Industry Trends

Loading...

Clinical Research
Off-shoring: A Country Attractiveness Index for Clinical Trials

By Mark P. Mathieu
For many years, pharmaceutical companies have been off-shoring manufacturing operations to lower-cost countries. Healthy margins and strong risk aversion have afforded pharmaceutical companies the luxury of staying close to home, for all but manufacturing activities. As financial pressures increase, pharmaceutical executives are finding that going offshore is not only less risky than it once was, but also too attractive to ignore.  Read More



clinicalRSVP Detects and Stops Attempted Dual Enrollers



Loading...

By Ann Neuer

February 16, 2010 | One of the more intractable problems in clinical research is identifying which subjects are attempting to enroll in more than one study at once or have failed to meet the required waiting period between studies. Independent Data Integrator (IDI), a Florida-based provider of IT solutions, is addressing the longstanding challenge of identifying these so-called dual enrollers head on. With its Clinical Research Subject Verification Program, or clinicalRSVP, a Web-based subject registry, dual enrollers can be easily spotted and stopped from entering a study.

Darran_Boyer
Darran Boyer
ClinicalRSVP uses fingerprint biometric identification technology and a handful of other pieces of identifying information, such as subject’s initials, date of birth, sex, and last four digits of the social security or tax-ID number. The subject is fingerprinted at the time of screening, after which the fingerprint is scanned, a code is generated and then stored in a database along with the other identifiers. Then, the database is searched for the potential subject and his or her most recent dose history.

Darran Boyer, president and CEO explains that this technology is straightforward and critical as dual enrollment can be dangerous to individuals and can damage the integrity of clinical trial data. Yet, some individuals are motivated by the compensation they receive, particularly in the more generously compensated Phase I clinical trials. “The problem stems from the incentive structure in today’s clinical trial landscape. Some subjects want to maximize their earnings, so they are willing to test or manipulate the system based on how much they want the money,” Boyer says.

Although potential subjects have to sign affidavits, there is little a site can do if a subject intentionally misrepresents the last time he or she was enrolled in a study or was dosed. But clinicalRSVP changes that dynamic. “clinicalRSVP allows investigators to make well-informed enrollment decisions without having to rely on a subject’s full disclosure,” he comments.

Users of clinicalRSVP are required to enter critical date information within eighteen hours of subject dosing. Data are entered at time of initial dose of enrolled subjects and at time of final dose. This requirement enables other clinical RSVP sites to see the dosing history of a potential subject and whether that individual was dosed within the past thirty days, a typical washout period for clinical trials.

To document the value of clinicalRSVP, IDI engaged five investigative sites in South Florida in a pilot study. Lasting from October through December 2009, the sites used clinicalRSVP in sixteen clinical trials, generating a database of 1,400 subjects. The average time spent checking prospective subjects against the database was 20 seconds per subject, and the average time spent per study to report dosing activity of subjects was 22 minutes.

In eight short weeks, the pilot study revealed a surprising number of attempted dual enrollers. Within 15 days of last dose, 18 individuals tried to dual enroll; within 30 days of receiving a dose in another study, the number jumped to 38 individuals; and within 60 days of last dose, 92 tried to screen. All were prevented from enrolling.

According to Boyer, “We weren’t surprised that so many people tried to dual enroll because we had heard the stories, but we weren’t sure how prominently the activity would be detected in the small South Florida pilot considering there was at least one major site that choose not to participate.”

Because of the limited scope of the pilot study, it is possible that many dual enrollers who approached other sites went undetected. To address this issue, Boyer says the best tactic is to encourage as many regional sites as possible to participate in clinicalRSVP, extending the reach of the tool and rendering it more effective. “As to what’s next, our goal is to provide a way to bring sites together in a regional sense. This concept won’t work if only one site in an area enrolls,” says Boyer. 

Click here to log in.

0 Comments

Add Comment

Text Only 2000 character limit

Page 1 of 1

White Papers & Special Reports

oracle_RDC
Remote Data Capture:Acquisition and Analysis
Sponsored by Oracle

See why Electronic Data Capture (EDC) is gaining traction in the pharmaceutical
clinical trials arena. Today approximately half of all clinical trials are conducted
electronically, and the figure is rapidly rising. Report includes contributions from
Oracle Health Sciences, Pfizer, PPD, and C3i.

 



oracle20723
The Role of Analytics in Transforming Healthcare
Sponsored by Oracle

Sharing many of the data challenges and opportunities faced by Healthcare, the Life Sciences industry remains focused on delivering new, innovative therapies and solutions to patients in a cost effective, timely and safe way. With spiraling R&D costs, new methods such as adaptive trials, and never ending need for deep pharmacovigilance, the Life Sciences companies that effectively use analytics to explore, monitor and optimize their business will rapidly become the new leaders.

Oracle’s strategy—built upon Enterprise Health Analytics and Health Data Warehouse Foundation—provides a powerful, practical, and extensible approach to delivering the IT analytics infrastructure required to confront the worldwide healthcare challenge.



pegasystems
BPM-Based Case Management Approach to Optimizing Clinical Trial Efficiency
Sponsored by Pegasystems

Business Process Management (BPM) software offers liberation in the planning and management of clinical trials today. SmartBPM provides the components for automating critical clinical trial processes ranging from protocol development and patient enrollment to site management and investigator payments. Advantages are:

  • Potentially stunning return on investment at multiple levels.
  • A 500%, or better, increase in application development time by directly executing business requirements
  • Improved customer retention
  • A 50% possible reduction in training time

Discovered is opportunity to enhance relationships with investigators, subjects, and regulators while bringing momentum to a technology-impaired study startup phase. Learn more about SmartBPM in this complimentary white paper.



Life Science Webcasts & Podcasts

Bio-IT World & CHI

Impact of the 1000 Genomes Project on the Next Wave of Pharmacogenomic Discovery
1000genomeInterview with M. Eileen Dolan, Ph.D., Professor, Medicine, University of Chicago and Speaker at Next-Generation Sequencing Data Management, September 27-29, 2010, Providence, RI  

The 1000 Genomes Project aims to provide detailed genetic variation data on >1000 genomes from worldwide populations using the next-generation sequencing technologies. Some of the samples utilized for the 1000 Genomes Project are the International Hap-Map samples that are composed of lymphoblastoid cell lines (LCLs) derived from individuals of different world populations. The detailed map of human genetic variation promised by the 1000 Genomes project will allow a more in-depth analysis of the contribution of genetic variation to drug response. Future studies utilizing this new resource can greatly enhance our understanding of the genetic basis of drug response and other complex traits.


Download Now 



More Podcasts

Job Openings

mskc logo
Software Engineer – Computational Biology Center

Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center seeks an Engineer to design and develop complex data analysis systems in support of cancer genomics research projects at the Computational Biology Center. Qualified candidate will have a BA, 5+ years of software development experience and expert knowledge of Java, SQL, and HTML.

Apply: www.mskcciscareers.org.  Equal opportunity and affirmative action employer.

Loading...

For reprints and/or copyright permission, please contact The YGS Group, 3650 West Market Street, York, PA;

(717) 505-9701 ext. 125, or via email to Ashley.Zander@theYGSgroup.com.