Best Practices for the Use of DMCs: Join Us for a Webinar Unveiling CTTI’s Latest Recommendations

The Clinical Trials Transformation Initiative (CTTI) invites you to participate in a webinar to learn about its new recommendations on best practices for the use of Data Monitoring Committees (DMCs), intended to enhance the functioning of a DMC, beginning with training of members.  Other issues addressed by CTTI include the role and responsibilities of the DMC, composition of members, development of a charter, and communication with the trial sponsor and others.  CTTI’s recommendations can help to ensure the validity and integrity of a clinical trial when there is a need to periodically review accumulating safety and efficacy data and advise on whether to continue, modify, or terminate a trial based on the benefit-risk assessment.

  • Topic:  DMC Project Recommendations
  • Date:   Thursday, June 16, 2016
  • Time:  12:00 p.m. – 1:00 p.m. EST (New York, GMT-05:00)
  • Presenters:
    • Karim Anton Calis, PharmD, MPH, FASHP, FCCP, Office of Medical Policy, Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, U.S. Food and Drug Administration
    • Jane Perlmutter, PhD, Patient Advocate
    • Dave DeMets, PhD, Professor, Department of Biostatistics and Medical Informatics, University of Wisconsin – Madison

This webinar is open to the public.  We encourage you to share this invitation with others who may be interested in learning more about CTTI’s DMCs Project Recommendations.

To join:

Meeting Link: Join WebEx meeting
Meeting Number:  732 840 380
Meeting Password: DMCctti
After you connect to the website, please follow step-by-step instructions for connecting to the audio.

If you prefer to connect to audio only, you can join by phone at:
1-855-244-8681 Call-in toll-free number (US/Canada)
1-650-479-3207 Call-in toll number (US/Canada)

 

FDA and CTTI to Collaborate on New Patient Engagement Initiative

The FDA and the Clinical Trials Transformation Initiative (CTTI) will be collaborating to establish a new external work group related to patient engagement at the FDA. The FDA has long involved patients and considered patient perspectives in its work. This new initiative is part of the FDA’s continued commitment to fostering greater patient participation and input in regulatory medical product matters. Stakeholders suggested an external work group as a way for FDA to enhance patient engagement (View Report).

The FDA will leverage CTTI’s strengths in multi-stakeholder engagement to coordinate the new work group. CTTI, a public-private partnership, has a strong community of patient advocates and caregivers within its membership. The new work group will create a forum to exchange information, ideas, and experiences on matters of interest to patients and patient advocates related to patient engagement at the FDA. The work group will be similar to the European Medicines Agency’s Patients’ and Consumers’ Working Party, which marks its 10th anniversary in June 2016.

Additional details will be released as the work group develops.

Earlier Strategic Planning Key to Clinical Trial Recruitment, According to New CTTI Recommendations

CTTI has released new recommendations and tools for enhancing the efficiency of clinical trial recruitment. Patient recruitment is a leading challenge in the efficient completion of clinical trials, which can result in wasted resources and delays in bringing new therapies to market. The foundational principle for this new approach is that recruitment planning should be started earlier in the clinical trial development process and continue throughout the implementation.

DOWNLOAD THE RECOMMENDATIONS

“The Recruitment Project recommendations are the result of an in-depth study evaluating why too often clinical trial recruitment efforts fail,” said Jonca Bull, MD, the FDA’s Assistant Commissioner for Minority Health. Bull served as a team lead for the Recruitment Project. “These recommendations have the potential to catalyze greater efficiencies in diverse patient recruitment–women, minorities, and older adults–by focusing on the earliest stages in protocol development.”

The recommendations and tools were developed with input from a diverse team of stakeholders, including clinical researchers, patient advocates, and representatives from academia, industry, and the FDA. “What we found was that, to truly make a difference, we need a comprehensive solution that covers all areas of clinical research, from making sure the study is asking the right questions–questions that matter to patients and providers–to shaping study design and feasibility, to budget and implementation,” said Kelly McKee, a project team member from Eli Lilly and Company. Among the released tools, a new framework outlines considerations for strategic recruitment planning throughout all stages of a clinical trial.

