This document advertises and provides an agenda for the "Data Quality & Technology in Clinical Trials 2016" conference to be held in Philadelphia on April 18-19, 2016. The conference will focus on how pharmaceutical companies can maximize data quality, become data-driven organizations, and harness analytics to improve clinical trial design, monitoring, and outcomes. Speakers will include executives from major pharmaceutical companies as well as regulators and discuss topics like unlocking value from clinical trial data, using patient-generated data, and harnessing new technologies in clinical trials. The goal is to help pharmaceutical companies transition to being data-driven organizations and improve clinical development timelines and success rates through better data practices and technologies.
Clinical Trial Data Transparency: Explaining Governance for Public Data SharingHealth Data Consortium
Watch the webinar here: http://www.screencast.com/t/0lATKYlJ8
Dr. Chris Boone, then-VP in Avalere’s Evidence Translation and Implementation Practice, discussed clinical trial data transparency and considerations for governance and open data sharing. Clinical trials are extremely valuable as the primary data source for seeking regulatory approval of products. Historically, regulatory agencie have been the sole recipients of clinical trial data, butthere has been a recent push from various stakeholder groups to open access to clinical trial data to non-regulatory researchers as an act of ethical responsibility to patients, a contribution to public health, and a demonstrated commitment to advancing the science. Some of the barriers include developing a sound approach for de-identifying patient data, adopting universal clinical trial data format, and managing the proactive and non-selective access and security of clinical data once collected. Dr. Boone discusses rationales and benefits/risks of clinical trial transparency, responsible use of publicly sharing this data, barriers and legal implications, and reasonable data sharing models.
Discover more health data resources on our website at http://www.healthdataconsortium.org/
Seamless Journey from Population Health to Precision MedicineOrion Health
Precision medicine is happening now! Join us as we examine the opportunities to leverage your initial core data sets and prepare for new data types to deliver real-time population health and precise medicine.
This webinar will demonstrate how modern healthcare organizations (HCO) are expanding clinical integration and upgrading to higher performing technology stacks on their journey to the omics-based and real-time delivery of precision medicine.
We’ll chat with Dr. Chris Hobson, CMO and CPO at Orion Health, Doctor Dylan Mordaunt, Clinical Director Research at Orion Health, and with Orion Health’s Executive Vice President of Product and Strategy, Dave Bennett about the importance of real-time data mining and re-mining, and which new computational tools and techniques you need to meet your population health goals and future proof your organization for the delivery of precision medicine.
In this webinar, we will explain:
How new models of medicine (e.g., molecular medicine, value-based medicine, etc.) are driving the immediate need for patient-specific decision support assistance
How existing and new data sets can be leveraged with integrated and real-time analytics (e.g., family history, pharmacogenics) for immediate reduction in adverse events and improved outcomes
How innovative organizations are answering this demand with high-performing technology
January 23, 2017
The Fifth Annual Health Law Year in P/Review symposium featured leading experts discussing major developments during 2016 and what to watch out for in 2017. The discussion at this day-long event covered hot topics in such areas as health policy under the new administration, regulatory issues in clinical research, law at the end-of-life, patient rights and advocacy, pharmaceutical policy, reproductive health, and public health law.
The Fifth Annual Health Law Year in P/Review was sponsored by the Petrie-Flom Center for Health Law Policy, Biotechnology, and Bioethics at Harvard Law School, Harvard Health Publications at Harvard Medical School, Health Affairs, the Hastings Center, the Program On Regulation, Therapeutics, And Law (PORTAL) in the Division of Pharmacoepidemiology and Pharmacoeconomics at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, and the Center for Bioethics at Harvard Medical School, with support from the Oswald DeN. Cammann Fund.
Learn more on our website: http://petrieflom.law.harvard.edu/events/details/5th-annual-health-law-year-in-p-review
January 23, 2017
The Fifth Annual Health Law Year in P/Review symposium featured leading experts discussing major developments during 2016 and what to watch out for in 2017. The discussion at this day-long event covered hot topics in such areas as health policy under the new administration, regulatory issues in clinical research, law at the end-of-life, patient rights and advocacy, pharmaceutical policy, reproductive health, and public health law.
The Fifth Annual Health Law Year in P/Review was sponsored by the Petrie-Flom Center for Health Law Policy, Biotechnology, and Bioethics at Harvard Law School, Harvard Health Publications at Harvard Medical School, Health Affairs, the Hastings Center, the Program On Regulation, Therapeutics, And Law (PORTAL) in the Division of Pharmacoepidemiology and Pharmacoeconomics at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, and the Center for Bioethics at Harvard Medical School, with support from the Oswald DeN. Cammann Fund.
Learn more on our website: http://petrieflom.law.harvard.edu/events/details/5th-annual-health-law-year-in-p-review
Clinical Trial Data Transparency: Explaining Governance for Public Data SharingHealth Data Consortium
Watch the webinar here: http://www.screencast.com/t/0lATKYlJ8
Dr. Chris Boone, then-VP in Avalere’s Evidence Translation and Implementation Practice, discussed clinical trial data transparency and considerations for governance and open data sharing. Clinical trials are extremely valuable as the primary data source for seeking regulatory approval of products. Historically, regulatory agencie have been the sole recipients of clinical trial data, butthere has been a recent push from various stakeholder groups to open access to clinical trial data to non-regulatory researchers as an act of ethical responsibility to patients, a contribution to public health, and a demonstrated commitment to advancing the science. Some of the barriers include developing a sound approach for de-identifying patient data, adopting universal clinical trial data format, and managing the proactive and non-selective access and security of clinical data once collected. Dr. Boone discusses rationales and benefits/risks of clinical trial transparency, responsible use of publicly sharing this data, barriers and legal implications, and reasonable data sharing models.
