Title: Optimizing Patient Enrollment in Clinical Trials Forum
1Optimizing Patient Enrollment in Clinical Trials
Forum
2Objectives
- Discuss enrollment strategies
- Highlight important factors
- Share ideas
- Maximize impact on outcome
- Create an Ideal CRO
3Complexities of the Drug Development Process
4Pharmaceutical and Biotechnology Cultures
5Drug Companies The Top Five
- Pfizer
- Parke-Davis, Warner Lambert, Pharmacia, Searle,
Monsanto, Pfizer - GlaxoSmithKline
- Burroughs Welcome Glaxo Glaxo-Wellcome
- Smith Kline French Beecham SKB
- Sanofi-Aventis
- Sterling-WinthropKodakSanofi SyntholoboSanofi-
Syntholobo - Hoechst Marion Roussel Rhone-Poulenc Rorer
Aventis - Merck
- Johnson Johnson
6Other Large Pharma and Biotech Companies
- Amgen
- Genentech
- Serono
- Biogen-Idec
- Celgene
- Genencor
- Chiron
- Icos
- Millennium
- AstraZeneca
- Novartis
- Bristol-Myers Squibb
- Roche
- Wyeth
- Eli Lilly
- Abbott Labs
- Schering Plough
- Schering Ag
- Boehringer-Ingelheim
7The Drug Discovery Process
Traditional Small Molecules MAb
RNAi
42-66 months 27-50 months 15-24 months
Total Discovery Time
8Clinical Development
9Time to Approval is Decreasing
10RECRUITMENT
11Laws governing clinical trial conduct
- Lasagnas law
- The prevalence of any disease under study
drops - dramatically immediately upon study
initiation, returning - to previous levels only once enrolment is
complete - Murphys law
- Everything that can go wrong will go wrong
- Giltinans law
- The expected quality of trial data obtained
from a center where the P.I. is a
thought-leader in the field is inversely
proportional to the degree of exaltation of the
P.I.
12What does recruitment mean?
- A fresh or additional supply of something
- A fresh supply or number of persons, either as
additional to the previous number, or to make up
for a decrease. - To get or seek recruits
- More than the word suggests
13Target population
- THE PLANwhat to do and when
- Seek out information..tailor
- Patients
- Give main eligibility criteria
- Inclusion and exclusion criteria best specified
as checkbox criteria - Are lab values needed to establish eligibility?
Central or local lab determinations? - Minimize ambiguity when specifying who is
eligible, especially in multi-center trials - Therapy/Sites
- Flexibility-be accommodating
- Geography
- Time of Year
- Numbers
- Time.stay ahead of the game
- Early risk assessment/hurdles
14Basic design elements
- Control group (concurrent, other?)
- Gold standard randomized, double-blind,
placebo-controlled trial - Blinding (double, single-blind, open-label?
precautions in implementation?) - Randomization (allocation to treatments - how
implemented?) - Balance across key prognostic factors?
- Min/max representation of certain subgroups or
participating study centers? - Adequate sample size?
- Method for handling of dropouts/missing data
specified? Unambiguously? - Blinding is especially important in the case of
subjective evaluation - Balance across important prognostic factors
15Internet Applications for Todays Clinical Trial
- Sponsors and vendors have recognized the value of
the internet for - Patient Recruitment
- Monitoring
- Patient Education
- Electronic Data Capture
- Data Management
16Patient Recruitment by Internet
- Competition for participants (PIs and sites)
- Specific inclusion and exclusion criteria
(screening) - Multi-center, international studies
- Evidence requirements (e.g., heterogeneity)
- With its ability to reach a large population of
potential subjects, the internet is a natural,
important tool for recruitment for a number of
trials - Large number of websites have been developed
17Patient Recruitment the Internet
www.clinicaltrials.gov
18Summary
- Recruitment is more than word suggests
- Even studies that are easier to recruit for can
run more efficiently with a plan and smooth
implementation - This means less time and money and more
importantly.faster access to the drug by
patients. - Team Work..its not achieved alone
- Start early
- Plan, Implement, Measure Close
19Clinical Trial Team
20Who is involved?
- Remember the big picture
- Collaborate early
- Build relationships
- Clear objectives
Legal
Commercial
Advocacy
Media
Regulatory
Sponsor
Investigator
Subject
sites
21The Outsourcing Challenge
- Create develop productive strategic
partnerships with external suppliers - Drive process improvement both externally and
internally - Integrate internal and external processes
22Why do we need to establish performance
expectations with external suppliers?
23Strategic or Tactical Outsourcing?
- Strategic Outsourcing
- Outsource all data management to a single company
- In April 2003, Wyeth outsourced its clinical data
management operations to Accenture, enabling
Wyeths clinical staff to focus on more critical
functions. - The bold move aims to deliver equally bold
results, including an 80 percent reduction in
clinical trial cycle times and a 30 percent
reduction in contracted costs. - Tactical Outsourcing
- Outsource single development project to a single
or group of CRO - Transactional Outsourcing
- Contract a single project to a single CRO
24Maximising the Value of Outsourcing
Time
Cost
Risk
Quality
25Selecting CROs as a Competitive Bid Process
- Clinical trial management, data management, etc.