According to the recommendations, recruitment planning should also be more inclusive of all relevant stakeholders. “Too often important feedback from patients, study coordinators, and health care providers is not obtained when their insights can make or break a trial and prevent avoidable amendments,” said Bray Patrick-Lake, Director of Patient Engagement for the Duke Clinical and Translational Science Award. “CTTI’s evidence-based recommendations and toolkits provide practical guidance for successful clinical trial recruitment planning that will help ensure stakeholders are appropriately engaged and the right questions are asked during study design, feasibility, and recruitment planning activities.”

A thoughtful approach to recruitment planning before study activation is expected to alleviate downstream recruitment challenges and ensure trial viability. The work builds on CTTI’s previous advancements in the areas of engaging patient groups in clinical trials and a quality by design approach to improving clinical trials.

New CTTI Publication Promotes Quality by Design Principles to Enhance Clinical Evidence

The growing cost and complexity of clinical trials is threatening the ability to generate new evidence to improve healthcare. CTTI’s latest publication, Enhancing Clinical Evidence by Proactively Building Quality Into Clinical Trials, from the Quality by Design (QbD) Project summarizes recommendations and tools for streamlining clinical. The QbD framework aims to promote critical thinking about trial design and oversight to reduce errors that matter while eliminating non-essential activities. By applying these principles, efforts can be focused on activities that are necessary for the reliability of trial findings and the protection of study participants.

The official QbD recommendations were released in 2015. In the recent publication, the authors describe the process for recommendation development in which stakeholders from across the clinical trial enterprise, including patient advocates, clinical investigators, regulatory reviewers, and trial sponsors, contributed perspectives through workshops and qualitative interviews.

The article was published in the journal Clinical Trials. To read the full publication, click here.

Learn About CTTI at FDA’s Regulatory Education for Industry (REdI) Conference

At the Regulatory Education for Industry (REdI) Conference, regulatory educators from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) provide information to small drug and device manufacturers. On May 18, 2016, Kristen Miller, PharmD of OMP/CDER, will provide an overview of CTTI. CTTI was co-founded as a public-private partnership between Duke University and the FDA and develops projects culminating in recommendations and tools for transformational changes to clinical trials.

The presentation will review why CTTI was created, its mission and vision, CTTI’s array of projects, recommendations and implementation tools available, and how implementing the proposed changes could help to improve the clinical trial enterprise. CTTI was established as a public-private partnership between Duke and FDA and now comprises over 70 member organizations representing all stakeholders from across the clinical trials enterprise.

If you are attending the conference, we invite you to attend the session:

REdI Spring 2016 Conference

Conference Location: Bloomington, Minnesota

Topic: Increasing the Quality and Efficiency of Clinical Trials: The Clinical Transformation Trials Initiative (CTTI)
Date & Time: Wednesday, May 18, 2016, from 1:00-2:00 PM
Speaker: Kristen Miller, FDA/CDER

 

CTTI’s New Recommendations for Data Monitoring Committees

Today, CTTI unveiled new recommendations on best practices for the use of Data Monitoring Committees (DMCs), an important approach to ensure the validity and integrity of a clinical trial when there is a need to periodically review accumulating safety and efficacy data and advise on whether to continue, modify, or terminate a trial based on the benefit-risk assessment.

CTTI recommendations are intended to enhance the functioning of a DMC, beginning with the training of members. Other issues addressed by CTTI include the role and responsibilities of the DMC, composition of members, development of a charter, and communication with the trial sponsor and others. The recommendations were presented during a session at the Society of Clinical Trials (SCT) annual meeting. Dr. David DeMets, a thought leader on DMCs, chaired a session that also included project team members Karim Calis of FDA, Raymond Bain of Merck Research Laboratories, and Annemarie Forrest of CTTI.

As noted by Dr. Calis,
“DMCs play a unique and critical role in trial oversight. The clinical trial enterprise–including investigators, sponsors, trial participants, and other stakeholders–benefits greatly from having strong, independent DMCs that have adequate resources and sufficient flexibility to carry out their important mission.”