Discover more health data resources on our website at http://www.healthdataconsortium.org/
Seamless Journey from Population Health to Precision MedicineOrion Health
Precision medicine is happening now! Join us as we examine the opportunities to leverage your initial core data sets and prepare for new data types to deliver real-time population health and precise medicine.
This webinar will demonstrate how modern healthcare organizations (HCO) are expanding clinical integration and upgrading to higher performing technology stacks on their journey to the omics-based and real-time delivery of precision medicine.
We’ll chat with Dr. Chris Hobson, CMO and CPO at Orion Health, Doctor Dylan Mordaunt, Clinical Director Research at Orion Health, and with Orion Health’s Executive Vice President of Product and Strategy, Dave Bennett about the importance of real-time data mining and re-mining, and which new computational tools and techniques you need to meet your population health goals and future proof your organization for the delivery of precision medicine.
In this webinar, we will explain:
How new models of medicine (e.g., molecular medicine, value-based medicine, etc.) are driving the immediate need for patient-specific decision support assistance
How existing and new data sets can be leveraged with integrated and real-time analytics (e.g., family history, pharmacogenics) for immediate reduction in adverse events and improved outcomes
How innovative organizations are answering this demand with high-performing technology
January 23, 2017
The Fifth Annual Health Law Year in P/Review symposium featured leading experts discussing major developments during 2016 and what to watch out for in 2017. The discussion at this day-long event covered hot topics in such areas as health policy under the new administration, regulatory issues in clinical research, law at the end-of-life, patient rights and advocacy, pharmaceutical policy, reproductive health, and public health law.
The Fifth Annual Health Law Year in P/Review was sponsored by the Petrie-Flom Center for Health Law Policy, Biotechnology, and Bioethics at Harvard Law School, Harvard Health Publications at Harvard Medical School, Health Affairs, the Hastings Center, the Program On Regulation, Therapeutics, And Law (PORTAL) in the Division of Pharmacoepidemiology and Pharmacoeconomics at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, and the Center for Bioethics at Harvard Medical School, with support from the Oswald DeN. Cammann Fund.
Learn more on our website: http://petrieflom.law.harvard.edu/events/details/5th-annual-health-law-year-in-p-review
January 23, 2017
The Fifth Annual Health Law Year in P/Review symposium featured leading experts discussing major developments during 2016 and what to watch out for in 2017. The discussion at this day-long event covered hot topics in such areas as health policy under the new administration, regulatory issues in clinical research, law at the end-of-life, patient rights and advocacy, pharmaceutical policy, reproductive health, and public health law.
The Fifth Annual Health Law Year in P/Review was sponsored by the Petrie-Flom Center for Health Law Policy, Biotechnology, and Bioethics at Harvard Law School, Harvard Health Publications at Harvard Medical School, Health Affairs, the Hastings Center, the Program On Regulation, Therapeutics, And Law (PORTAL) in the Division of Pharmacoepidemiology and Pharmacoeconomics at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, and the Center for Bioethics at Harvard Medical School, with support from the Oswald DeN. Cammann Fund.
Learn more on our website: http://petrieflom.law.harvard.edu/events/details/5th-annual-health-law-year-in-p-review
Presentation by Prof Lisa Askie, ANZCTR, to the 'Unlocking value from publicly funded Clinical Research Data' workshop, cohosted by ARDC and CSIRO at ANU on 6 March 2019.
Investigator-initiated clinical trials: a community perspectiveARDC
Presentation by Miranda Cumpston, ACTA, to the 'Unlocking value from publicly funded Clinical Research Data' workshop, cohosted by ARDC and CSIRO at ANU on 6 March 2019.
January 23, 2017
The Fifth Annual Health Law Year in P/Review symposium featured leading experts discussing major developments during 2016 and what to watch out for in 2017. The discussion at this day-long event covered hot topics in such areas as health policy under the new administration, regulatory issues in clinical research, law at the end-of-life, patient rights and advocacy, pharmaceutical policy, reproductive health, and public health law.
The Fifth Annual Health Law Year in P/Review was sponsored by the Petrie-Flom Center for Health Law Policy, Biotechnology, and Bioethics at Harvard Law School, Harvard Health Publications at Harvard Medical School, Health Affairs, the Hastings Center, the Program On Regulation, Therapeutics, And Law (PORTAL) in the Division of Pharmacoepidemiology and Pharmacoeconomics at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, and the Center for Bioethics at Harvard Medical School, with support from the Oswald DeN. Cammann Fund.
Learn more on our website: http://petrieflom.law.harvard.edu/events/details/5th-annual-health-law-year-in-p-review
International perspective for sharing publicly funded medical research dataARDC
Presentation by Olivier Salvado, CSIRO, to the 'Unlocking value from publicly funded Clinical Research Data' workshop, cohosted by ARDC and CSIRO at ANU on 6 March 2019.
