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Decentralized Clinical Trials in the Pandemic Era and Beyond

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There is a paradigm shift happening now in how clinical trials are being conducted. With the onset of COVID-19, physical access to the patients has been challenging, resulting in challenges in collecting, analyzing, and monitoring patients. However, every adversity comes with an opportunity. The pharmaceutical industry saw decentralized clinical trials (DCT) as a way to maintain clinical trial conductivity without any disruption.

Traditionally, when patients are enrolled in a clinical trial, they must travel to the designated site. And it’s not unheard of for someone to have to travel two or more hours for a visit. The investigator or a study team member would record the clinical data in the case report form. In DCT, this focus is shifted primarily to having less dependency on keeping the trial centralized and moving the clinical data collection activity to where the patient is located.

Decentralized trials are not new, and sponsors have been exploring and conducting these trials before the pandemic. In 2011, Pfizer successfully completed its first Decentralized Clinical Trial, “Research on Electronic Monitoring of OAB Treatment Experience (REMOTE),” where the Clinical trial Data was collected using mobiles phones and web technologies. Since then, significant progress has been made in this field, and DCTs have garnered much more attention since the beginning of COVID-19.

One major challenge of conducting any clinical trial is the complexity of recruiting patients. According to a 2019 study, 80% of clinical trials are estimated to fail to meet their required patient enrollment on time. Several factors can limit patient recruitment, namely:

  • Finding the right patient: Sponsors and CROs are often not equipped to identify patients that meet the eligibility criteria
  • Patient logistics: Volunteers are reluctant to enroll in a study that requires frequent travel to the clinics/sites, finding daycare for children, losing pay at work, etc.

Modern digital data capture methods and technologies, including e-Consent, wearable medical devices, eCOA/ePRO, online surveys, telehealth visits, medication home delivery, local lab testing, and remote monitoring, enable DCTs and help alleviate many issues that prevent patients from participating and completing trials.

Advantages of DCT:

  1. Choice: Patients who would otherwise hesitate to join a clinical trial could now have an option to enroll without worrying too much about logistics
  2. Convenience: In a “virtual” trial, the data can be accessed anytime, anywhere with 24×7 support.
  3. Diversity: They enable participation from different population groups like the elderly, poor people, people living in remote locations, or minority ethnic groups that traditionally may not opt-in for a study.
  4. Collaboration: Using digital tools, all stakeholders can collaborate on a near real-time basis, which reduces redundant back-and-forth communication.
  5. Cost: With faster enrollment, the clinical study can be completed in a shorter duration, leading to significant cost benefits for the sponsors.

Even with the many advantages of DCTs, a few challenges still need to be addressed for widespread adoption to happen. For one, regulatory guidance for DCTs needs to be more precise. Second, as wearable devices have recently gained traction, it is important to create an ecosystem where data from different devices and technologies can be standardized, validated, and exchanged without data integrity issues. Another challenge is training site personnel and patients on using these digital tools/devices to ensure full compliance with the study protocol.

While there are challenges, the industry is quickly moving towards adopting DCTs. According to an Oracle Survey, “with patients unable to physically visit clinical trial sites, 76% of survey respondents noted that the pandemic sped their adoption of decentralized clinical trial methods. The same percentage (76%) reported at least some of their trials have already been decentralized, and 38% indicated more than half is decentralized.” This clearly indicates how the industry is swiftly evolving to the changing needs of conducting clinical trials and keeping patients at the center of this evolution.

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Bhanu Garg

Bhanu Garg is a Sr. Business Consultant on Perficient's Clinical Operations team. With over a decade of life sciences experience, he has worked with global pharmaceutical companies on various projects, including business process automation (BPA), robotic process automation (RPA), content management, and data migration.

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