The full recommendations are available on the CTTI website and will also be presented in a CTTI-hosted free, public webinar on June 16, 2016 from 12:00 – 1:00 PM EST (New York, GMT-04:00). See below for additional details on this upcoming webinar:

Speakers:

  • Dave DeMets, PhD, Professor and Chair of the Department of Biostatistics and Medical Informatics, University of Wisconsin – Madison
  • Jane Perlmutter, PhD, Patient Advocate
  • Karim Calis, PharmD, MPH, FASHP, FCCP, Office of Medical Policy, Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, U.S. Food and Drug Administration

Meeting Link:  Click here to join WebEx meeting on June 16
Meeting number: 732 840 380
Meeting password: DMCctti

Or join by phone only:
1-855-244-8681 Call-in toll-free number (US/Canada)
1-650-479-3207 Call-in toll number (US/Canada)
Access code: 732 840 380

CTTI Presents at Society for Clinical Trials Annual Meeting

There will be several opportunities to learn how CTTI recommendations can improve quality and efficiency of your clinical trials at the Society for Clinical Trials (SCT) 37th Annual Meeting, taking place May 15-18, 2016. Presentations will include the release of recommendations from the Data Monitoring Committees Project, as well as tips for collaborating with patient groups when designing clinical trials. CTTI will also have two posters for viewing: one on improving the informed consent process and one on how CTTI is improving the quality and efficiency of clinical trials.

If you are attending the conference, we invite you to stop by and learn more:

SCT 37th Annual Meeting

Presentation: Recommendations from the Clinical Trials Transformation Initiative Data Monitoring Committee Project
Date & Time: Monday, May 16, 2016, from 10:45 AM-12:15 PM EST
Speakers: Dave DeMets, Karim Calis, Ray Bain, Annemarie Forrest

Click here to learn more about the DMCs project.

 

Poster: CTTI’s Recommendations for Improving Informed Consent
Date & Time: Monday & Tuesday, May 16 – 17, 2016
Speaker: Annemarie Forrest

Click here to view recommendations and tools from the Informed Consent Project.

 

Poster: The Clinical Trials Transformation Initiative: Improving the Quality and Efficiency of Clinical Trials
Date & Time: Monday & Tuesday, May 16 – 17, 2016
Speakers: Pamela Tenaerts, Martin Landray, Christine Pierre, Ted Lystig, Annemarie Forrest

 

Presentation: Collaborating with Patient Advocacy Groups at the Design Stage of Your Clinical Trial: Why It Is So Important
Date & Time: Tuesday, May 17, 2016
Speaker: Bray Patrick-Lake

Click here to view recommendations and tools from the Patient Groups in Clinical Trials Project.

 

 

CTTI Presents Results of Several Projects at Society for Clinical Trials 36th Annual Meeting

On May 17 – 20, 2015, the Society for Clinical Trials will host its 36th Annual Meeting in Arlington, VA. An international community of professionals from a variety of disciplines will gather for three days of workshops, presentations, and discussions on the design, conduct, and analysis of clinical trials. CTTI will participate in several events throughout this conference and we look forward to discussing a number of practices that will increase the quality and efficiency of clinical trials.

 

Presentation: Making Trials Better: CTTI Recommendations for Developing Protocols and Identifying Safety Signals (Invited Session 8)
Date: May 18, 2015 from 12:45 – 2:15 PM
Presenters: Pamela Tenaerts (CTTI), Martin Landray (Oxford), Nancy Roach (Patient Representative), Janet Wittes (Chair of CTTI Biostatistics Workgroup)

 

Presentation: CTTI Recommendations for Developing Clinical Trials Pregnancy Testing Plans (Topic Contributed Session 3)
Date: May 18, 2015 from 2:45 – 3:45 PM
Presenters: Sara Calvert, Organizer (CTTI), Evan Myers (Duke University), Claire Jurkowski (Bristol Myers Squibb), Melissa Tassinari (FDA/CDER)

 

Presentation: Improving the Clinical Trial Process through Effective Engagement – Perspectives from the NIH, CTTI, PCORI, and Patient Advocacy Foundations (Invited Session 12)
Date: May 18, 2015 from 4:00 – 5:30 PM
Presenters: Megan O’Boyle (Phelan McDermid Syndrome Foundation), Bray Patrick-Lake (CTTI), Jamie Roberts (CTTI), Jaya Bea Smalley (PCORI), Veronica Todaro (Parkinson’s Disease Foundation)