Presentation by Dr Adrian Burton, ARDC, to the 'Unlocking value from publicly funded Clinical Research Data' workshop, cohosted by ARDC and CSIRO at ANU on 6 March 2019.
Presentation by David Farber, FDA Life Science Partner at King & Spalding, about US Reimbursement.
I. Introduction
• II. FDA Approval vs. Reimbursement
• a. Different Standards
b. Clinical Evidence Needed
• III. The Three Keys to Reimbursement
A. Coverage
B. Coding
C. Payment
• IV. What’s New for 2019
• V. Reimbursement for MedTech AI Solutions
• VI. Tips for Successful Reimbursement
Dr. Kelvin Chan gave a short explanation on what real-world evidence (RWE) is, how they can be used in cancer care and what benefits patients can get from the real-world evidence. He will also introduce the Canadian Real-world Evidence for Value of Cancer Drugs (CanREValue) collaboration, which is a pan-Canadian collaboration working on developing a framework to generate and use real-world evidence to inform cancer drug funding decisions.
The webinar was followed by an interactive question & answer session.
> HTA and Real World Evidence (RWE)
> Why RWE? - Limitations with RCT
> RCT v/s RWE
> Definition of RWE
> Sources of RWE
> Advantages of RWE
> Application of Real World Data (RWD) in RWE
> Benefits of RWD in RWE
> Why Data Sharing is Important?
> Important Stakeholders
> How to Encourage Data Sharing?
> Benefits of Data Sharing
> Case Studies
> Data Privacy Scenario
> Data Security in India
> Regulatory Perspectives Around RWD/RWE
> Way Forward
Presentation by Kelly Hart, ONDC in PM&C, to the 'Unlocking value from publicly funded Clinical Research Data' workshop, cohosted by ARDC and CSIRO at ANU on 6 March 2019.
2015 Edition Proposed RuleModifications to the ONC Health IT Certification ...Brian Ahier
Presentation to April 7, 2015 Health IT Policy Committee:
2015 Edition Proposed RuleModifications to the ONC Health IT Certification Program and 2015 Edition Health IT Certification Criteria
The role of the FAIR Guiding Principles in a Learning Health SystemMichel Dumontier
The learning health system (LHS) is a concept for a socio-technological system that continuously improves the delivery of health care by coupling biomedical research with practice- and evidence- based medicine. Key aspects of the LHS are collecting, integrating, and analyzing data from different sources. While the increased digitalisation of healthcare is creating new data sources, these remain hard to find and use, let alone make use of as part of intelligent systems for the benefit of patients, healthcare providers, and researchers. This talk will examine recent developments towards making key parts of the LHS, such as clinical practice guidelines, Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, and Reusable (FAIR).
Medical research:-rebuilt,-retooled -and -rebooted pptPuja Roy
Medical Research: Rebuilt, Retooled and Rebooted An early stage mobile medical device company developing a human-centered suite of consumer products using science and technology to empower everyday people to monitor and better understand their own health—anytime, anywhere.
Presentation by Prof Lisa Askie, ANZCTR, to the 'Unlocking value from publicly funded Clinical Research Data' workshop, cohosted by ARDC and CSIRO at ANU on 6 March 2019.
Investigator-initiated clinical trials: a community perspectiveARDC
Presentation by Miranda Cumpston, ACTA, to the 'Unlocking value from publicly funded Clinical Research Data' workshop, cohosted by ARDC and CSIRO at ANU on 6 March 2019.
January 23, 2017
The Fifth Annual Health Law Year in P/Review symposium featured leading experts discussing major developments during 2016 and what to watch out for in 2017. The discussion at this day-long event covered hot topics in such areas as health policy under the new administration, regulatory issues in clinical research, law at the end-of-life, patient rights and advocacy, pharmaceutical policy, reproductive health, and public health law.
The Fifth Annual Health Law Year in P/Review was sponsored by the Petrie-Flom Center for Health Law Policy, Biotechnology, and Bioethics at Harvard Law School, Harvard Health Publications at Harvard Medical School, Health Affairs, the Hastings Center, the Program On Regulation, Therapeutics, And Law (PORTAL) in the Division of Pharmacoepidemiology and Pharmacoeconomics at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, and the Center for Bioethics at Harvard Medical School, with support from the Oswald DeN. Cammann Fund.
Learn more on our website: http://petrieflom.law.harvard.edu/events/details/5th-annual-health-law-year-in-p-review
International perspective for sharing publicly funded medical research dataARDC
Presentation by Olivier Salvado, CSIRO, to the 'Unlocking value from publicly funded Clinical Research Data' workshop, cohosted by ARDC and CSIRO at ANU on 6 March 2019.
Presentation by Dr Adrian Burton, ARDC, to the 'Unlocking value from publicly funded Clinical Research Data' workshop, cohosted by ARDC and CSIRO at ANU on 6 March 2019.
Presentation by David Farber, FDA Life Science Partner at King & Spalding, about US Reimbursement.