- Therapeutic/Indication knowledge
- Previous experience with similar drug class
- Company annual reports
- References, Testimonials
- Financial Background checks
- Staffing Levels/Turnover
- Quality of Personnel
- Geographic stretch
- Service Gaps
- Stability
- Access to Metrics
- Previous audit reports
26Project Specifications (Sponsors view)
- Specifications to be written in a manner to
promote full and unrestricted competition by
setting actual, minimum requirements - Elements to consider when writing specifications
- Identify the essential characteristics of the
service to be purchased - Do not include unnecessary features
- Emphasize performance over design
- Do not allow them to be written by a CRO
- Should be quantifiable rather than qualitative
- Should be verifiable
- Do not overstate quality
- Metrics selected should create a common language
among diverse team members
27Track Performance vs. Milestones
Sponsor
CRO
CRO
CRO
CRO
CRO
Study Planning
Study Start-up
Patient enrolment
Data Cleanup
Statistical analysis
Report writing
Analysis
Protocols
Sites
Patients
CRF Pages
Reports
Protocol Start
Protocol Approval
1st Patient entered
Last Patient entered
Last Patient complete
Database Lock
Analysis Complete
Report Approval
Drug Order - Drug Available
Query Resolution Time
Site enrolment
28POOR MONITORING Produces poor data causes delays
and costs time
INCORRECT ENROLLMENT FORECASTS Causes delays,
increases resources and cost time
Time Money
POORLY DESIGNED STATISTICAL ANALYSIS PLANS cause
database changes which cost time
BADLY WRITTEN REPORTS cause more reviews,
rewrites which cost time
29How to Measure CRO Success
- There are several areas equally applicable to all
dimensions of outsourcing - Finance/budget
- focus on cost management and cost delivery of
services and work products - Customer satisfaction
- focus on critical attributes that generate
satisfaction with services and work products
among internal business customers - Dont be afraid to stop or change
- Work/product delivered
- focus on quantifying the amount of service or
work product provided in a given time period - Quality
- focus on the objective and measurable aspects of
quality of services and products - Continuous improvement
- Open to new ideas
- Time/schedule
- focus on critical service, product, and project
time frames and the ability to deliver on time
30Seek Metrics to Support Investigator Relationship
Management
31What Does Pharma Expect From Outsourcing?
- Focus on Quality
- delivering expertise and knowledge that meet or
exceed the quality standards demanded by product
development teams and regulatory authorities - Focus on Delivery
- Acting with an unwavering commitment to execution
and delivery of development and business Key
Performance Indicators - Focus on Teamwork
- Creating dynamic, talented teams that work
locally and globally, communicate openly
internally and externally, are passionate about
and enjoy what they do - Focus on Leadership Innovation
- Leading by example, welcoming change, encouraging
innovation, providing an environment of
professional learning and development, and
creating value for the product
32Summary
- The bid defence process provides an opportunity
to establish performance expectations with CROs - Metrics provide the roadmap
- starting point
- Where you need to improve (vision of future)
- Focus on Quality, Delivery, Time and Cost during
the bid defense process - Develop productive and performance enhancing
relationships
33Just One Example A single Phase III randomized,
placebo-controlled, double-blind study of Rituxan
34Non-Hodgkin's lymphoma most commonly occurs in
the lymph nodes and is a cancer of the
B-cells Rituxan, a monoclonal antibody, binds to
the CD20 protein found on normal and cancerous
B-cells in vitro.
Rituxan recruits components of the body's immune
system (phagocytes, etc.) to destroy B-cells
Once Rituxan has cleared the body, normal B-cells
can begin to grow again
35Rituxan Clinical Development PlanChallenges and
Constraints
- Rituxan was marketed
- Accrual hurdle Patients/ physicians may opt for
treatment off-study - The specified patient population for the Phase
III study is small - Uncertainty re the frequency and clinical
significance of anti-Rituxan antibodies (HACA) in
this patient population
36Rituxan Phase III Feasibility Assessment
- Objective To establish the feasibility of
conducting the proposed clinical trial - A site survey process was implemented to collect
data in the US and some other countries
(Australia, NZ, Russia, Poland, Czech Republic) - Telephone contacts were utilized in Sweden,
Denmark, Canada, Italy and the UK - Targeted site criteria Covance
hematologist/oncologist database (US) and Roche
key customers/investigators (ex-US)
37Rituxan Phase III Feasibility Assessment
- Conclusions (US)
- Significant numbers of investigators declined to
participate in the feasibility assessment since
they would be unable to conduct the trial at
their sites (212/246, 86) - However, all responding investigators (34, 14)
felt that the trial was operationally feasible
and would be interested in participating - Recruitment projections estimated that it would
take more than 12 months to complete enrollment
(n75) at 34 US sites - Assessment based on
single-arm trial design
38Rituxan Phase III Feasibility Assessment
- Conclusions for other countries
- Much higher investigator acceptance of
