriers to patient participation in clinical trials

You can watch the event, session by session:

Meeting Location:

Tommy Douglas Conference Center 10000 New Hampshire Ave., Silver Spring, Md.

Meeting Materials:

Meeting Agenda

Meeting Summary

Full Presentation Set

Session I: Enhancing Awareness and Access

Session II: Design & Conduct of Patient-Centric Trials

Session III: Post-Trial Communication & Engagement

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.

Expert Meeting: IND Safety Assessment and Communication

FEBRUARY 28, 2012 TO FEBRUARY 29, 2012

CTTI Project: Safety Reporting

Meeting Background:

Since its inception, the Clinical Trials Transformation Initiative (CTTI) has had an interest in improving the quality and efficiency of safety reporting for serious adverse events (SAE) in studies performed under investigational new drug applications (INDs). CTTI’s first project on this topic focused on expedited safety reporting of serious, unexpected and possibly related SAEs to site investigators in multi-center trials. At the project’s conclusion, CTTI recommended that sponsors decrease the volume of uninterpretable and irrelevant safety reports to investigators, and instead supply investigators with meaningful reports that would improve investigators’ understanding of a drug’s benefit-risk profile. These recommendations were developed immediately prior to the FDA issuing a new final rule on safety reporting for drugs being studied under INDs.

FDA’s new IND safety reporting rule, published in the Federal Register on September 29, 2010, became effective on March 28, 2011. The intent of the new rule is to improve the quality of safety reports by minimizing the number of uninterpretable reports that sponsors submit to FDA and investigators. This is consistent with CTTI’s recommendations described above. However, CTTI members have expressed concern that there may be some uncertainty about the best methods to implement the new rule. For this reason, CTTI formed a new project entitled “IND Safety Assessment and Communication,” with the goal of promoting responsible oversight of safety for pre-market drug products consistent with the intent of the FDA’s new IND safety rule. The project objectives are as follows:

  • To obtain a deeper understanding of sponsors’ current practices for assessing safety of a pre-market drug product across all trials and sources of safety information and for communicating potential safety signals
  • To facilitate an informed discussion of practices and challenges in assessing and communicating IND safety information
  • To issue recommendations for future approaches that will support the intent of the IND safety reporting rule effective March 2011

The project team first surveyed industry sponsors to obtain a deeper understanding of their current practices. CTTI then distributed anonymized survey results to a group of experts that included representatives from each sponsor organization that completed the survey, government (NIH, Department of Veterans’ Affairs, and FDA), academia, and patient advocacy. These experts participated in a meeting convened on February 28-29, 2012 in Bethesda, MD. A subgroup of attendees at this meeting were members of a biostatistics workgroup that the CTTI project team formed to advise on the methodological dilemmas related to implementing the new IND Safety Reporting rule.

Meeting Objectives:

  • Findings from the survey of sponsor practices
  • Companies’ strategies for implementing the new IND safety reporting rule
  • Challenges in implementing the new rule

Meeting Location:

Bethesda, Maryland