I. Introduction
• II. FDA Approval vs. Reimbursement
• a. Different Standards
b. Clinical Evidence Needed
• III. The Three Keys to Reimbursement
A. Coverage
B. Coding
C. Payment
• IV. What’s New for 2019
• V. Reimbursement for MedTech AI Solutions
• VI. Tips for Successful Reimbursement
Dr. Kelvin Chan gave a short explanation on what real-world evidence (RWE) is, how they can be used in cancer care and what benefits patients can get from the real-world evidence. He will also introduce the Canadian Real-world Evidence for Value of Cancer Drugs (CanREValue) collaboration, which is a pan-Canadian collaboration working on developing a framework to generate and use real-world evidence to inform cancer drug funding decisions.
The webinar was followed by an interactive question & answer session.
> HTA and Real World Evidence (RWE)
> Why RWE? - Limitations with RCT
> RCT v/s RWE
> Definition of RWE
> Sources of RWE
> Advantages of RWE
> Application of Real World Data (RWD) in RWE
> Benefits of RWD in RWE
> Why Data Sharing is Important?
> Important Stakeholders
> How to Encourage Data Sharing?
> Benefits of Data Sharing
> Case Studies
> Data Privacy Scenario
> Data Security in India
> Regulatory Perspectives Around RWD/RWE
> Way Forward
Presentation by Kelly Hart, ONDC in PM&C, to the 'Unlocking value from publicly funded Clinical Research Data' workshop, cohosted by ARDC and CSIRO at ANU on 6 March 2019.
2015 Edition Proposed RuleModifications to the ONC Health IT Certification ...Brian Ahier
Presentation to April 7, 2015 Health IT Policy Committee:
2015 Edition Proposed RuleModifications to the ONC Health IT Certification Program and 2015 Edition Health IT Certification Criteria
The role of the FAIR Guiding Principles in a Learning Health SystemMichel Dumontier
The learning health system (LHS) is a concept for a socio-technological system that continuously improves the delivery of health care by coupling biomedical research with practice- and evidence- based medicine. Key aspects of the LHS are collecting, integrating, and analyzing data from different sources. While the increased digitalisation of healthcare is creating new data sources, these remain hard to find and use, let alone make use of as part of intelligent systems for the benefit of patients, healthcare providers, and researchers. This talk will examine recent developments towards making key parts of the LHS, such as clinical practice guidelines, Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, and Reusable (FAIR).
Medical research:-rebuilt,-retooled -and -rebooted pptPuja Roy
Medical Research: Rebuilt, Retooled and Rebooted An early stage mobile medical device company developing a human-centered suite of consumer products using science and technology to empower everyday people to monitor and better understand their own health—anytime, anywhere.
Jenny - Making your site better with EATBDX Events
Jenny from POSH talked about PR and blogger outreach for SEO and the EAT algorithm (Expertise, Authority & Trustworthiness) that companies should follow if they want to help the back link profiles of their site improve.
Corrin from Lloyd Loves slides from the BDX :Instagram for Business event which took place at The Buff Club in Glasgow on Wednesday 25th February.
Corrin talked about how to use Instagram when you're running an independent business and want to attract a solid customer base.
Big data, RWE and AI in Clinical Trials made simpleHadas Jacoby
Technology is slowly but surely penetrating the healthcare industry in general and the clinical trials sector in particular. New and advanced solutions offer a variety of possibilities aimed to both improving existing processes and creating new and more efficient ones. And on top of all stands the desire to make clinical trials more patient centric.
In all of this, even though some of the technologies have yet to mature enough to meet the high quality standards necessary, it is important to know them and begin imagining the promise they hold for clinical trials.
A hybrid approach to data management is emerging in healthcare as organizations recognize the value of an enterprise data warehouse in combination with a data lake.
In this SlideShare, we discuss data lakes in healthcare and we:
Provide an overview of a Hadoop-based data lake architecture and integration platform, and its application in machine learning, predictive modeling, and data discovery
Discuss several key use cases driving the adoption of data lakes for both providers and health plans
Discuss available data storage forms and the required tools for a data lake environment
Detail best practices for conducting data lake assessments and review key implementation considerations for healthcare
This conference offers delegates an in-depth view of the latest initiatives that are simplifying and improving the clinical trial experience for the patient through data-sharing and setting industry standards. Leading individuals from biopharma partnerships and consortia come together to share the results and impact of their projects, as well as insights on areas ripe for future collaboration. The conference provides delegates with opportunities to learn from one another in regard to what works now and a forum to discuss how to leverage and build on collective experiences to advance innovation across the wider community.
We discuss:
Responsible Clinical Trials Data Sharing – Protecting Intellectual Property While Enabling Public Access to Data.
The Project Data Sphere Initiative – A New Data Sharing and Analytics Model for Cancer Research.
Clinical Trials Transformation Initiative – Advancing Central IRBs, IND Safety and a Quality by Design Approach to Clinical Trial Operations.
Lessons Learned from Pilot Studies on Risk-Based Monitoring Methodology to Identify Risk and Ensure Data Quality.
A Model to Create, Share, and Re-Use Structured Content throughout the Clinical Trial Life Cycle – The Sanofi-TransCelerate Collaboration.
CISCRP Recommendations – Communicate Trial Results to Participants to Improve Experience and Build Support for the Clinical Research Enterprise.
http://www.worldcongress.com/events/PB14014/
Mark Ramsey, Former CDAO at GlaxoSmithKline, discusses clinical trials data, health tech, and moving your company and employees forward by enhancing analytics know how.
