Bring trials directly to patients to improve access and engagement, increase quality and shorten timelines.
The shift to technology-driven trials and specialized care for study participants during the pandemic opened the industry’s eyes to the benefits of decentralized research models. A recent IQVIA studied 12 Decentralized Clinical Trials (DCTs) and found that sponsors captured time and cost savings at virtually every point in the DCT research journey compared to traditional trials.
The DCTs studied saw an average 78% reduction in time to first patient in, 54% reduction in protocol deviations, and a 26% reduction of non-enrolling trial sites, among other measurable benefits.
The analysis also shows that when sponsors planned for DCT models from the start they experienced more time and cost savings and greater patient engagement that studies that added these elements at the last minute.
The research proves that choosing a DCT model can add value across treatment categories and patient populations – and these decentralized studies aren’t going away. Currently, about one-third of active clinical trials that IQVIA supports incorporate one or more DCT technologies or service capabilities, and 10% are fully decentralized.
A related survey conducted by Industry Standard Research (ISR) in 2021 found 83% of sponsors said they expect to increase their use of DCTs in the next three years, and half expect the cost of running DCTs will drop below the cost of traditional trials by next year.
As the commitment to DCTs increase, several industry organizations are now focused on how to enhance their DCT trial designs so they can best meet the needs of patients, sites and sponsors in every studies.
IQVIA hosted the recent webinar “Demonstrating the value of decentralized trial: What is in it for sponsors, sites and study participants” to explore how the insights and best practices these industry leaders have gathered. The conversation included Karen Noonan, SVP of global regulatory policy at the Association of Clinical Research Organizations (ACRO) and David Vulcano VP of Research Compliance & Integrity for HCA Healthcare, and honorary president of the Society Of Clinical Research Sites (SCRS); moderated by Bhausaheb Patil, Head of Business Operations, Decentralized Clinical Trials Solutions at IQVIA
Here is what they had to say.
Karen Noonan spent the last two years helping ACRO’s DCT Working Party develop a set of quality-based principles and tools to facilitate study implementations. To help advance DCTs, ACRO created the DCT toolkit which lays out a vision for how decentralized clinical trials can be planned and executed now and in the future. You can find more out about ACRO’s DCT toolkit here.
She shared four key takeaways the team learned through their research.
Founded in 2012, the Society for Clinical Research Sites (SCRS) mission is to unify the voice of the global research site community for greater site sustainability.
“Sites are in for this future,” David Vulcano states. Through an annually conducted SCRS site landscape survey, the 9,500-member organization shared that 66% of trials sites were approached to run a DCT in 2020 and 2021, and of that, 80% accepted the challenge. “Their top reasons were to bring their sites into the future, and to benefit their patient populations. Those who declined the opportunities, were most likely to say they were uncomfortable with the delegation of authority, especially when having mobile health professionals work on their behalf, notes Vulcano.
Though their early experiences with DCTs were not all stellar.
Only seven percent of the sites who led these trials felt that they were adequately compensated to handle the decentralized components. They pointed to many unexpected costs, particularly around training, and technical challenges that emerge in these trials. Many site coordinators said they were expected to train the study participants on trial technology, and to function as help desk support for patients and home health staff. “They just don't feel ready, capable and adequately compensated to be able to be that help desk,” Vulcano said. They also felt they needed more help understanding how the DCT model addresses compliance around study oversight.
“They are interested as sites to be part of this future, and building the site experience around study participants,” he said. But they will need financial, technical and training support from sponsors and CROs to make them work.
Finally, IQVIA’s Patil offered advice garnered from the in-depth analysis his team conducted comparing conventional trials to DCTs.
“DCT experiences captured during the pandemic can help the industry to identify the right digital strategies and better understand the patient journey,” Patil concludes. Using the lessons learned collected by ACRO and SCRS, and the best practices identified in IQVIA’s analysis will help industry leaders continue to enhance their DCT models and find the ideal balance of digital and human support for every study.
You can view the full webinar here to learn more about how ACRO and SCRS are supporting the evolution of DCTs.
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