A study reported in this week's Science Translational Medicine found that qualified investigators are more likely to respond to opportunities for clinical trials if they are contacted by an institution-specific point person, or navigator.
Jonathan M. Davis, MD, Tufts Clinical and Translational Science Institute (CTSI) Director of Regulatory Affairs and Chief of Newborn Medicine at Floating Hospital for Children at Tufts Medical Center and a multi-institution team of child health researchers instituted the Point-Person Project, a pilot study that built a national network of navigators to find investigators with the bandwidth and expertise to respond to pediatric clinical research opportunities.
Multisite clinical trials are inherently complex and time-consuming. Clinical trials involving children face even greater challenges, with small patient populations and few investigators trained in pediatric therapeutics development. The Point-Person Project seeks to find these investigators and solicit their participation in a variety of clinical research projects for industry as well as individual investigators.
"If studies can't draw enough investigators to participate, patients and industry will suffer," says Dr. Davis. "When a research opportunity presents itself, we need to rapidly assemble a team of experts who can commit to participation and patient enrollment. The navigators find and connect these experts to get things underway."
The project designated 84 navigators at 55 institutions supported by the Clinical and Translational Science Awards (CTSA) program, funded through the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (NCATS). Over the course of one year, 289 investigators from 40 institutions responded to research opportunities, with 16 sites involved in start-up or enrollment of at least one trial. One research group that formed as a result of the Point-Person Project published a manuscript, developed a full clinical trial protocol, and submitted an Investigational New Drug (IND) application for approval by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA).
"Overall, our pilot project increased awareness of, and conversation about, planned clinical trials," says Dr. Davis. "Unfortunately, though, many investigators who initially expressed interest chose not to participate for a variety of reasons, but the most concerning was because industry-sponsored studies - required by law - typically don't lead to academic achievement."
Despite these challenges, Dr. Davis thinks the Point-Person model should be adopted nationally and the CTSA sites function as a clinical trials network. "We still have a lot of work to do," he says. ""Going forward, initiatives like the Point-Person Project will be more successful with a national infrastructure for clinical trials, institutional investment in clinical and translational research, and investigator education about regulatory requirements and good clinical practice. With these elements, and a network of navigators across the country, we'll be better equipped to design and conduct studies that benefit children."
Explore further: Yale YODA Project announces first availability of medical device trial data
More information: Science Translational Medicine, http://ift.tt/1BXaPph
Journal reference: Science Translational Medicine
Provided by Tufts Clinical and Translational Science Institute
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A study reported in this week's Science Translational Medicine found that qualified investigators are more likely to respond to opportunities for clinical trials if they are contacted by an institution-specific point person, or navigator.
Jonathan M. Davis, MD, Tufts Clinical and Translational Science Institute (CTSI) Director of Regulatory Affairs and Chief of Newborn Medicine at Floating Hospital for Children at Tufts Medical Center and a multi-institution team of child health researchers instituted the Point-Person Project, a pilot study that built a national network of navigators to find investigators with the bandwidth and expertise to respond to pediatric clinical research opportunities.
Multisite clinical trials are inherently complex and time-consuming. Clinical trials involving children face even greater challenges, with small patient populations and few investigators trained in pediatric therapeutics development. The Point-Person Project seeks to find these investigators and solicit their participation in a variety of clinical research projects for industry as well as individual investigators.
"If studies can't draw enough investigators to participate, patients and industry will suffer," says Dr. Davis. "When a research opportunity presents itself, we need to rapidly assemble a team of experts who can commit to participation and patient enrollment. The navigators find and connect these experts to get things underway."
The project designated 84 navigators at 55 institutions supported by the Clinical and Translational Science Awards (CTSA) program, funded through the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (NCATS). Over the course of one year, 289 investigators from 40 institutions responded to research opportunities, with 16 sites involved in start-up or enrollment of at least one trial. One research group that formed as a result of the Point-Person Project published a manuscript, developed a full clinical trial protocol, and submitted an Investigational New Drug (IND) application for approval by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA).
"Overall, our pilot project increased awareness of, and conversation about, planned clinical trials," says Dr. Davis. "Unfortunately, though, many investigators who initially expressed interest chose not to participate for a variety of reasons, but the most concerning was because industry-sponsored studies - required by law - typically don't lead to academic achievement."
Despite these challenges, Dr. Davis thinks the Point-Person model should be adopted nationally and the CTSA sites function as a clinical trials network. "We still have a lot of work to do," he says. ""Going forward, initiatives like the Point-Person Project will be more successful with a national infrastructure for clinical trials, institutional investment in clinical and translational research, and investigator education about regulatory requirements and good clinical practice. With these elements, and a network of navigators across the country, we'll be better equipped to design and conduct studies that benefit children."
Explore further: Yale YODA Project announces first availability of medical device trial data
More information: Science Translational Medicine, http://ift.tt/1BXaPph
Journal reference: Science Translational Medicine
Provided by Tufts Clinical and Translational Science Institute
Medical Xpress on facebook
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Yale YODA Project announces first availability of medical device trial data
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The Yale University Open Data Access (YODA) Project is announcing the first-ever broad availability of clinical trial data for medical devices and diagnostics by a company. This historic expansion of data ...
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Despite legal and ethical mandates for disclosure, results from most clinical trials of medical products are not reported promptly on a registry specifically created to make results of human studies publically available, ...
Just 11 percent of adults, five percent of children participate in medical research
Jan 31, 2013
Medical research is vital to the advancement of health care, but many medical research studies have too few people who participate. A new study from the University of Michigan takes an in-depth look at public participation ...
The challenges and opportunities of clinical trials in developing countries
Jun 12, 2012
Conducting more clinical trials in developing countries is of benefit because these populations are underrepresented in research, but doing trials in resource poor settings has many challenges. Research sites in developing ...
Team proposes new model for clinical trials
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Experts across academia, industry and government propose a new method for health care providers to get the right treatments to the right patients at the right time. This new approach, A Proposal for Integrated Efficacy-to-Effectiveness (E2E) Clinical Trials, published in Nat ...
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