Check out the full presentation here: https://www.tamr.com/7-steps-for-boosting-rd-outcomes/
Our INTIENT Clinical suite of tools provides simplified collection, cleansing and management of clinical data, as well as faster, improved access through smart analytics and intelligent data flow. Visit https://accntu.re/2Eaov8N to learn more.
Pharmaceutical companies can leverage data science to determine patterns, test ideas and understand the effectiveness of treatments. Moreover, it helps in finding out the solution for the industries that need them. Data Science In Pharmaceutical industry can also help track sales efforts and offer feedback received during sales. Many pharmaceutical companies use data science to generate maximum benefits. At Root Facts, we offer advanced analytics that helps pharmaceutical companies to gain real advantage and build data models for turning insights to impact at scale.
Pharmaceutical companies can leverage data science to determine patterns, test ideas and understand the effectiveness of treatments. Moreover, it helps in finding out the solution for the industries that need them. Data Science In Pharmaceutical industry can also help track sales efforts and offer feedback received during sales. Many pharmaceutical companies use data science to generate maximum benefits. At Root Facts, we offer advanced analytics that helps pharmaceutical companies to gain real advantage and build data models for turning insights to impact at scale.
Pharmaceutical companies can leverage data science to determine patterns, test ideas and understand the effectiveness of treatments. Moreover, it helps in finding out the solution for the industries that need them. Data Science In Pharmaceutical industry can also help track sales efforts and offer feedback received during sales. Many pharmaceutical companies use data science to generate maximum benefits. At Root Facts, we offer advanced analytics that helps pharmaceutical companies to gain real advantage and build data models for turning insights to impact at scale.
Pharma Focus Asia, the leading Pharma Magazine in the industry, provides the latest issue 29 that discusses latest trends happening in the pharma industry. Explore our latest issue to enhance your knowledge. Check our Digital Magazine here: https://goo.gl/FHDDtt
MedTech clinical data collection problems have been found throughout our ten years of work with over 250 medical device studies from across the globe. We keep running across these seven hazards while working in the MedTech business and clinical operations.
R&D
Drug Development
Diagnosis
Disease Prevention
Epidemic prediction
Remote Monitoring
Manufacturing
Marketing
Wrapping up
How is AI used in the pharmaceutical industry?
How does AI help in drug discovery?
Will AI lead to cheaper and better medications?
How to Create a Big Data Culture in PharmaChris Waller
A talk presented at the Big Data and Analytics conference in Boston on January 28, 2014. Emphasis on data and information sharing cultures in companies.
The convergence of separate health systems has led to
a great increase in data, which some organisations are
struggling to get to grips with. Harnessing analytic tools
and sharing knowledge is the best way forward
Similar to Data & Technology in Clinical Trials (20)
1. Philadelphia / 18-19 April 2016
Data Quality & Technology
In Clinical Trials 2016
Reserve your place at www.eyeforpharma.com/data-clinical
Deliver quality and slash timelines
with new technology and analytics
„ Maximize data quality: Enhance your trial rate
of success with the perfect protocol design
„ Become a data company: Work with pharma’s
leaders to design the analytics-driven
organization of the future
„ Harness the right analytics: Choose the right
ways to translate and adopt the hidden message
behind your data
8+ HOURS OF
FACE-TO-FACE
NETWORKING
2 DAYS WITH 100+
LEADING CLINICAL
EXPERTS
RESEARCH-LED
AGENDA SHAPED
BY INDUSTRY
THOUGHT-LEADERS
FAST TRACK
KNOWLEDGE FROM
EXECUTIVE PANELS
AND CASE STUDIES
SAVE
$500
if you register before
January 28
#DQTCT
Julian Jenkins,
Vice President,
Innovation
Performance
Technology,
GSK
Johann Proeve,
Global Development
and Strategy Advisor,
Bayer HealthCare
Immo Zadezensky,
Clinical Pharmacologist,
Professional Affairs
and Stakeholders
Engagement,
FDA
Ann Meeker-
O’Connell,
Head, Risk
Management and
External Engagement,
Johnson Johnson
Anthony G. Johnson,
Vice President,
Head Early Clinical
Development,
AstraZeneca
Barbara Tardiff,
Vice President,
Global Head Clinical
Informatics and
Innovation
Pfizer
Partnering with:
„ Focus on what matters: Achieve a structured
risk identification, analysis, and measurement
and successful transition to Risk Based
Monitoring
„ Align your objectives with your sites:
Collaborate with key stakeholders and
optimize the information exchange
2. Don’t just take
our word for it!
Here’s what attendees have said
about previous commercial and
market access events...
www.eyeforpharma.com/data-clinical
Welcome to Data Quality
Technology in Clinical Trials
Dear Colleague,
It is my distinct honor to invite you to our inaugural annual Data Quality and
Technology in Clinical Trials Summit for Pharmaceutical companies, Biotech, CROs,
IT innovators, clinical trial sites, associations, patient organizations, and regulatory
bodies.
Currently, the biggest challenges we face as an industry involve enhancing data
quality through technology to achieve study endpoints more efficiently, and
improving the chances of not only regulator, but, also payer approvals.