feasibility assessment and trial design (34/54,
63) - Involvement of sites outside the US will enhance
enrollment but will increase operational
complexity - Assessment based on randomized pivotal trial
design
39Site Selection
- 25 US sites targeted
- 20 sites targeted in other countries
- 4 Canada
- 5 Australia
- 2 New Zealand
- 4 Sweden
- 5 Italy
- 2 UK
- Expect enrollment gt Outside US US
40Roles and Responsibilities Genentech
- Co-sponsor with Biogen IDEC
- Authorship of study protocol and development of
CRF - IND holder, primary contact with US FDA
- Responsible for study operationalization
- Contract holder with CRO and study sites
- Drug manufacture, supply and distribution
- Safety reporting
- Medical monitoring (oversight and 1 US
responsibility) - Statistical analysis, final study report and sBLA
filing
41Roles and Responsibilities Biogen IDEC
- Co-sponsor with Genentech
- Implementation team participation
- Regulatory consultation
- Funding through Genentech/Biogen IDEC
collaboration
42Roles and Responsibilities Roche HQ
- Life cycle team decision to support
Genentech/Biogen IDEC study conduct ex-US - Communication with Roche Affiliate offices
- Future consideration of label expansion to
countries outside the US
43Roles and Responsibilities Roche Affiliates
- Post marketing safety reporting responsibilities
- Key customer management
- Input regarding key investigator sites outside US
- Participation in regional investigator meetings
44Roles and Responsibilities Covance
- Execution of transferred obligations from
Genentech - Regulatory applications outside US
- Safety reporting to authorities outside US
- Site management
- Central labs, IVRS, drug distribution management
- Data management
- Medical monitoring in AU/NZ
- Execution of investigator meetings
45Roles and Responsibilities Connector-Medical
- Medical monitoring in EU
- Protocol exceptions
- Unblinding
- SAE review if required
- Participation in EU investigator meeting
- Site identification and feasibility assessment
for Sweden / Denmark
46A Global Team
Covance
ROCHE
STUDY SITES
COVANCE
GENENTECH / IDEC
47Issues in International Research
- Prepared using materials of the Council for
International Organizations of - Medical Sciences (CIOMS is an international,
non-governmental, non- - profit organization established jointly by WHO
and UNESCO in 1949)
48What types of things make a country/ community
especially vulnerable to harm or exploitation
from external scientific research?
- Economic disparity
- Authoritative/corrupt political system
- Lack of human rights protection
- Lack of individual autonomy (especially when this
applies only to certain sectors) - Lack of infrastructure for scientific/ ethical
review - Low education or literacy
49Some issues to consider.
- Who should provide consent for participation?
- Community leaders? Heads of household? Only the
individual participant? - What is sensitive information?
- Abortion in Russia vs. The Philippines
- Income
- In societies where life is very public...How can
privacy be assured during data collection? - How can you insure that consent is truly
informed? - Some of the basic principles may be difficult to
convey/implement due to - Limited autonomy
- Limited education
- Language barrier
- This cannot be used as a reason to forgo
obtaining individual informed consent thus,
creative informed consent processes should be
developed
50With respect to clinical trials...
- Persons in underdeveloped communities should not
ordinarily be involved in research that could be
carried out reasonably well in developed
communities - Research should be responsive to the health needs
and the priorities of the community in which it
is to be carried out - Local IRBs should be constituted in the same way
that IRBs are constituted in the US (diversity
and representation of relevant stakeholders
researchers, health care providers, community
representatives)
51FDA Vs. European Committees Concerns
52CLINICAL TRIALS Conducted by European
Organization for the Research and Treatment of
Cancer (EORTC)
53EORTC TODAY (I)
- Aims
- Improvement of cancer treatment and related
problems - Education to high quality clinical research
- How ?
- Multicenter - multinational and intercontinental
cancer clinical trials - Research projects on methods and practices for
- cancer clinical trials
- anti-cancer agents development
- cancer management procedures
- Dissemination of know-how courses - symposia -
workshops
54EORTC TODAY (II)
- Network of more than 350 institutions from 31
different countries - /- 2,000 collaborators
- (clinicians, pathologists, researchers,...)
- /- 7,000 patients are entered each year in EORTC
trials (database of more than 100,000 patients) - /- 30.000 patients in follow-up
- /- 120 trials open to patients entry
- (Phase I -gt Phase III)
55PATIENT ACCRUAL IN EORTC CLINICAL STUDIES 2000
(6509 PTS)
Norway61 Estonia1 Czech Rep.37 Poland51 Slovak
ia45 Hungary26 Slovenia7 Croatia42 F.R.
Yugoslavia13 Bosnia3 Romania
11 Bulgaria15 Turkey75 Israel78 Egypt46
Sweden71 Denmark38 The Netherlands1484 U.K.
538 Belgium760 Italy413 Germany569 Greece27 A
ustria111 Portugal57 Spain219 France1166
Finland3
Argentina 6 Chile 28 Canada188 N.
Zealand5
Russia32 USA52 Malta10
Switzerland169
South Africa14 Australia34 Saudi Arabia4
56Questions ?
57Celebrate share success
- Vadim Paluy, MD
- vadpal_at_hotmail.com
- (408) 621-4028
- www.placetresearch.com
-