 

Presentation: The Clinical Trials Transformation Initiative Data Monitoring Committee Project: Findings And Next Steps (Invited Session 27)
Date: May 20, 2015 from 9:15 – 10:45 AM
Presenters: Annemarie Forrest, Organizer (CTTI), Patrick Archdeacon (FDA), Ray Bain (Merck), Karim Calis (FDA)

 

Presentation: Trial Forge: A Systematic Approach to Making Trials More Efficient (Session 30)
Date: May 20, 2015 from 11:00 AM – 12:30 PM
Presenters: Peter Bower (University of Manchester), Marion Campbell (University of Aberdeen), Kerry Hood (University of Cardiff), Jamie Roberts (CTTI), Mary Foulkes, Discussant (George Washington University), Shaun Treweek, Organizer (University of Aberdeen)

 

CTTI Presents on Patient & Provider Attitudes on Streamlined Antibacterial Drug Development at ATS 2016

Resistance to available antibiotics is increasing. Despite the critical need for novel antibacterial therapies, their development is lagging. At the 2016 American Thoracic Society (ATS) International Conference, Deborah Collyar, a project team member for CTTI’s Unmet Need in Antibiotic Development Project, will present results from interviews and focus groups on patient and provider attitudes toward using streamlined approaches for antibacterial drug development. These findings will be used to develop recommendations to improve the uptake and appropriate use of antibacterial therapies that are developed through streamlined approaches to address the critical unmet need for novel antibacterial therapies.

View the poster abstract.

If you are attending the conference, please stop by to learn more:

ATS 2016 International Conference Conference
Location: San Francisco, California
Poster: Streamlining Antibacterial Drug Development Programs to Address Unmet Medical Need: Patient and Provider Attitudes on a Modified Benefit-Risk Calculus
Date & Time: Sunday, May 15, 2016, from 9:00 AM-4:15 PM PT
Presenter: Deborah Collyar

 

CTTI Recommendations for Data Monitoring Committees to be Unveiled at the Society for Clinical Trials (SCT) Annual

Data Monitoring Committees (DMCs) play a critical role in clinical trial conduct; however, the definition and role of a DMC are often misunderstood, even among stakeholders in the clinical trial enterprise. CTTI recommends that DMCs should be used when there is a need to periodically review the accumulating unmasked safety and efficacy data by treatment group, and advise the trial sponsor on whether to continue, modify, or terminate a trial based on benefit-risk assessment. Jane Perlmutter, patient advocate and team leader for the DMC Project, elaborates on this central theme of CTTI’s DMC recommendations:

“DMCs are something most clinical trial participants are unaware of. Yet, once a trial is approved by an IRB, DMCs are an important way to ensure that trials are proceeding in an orderly and ethical way and that the accumulating data do not suggest that the trial poses undue harm to patients.”

Given this important role of the DMC, it is imperative that they function optimally. The conduct of the DMC is largely dictated by a charter, which outlines the roles, responsibilities, and operational structure of the DMC, and should be agreed to by the sponsor and the DMC members prior to patient enrollment. Knowledge and experience of DMC members are other critical factors. New members would benefit greatly from apprenticeship or mentoring, as well as provision of case studies that illustrate challenging DMC scenarios.

The above-mentioned insights are just the beginning of a thorough examination on best practices for DMCs. CTTI’s full recommendations will be unveiled at this year’s Society for Clinical Trials (SCT) meeting. Join us for Invited Session 3 on Monday, May 16, where speakers Karim Calis, Raymond Bain, and Annemarie Forrest will reveal our recommendations. Dr. David DeMets, one of the thought leaders within the field of DMCs, will be the chair for this session. Following the unveiling, we hope you share Jane’s sentiments on the impact of our work:

“CTTI’s guidelines will help trial sponsors to follow best practices in regard to DMCs and also spur stakeholders to take measures to engage an adequate supply of diverse DMC members.”