The advent of the internet, bringing along with it mobile health, social media,
and advanced technologies that integrate risk analytics into decision making
have allowed us to access larger amounts of relevant data, a trend that we can
leverage to solve challenges within our clinical studies. However, without the
appropriate technology and analytics to capture, link, aggregate, and distill this
data - in addition to pharma’s hesitancy to accept novel technology - we have
been struggling to take full advantage of the available capabilities.
As part of our clinical trial infinitive Data Quality and Technology in Clinical Trials,
we will present the solutions to these challenges through in depth analysis and
industry case studies enabling you to integrate the right technology and analytics
when designing and conducting clinical trials. Pharma attendees can expect to
join key stakeholders involved in the clinical trial process, and together, drive the
strategy shift and take full advantage of innovative technological advancement
capabilities.
I sincerely hope you can join us for this important gathering, and I look forward to
meeting you in Philadelphia.
NASSIM AZZI
Global Project Director
nassim@eyeforpharma.com
201-234-4804 / c: 240-406-6659
www.linkedin.com/in/nassimazzi
“The event sparked many great ideas that
we can immediately implement. The
sessions on technology and social media
trends were some of the
best forward thinking
presentations I’ve heard”.
“This event was extremely valuable for
anyone who is involved in clinical research
trial. The importance of the patient
perspective and the growth of patient-
centric trials make this conference a must
attend for many in the pharma
industry...”
“ I came away from the conference feeling
like I had some useful insights to share with
my colleagues and ideas that could be
implemented easily to further
enhance our strategy”
“It was a great collaboration of
professionals, experts and patients
to discuss issues around
engagement in research”
AGENDA AT A GLANCE
DATA QUALITY
Hear about real benefits of data
generated in digital study, measure
the risk of compromising study end-
point, and learn from the FDA when
this data cross the regulatory lines.
Utilize Quality by Design principles
to avoid data point overload and
reduce the number of protocol
amendments.
Establish a standard database
design and decrease review and
aggregation time.
Get the expertise on using big data
analytics to competitively position
medical products during trial design.
TECHNOLOGY
Get a full view of available
technology that will give you
the ability to get key insights
faster and at lower costs.
Elaborate your optimal
RBM planning strategy by
understanding the most
critical factors to base it on.
Learn about how to
program the EDC to limit the
monitoring to specific and
targeted set of data.
Use analytics and statistical
analysis to make your data
speak to you.
STAKEHOLDER
COLLABORATION
Learn how eSource is
being used to enhance
data quality and improve
operational productivity
at sites.
Hear how Industry aims to
standardize approaches to
quality management.
Learn how to get the data
transferred electronically
from the site to the
sponsor reducing your
queries.
3. Julian Jenkins,
Vice President, Innovation
Performance Technology,
GSK
Johann Proeve,
Global Development and
Strategy Advisor,
Bayer HealthCare
Immo Zadezensky,
Clinical Pharmacologist,
Professional Affairs and
Stakeholders Engagement, FDA
Barbara Tardiff,
Vice President, Global Head
Clinical Informatics and
Innovation, Pfizer
Ann Meeker-O’Connell,
Head, Risk Management and
External Engagement,
Johnson Johnson
Jonathan Helfgott,
Professor, Johns Hopkins,
Former Associate Director
for Risk Science, Intelligence
Prioritization, FDA
Christine Pierre,
President,
Society of Clinical
Research Sites (SCRS)
Rob DiCicco
Vice President, Clinical
Pharmacology Sciences and
Study Operations,
GSK
Anthony G. Johnson,
Vice President, Head,
Early Clinical Development,
AstraZeneca
Balazs Flink,
Clinical Trial Analytics Lead,
Bristol-Myers Squibb
Wendy Snyder,
Director, Clinical
Development,
Amgen
Industry Experts Include:
www.eyeforpharma.com/data-clinical
Brian Nugent,
Associate Director,
Clin Ops, Process,
Gilead Sciences
Gati Dharani,
Senior Associate Director,
Boehringer Ingelheim
Henrik Finnern,
Head of Global Patient
Advocacy Relations,
Boehringer Ingelheim
Joe Camardo,
Senior Vice President,
Celgene
Roland Rich,
Operations Expert, DevQA
Quality Compliance
Excellence, Novartis
Mike Hale,
Global Head of Biometrics,
Baxalta
Vera Pomerantseva,
Clinical Data Management,
Reporting and Analytics,
Daiichi-Sankyo
Mark Wiener,
Chief Medical Information
Officer, Temple University
Health System
Greg Koski,
President Alliance for Clinical
Research Excellence and Safety,
ACRES
Do you have
a speaker
recommendation
or topic we should
discuss?
PLEASE GET IN TOUCH!
Nassim Azzi MS MBA
Director, eyeforpharma
nassim@eyeforphama.com
201- 234 - 4804
4. SESSION 1:
Are Pharma companies transitioning
from drug makers to data companies?
KEYNOTE
Driving the Strategy Shift and unlock to value in
your clinical data
Having data that is consistent, clean, and reliable has become one of the
biggest challenges facing pharmaceutical RD. Hear from the industry’s
top C level executives how to:
Use technology combined with clinical expertise to unlock the value
behind the data, i.e. getting a clear view on the data, permitting to
understand the data better and thus facilitating earlier intervention
Navigate the challenges of adopting and applying technological
innovations in data aggregation for pharma companies
Break internal and external silos to create a more seamless network
of data sources, and analytical approaches. Who needs to be involved
when to ensure everybody has access to the data and information he
/ she needs to know
Klaus Dugi,
Chief Medical Officer,
Boehringer Ingelheim
Mark Wiener,
Chief Medical Information Officer,
Temple University Health System
KEYNOTE
A brand new source: Patient generated data
Wearable, mobile technology and e-pros have generated a new type of
patient-generated data. More are on the horizon, including home-based
blood sampling, eInformed consent and gamification. The pharma
industry has quickly seen the potential in these new sources and started
to look at it.
Hear about the best ways out there to use and validate these data
Define which data are useful and which ones are just going to add
background noise and not adding value
Hear about the challenges associated with the use of patient
generated data
Learn how this strategy will shorten the timelines and improve the
quality of the trials
Immo Zadezensky,
Clinical Pharmacologist,
Professional Affairs and
Stakeholders Engagement,
FDA
David Vulcano,
AVP Responsible Executive,
Clinical Research,
Hospital Corporation
of America (HCA)
Better understand your patient populations and
the effect of your drugs far earlier in the process
with smart use of technology
Determine if technology provides everything you need to understand
the data
Get a full view of what kind of technology is available to help you to
grasp what is going on in your trials
Prepare all what you need to facilitate a holistic overview of your data
across studies
What kind of data do you need to look at to fully understand your
trials? Patient data only?
Julian Jenkins, Vice President,
Innovation Performance
Technology, GSK
PANEL DISCUSSION
Harness technology innovation in clinical trials
Hear about the latest technology systems that are changing the
clinical landscape
Learn from a multi stakeholder panel how to champion an idea
internally and create enough influence for a widespread adoption
SESSION 2:
Apply ‘Quality by Design’ principles to
optimize trial design and reduce the
number of protocol amendments
Designing protocols while planning for future
commercialization
Strategically designing protocols while planning for future
commercialization potential requires significant collaborations with
post-marketing and commercial personnel.
Listen to from Celgene’s top management’s perspectives about how
commercial entities use clinical data to operate in a post-marketing
environment
Maximize your organization’s success by collecting the right clinical
data, and providing it to your commercial peers
Joe Camardo,
Senior Vice President, Celgene
Examine the value proposition’s implication on
trial design
A case for action starts with a clear understanding of the quality of the
data and the analytics supporting it. Appreciate the importance a value
proposition plays in:
Streamlining the activities of your clinical trial
Utilizing Quality by Design principles to avoid data point overload
Reducing the number of protocol amendments
Ann Meeker-O’Connell,
Head, Risk Management and
External Engagement,
Johnson Johnson
www.eyeforpharma.com/data-clinical
Conference Agenda
5. Monitoring patients for trials and post-market
drugs with tracker technologies
Discover evolving pharma best practices towards innovative solutions
Hear from Boehringer Ingelheim executive on how to incorporate
technology across the pharma value-chain.
Gati Dharani,
Senior Associate Director,
Boehringer Ingelheim
Reducing experience bias an encourage innovation
Many Biopharmaceutical enterprises are launching innovation initiatives,
however, face cultural challenges in adopting novel directives.
Hear from Amgen’s top innovators on how to foster an environment that
promotes cultural change, and encourages innovation
Learn how to correctly use data systems to avoid experience bias for
successfully designed protocols and reduce extra amendments
Wendy Snyder,
Director, Clinical Development,
Amgen
CASE STUDY
The effective database: Protocol-centered
database design
Rapid and effective clinical trials start with an equally effective protocol,
but none of this happens without the perfect database
Learn how companies are using the latest aggregated databases to
optimize protocols and enhance patient enrollment compatibility
Establish a standard database design along with a study specific
parameters that will help you target, collect, and include only the data
point needed for your study, decreasing review and aggregation time
Establish standards not only for the data capture part of a study or
project but rather build a standards environment for all aspects of your
development, i.e. for the protocols, for the database, for the edit checks,
the tables, graphs and listings and eventually also for the study report
Johann Proeve,
Global Development and
Strategy Advisor,
Bayer HealthCare
Use and reuse electronic health record data during
the planning phase for better upfront protocol
planning and review
Enhance protocol feasibility to reduce protocol amendment, improve
planning, and maximize your chances for achieving your trial objectives
Acquire the knowledge needed for faster patient identification and
recruitment with population targeting leading to shorter timelines
See the direct impact of the using electronic health records on the
efficiency of study conduct and reporting serious adverse events
Anthony G. Johnson,
Vice President, Head,
Early Clinical Development,
AstraZeneca
Position trial design strategically with data
Many study teams are now starting to use EMR (Electronic Medical
Record) to evaluate protocol compatibility with patient populations;
however, very few are leveraging big data analytics to competitively
optimize endpoint design
Refine your definition of big data in the context of clinical trials
Get the expertise on using big data analytics to competitively
position medical products during trial design
Barbara Tardiff,
Vice President, Global Head
Clinical Informatics and
Innovation, Pfizer
SESSION 3:
Risk based monitoring: Pave the way
for clean and reliable data
The regulatory views on risk based monitoring
Understand the root cause for U.S. FDA, MHRA and EMA to
recommend the use of this method by hearing directly from the source
CASE STUDY
Risk Based monitoring vs 100% source data
verification
Real life example on how offsite monitoring more effectively detects
issues and trends that would otherwise not been spotted with
traditional methods
Determine the most critical angle for each
study (end-point)
Learn about how to program the EDC to limit the monitoring to
specific and targeted set of data
Hear specific example on how the cost and time of monitoring
of the trial has been reduced by only focusing on data related to
efficacy endpoints reducing time needed for SDV and thus number
of visit required (MVRs)
Understand the risks of putting the focus on only the efficacy
endpoints, ignoring the other important that have the potential to
kill your study if not looked at carefully as well
www.eyeforpharma.com/data-clinical
Conference Agenda
6. Understand what makes successful risk based
monitoring
In order to perform a successful risk mitigation model, especially
when it comes to transitioning to Risk Based monitoring, a structured
risk identification, analysis, and measurement is essential.
Understand the construction of a structured model; with emphasis
on the residual risk
Case study on how Quality by Design can be integrated into the risk
mitigation management model
Create a robust risk training and manifest a culture change to
deliver a structured risk approach
Brian Nugent,
Associate Director,
Clin Ops, Process,
Gilead Sciences
Precision Medicine: The Biomarker Meets
Predictive Analytics
Today, technology is enabling the healthcare system to shift from the
universal to the individual.
Hear about the tools available that are enabling this shift.
Understand how a biomarker fits into the healthcare delivery
system
See practical examples from other industries’ best practices that
reflect the methodology
Mike Hale,
Global Head of Biometrics,
Baxalta
SESSION 4:
What is your data telling you?
Making your data speak to you
Use statistical methodology to check the quality of the different
types of data collected, and analyze them
Understand how reliable the data are, and explore various types of
data issues such as missing data, outliers and inconsistent data
Explore the use of machine learning to leverage historical
databases to explore patterns in new datasets
Understand how to arrive at signals that are truly signals and not
artefacts
The latest technology to translate complex
data to easy to read format
Create applications that only require programming once and then
can be used by the end users without programming skills
How to merge data from different sources which an end-user may
want to see in one application
Support functionality helping users to instantaneously see when an
action is required and when it is not
www.eyeforpharma.com/data-clinical
Conference Agenda
A former FDA Investigator’s perspective in quality
risk management and technology implementation
in clinical trials
Hear about the activities associated with the FDA’s review of clinical trial
data used to support marketing applications
Learn about the direct implications on selecting clinical investigator sites
for inspection, conducting inspections, and evaluating inspection results
Discover the previous use of the Risk Based Site Selection Tool and
Technology will be shared during this presentation
Jonathan Helfgott,
Professor, Johns Hopkins, Former
Associate Director for Risk Science,
Intelligence Prioritization, FDA
SESSION 5:
Optimize your information exchange
Reducing your Queries
Learn how to get the data transferred electronically from the site to the
sponsor
Best practices to estimate the number of edit checks needed before
starting the study
Integration of technology system to make the site/ sponsor exchange
of data more efficient and reduce the layers (Pharma -CRA-Site-
Monitors-CRA-Pharma)
Christine Pierre,
President, Society of Clinical
Research Sites (SCRS)
Panel Discussion: Leveraging an all-stakeholder
technology platform for clinical trials
Sense the power and innovative capabilities of multi-stakeholder
connectivity, inter-operability, and security.
Understand the role of a collaborative IT Platform in a System for
conducting clinical research that does not currently exist
Hear about the value for data storage and exchange, as well as
performance, regulatory and ethical analytic capability
Discover The “Apollo” Model
Panel organizer
Greg Koski,
President, Alliance for Clinical
Research Excellence and Safety
Participants - To be revealed soon
TransCelerate BioPharma: Transformation of
Protocols from Paper to a Digital Platform
Rob DiCicco,
Vice President, Clinical Innovation
Digital Platform Performance
Unit, GSK
7. www.eyeforpharma.com/data-clinical
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Data Quality Technology
In Clinical Trials 2016
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Deliver quality and slash timelines
with new technology and analytics
„ Maximize data quality: Enhance your trial rate
of success with the perfect protocol design
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leaders to design the analytics-driven
organization of the future
„ Harness the right analytics: Choose the right
ways to translate and adopt the hidden message
behind your data
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Julian Jenkins,
Vice President,
Innovation
Performance
Technology,
GSK
Johann Proeve,
Global Development
and Strategy Advisor,
Bayer HealthCare
Immo Zadezensky,
Clinical Pharmacologist,
Professional Affairs
and Stakeholders
Engagement,
FDA
Ann Meeker-
O’Connell,
Head, Risk
Management and
External Engagement,
Johnson Johnson
Anthony G. Johnson,
Vice President,
Head Early Clinical
Development,
AstraZeneca
Barbara Tardiff,
Vice President,
Global Head Clinical
Informatics and
Innovation
Pfizer
Partnering with:
„ Focus on what matters: Achieve a structured
risk identification, analysis, and measurement
and successful transition to Risk Based
Monitoring
„ Align your objectives with your sites:
Collaborate with key stakeholders and
optimize the information exchange