Restructuring the National Cancer Clinical Trials Research Enterprise - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 26
About This Presentation
Title:

Restructuring the National Cancer Clinical Trials Research Enterprise

Description:

Proposed 22 initiatives designed to support a transparent clinical trials ... Ray Petryshyn, LeeAnn Jensen, Steve Krosnick, Jean Lynn, Anna Levy, Sarah Fabian ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:39
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 27
Provided by: dfr89
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Restructuring the National Cancer Clinical Trials Research Enterprise


1
Restructuring the National Cancer
Clinical Trials Research Enterprise

CTSA Clinical Research Management Workshop
  • Sheila A. Prindiville, MD, MPH
  • Coordinating Center for Clinical Trials
  • National Cancer Institute
  • June 22, 2009

2
Clinical Trials Working Group
  • Proposed 22 initiatives designed to support a
    transparent clinical trials enterprise that
    integrates the individually strong components of
    the current system into a cross-disciplinary,
    scientifically-driven, cooperative research effort

3
CTWG Restructuring Initiatives
  • Prioritization/Scientific Quality
  • Involve all stakeholders in design and
    prioritization of clinical trials that address
    the most important questions, using the tools of
    modern cancer biology
  • Coordination
  • Standardization
  • Operational Efficiency
  • Enterprise-Wide/Integrated Management

4

Components of NCIs Clinical Trials System
  • Cooperative Groups
  • Community Clinical Oncology Programs
  • Early Drug Development Program of the
    Investigational Drug Branch
  • Cancer Centers
  • Specialized Programs of Research Excellence
    (SPOREs)
  • Program Project and Investigator Initiated Grants

5
Scientific Steering Committee (SSC) System
  • Members are leading cancer experts and advocates
    from outside the Institute as well as NCI senior
    investigators who meet regularly to
  • increase the transparency and openness of the
    trial design and prioritization process
  • enhance patient advocate and community oncologist
    involvement in clinical trial design and
    prioritization
  • convene Clinical Trials Planning Meetings to
    identify critical questions, unmet needs, and
    prioritize key strategies.
  • Leverage current Intergroup, Cooperative Group,
    SPORE, and Cancer Center structures by
  • increasing information exchange at an early stage
    of trial development
  • increasing the efficiency of clinical trial
    collaboration
  • reducing trial redundancy (phase II and phase
    III)
  • developing, evaluating, and prioritizing concepts
    for phase III and large phase II clinical trials.

6
Scientific Steering Committee (SSC) System
  • Investigational Drug Steering Committee (IDSC)
    for strategic input to NCI for the
    prioritization of phase I and II trials for new
    agents
  • Disease-Specific Scientific Steering Committees
    (SSCs) for prioritization of phase III trials
    and selected phase II studies
  • Symptom Management and Health-Related Quality of
    Life Steering Committee (SxQOL) for symptom
    management trials and patient reported outcomes
    expertise
  • Patient Advocate Steering Committee (PASC) to
    share best practices for advocates across the
    SSCs and ensure concept evaluation considers the
    patient community

http//restructuringtrials.cancer.gov/steering/ove
rview
7
CTWG Restructuring Initiatives
  • Prioritization/Scientific Quality
  • Coordination
  • Coordinate clinical trials research through
    data sharing and providing incentives for
    collaboration
  • Standardization
  • Standardize informatics infrastructure and
    clinical research tools and evaluate the
    feasibility of common clinical trials agreement
    language
  • Operational Efficiency
  • Enterprise-Wide/Integrated Management

8
  • START clauses Standard Terms of Agreement for
    Research Trials
  • Collaborative project with Life Sciences
    Consortium of the CEO Roundtable, Cancer
    Centers, and Cooperative Groups to developed
    common language as starting point for
    negotiations
  • Project Rationale
  • Negotiation of clinical trials agreements is a
    key barrier to timely initiation of trials
  • Perception that negotiated agreements contain
    clauses reflecting common key agreement concepts
  • Perception that reaching common ground for each
    agreement requires unnecessary duplication of
    effort that delays trial initiation

www.ceoroundtableoncancer.org
9
Project Methods
  • Involved legal and business representatives 17
    Life Science Consortium company and 26 Cancer
    Center members
  • Obtained copies of 78 clinical trials agreements
    from participating organizations (49 redacted
    final negotiated agreements and 29 templates)
  • Agreements included company-sponsored and
    investigator initiated trials
  • Identified key clauses through discussions with
    legal and business representatives intellectual
    property, study data, publication rights, subject
    injury, confidentiality, indemnification,
    biological samples

10
Project Methods cont.
  • Identified 45 concepts in the 7 key clauses
  • Captured the exact language that embodied these
    concepts in the 78 agreements
  • Organized agreement language into categories
    representing embodied concept
  • Analyzed results for similarities and differences
    in key concepts across final negotiated
    agreements and templates

11
Project Findings
  • Final negotiated agreements showed greater than
  • 67 convergence on the vast majority of
    concepts analyzed
  • Developed common language with input from legal
    and business participants
  • Language is a starting point for negotiations
  • Toolkit at http//ccct.nci.nih.gov
  • Biological clauses and terms for Cooperative
    Group studies under development

12
(No Transcript)
13
CTWG Restructuring Initiatives
  • Prioritization/Scientific Quality
  • Coordination
  • Standardization
  • Operational Efficiency
  • Use resources most efficiently through
    improved cost-effectiveness and accrual rates,
    and more rapid trial initiation
  • Enterprise-Wide/Integrated Management

14
Operational Efficiency Initiative
  • Identify the institutional barriers that
    prolong the time from concept approval to accrual
    of the first patient

Dilts, D. M. et al. J Clin Oncol 244553-4557
2006
15
Total Processes to Open a Cooperative Group Study
Comprehensive Cancer Center Processes
Cooperative Group Processes
Median 784 to 808 days Range 435-1604 days
Median 116 to 252 days Range 21-836 days
Depending Upon Site, based on the Phase III
trials studied JCO 2009 27 (11)
1761-66 Clinical Cancer Research 2008 14(11)
3427-33
16
Process Steps for Opening aPhase III Cooperative
Group Study
Process Step Counts
The process steps reported only show one loop
in the process. Actual development frequently
includes multiple loops
JCO 2009 27 (11) 1761-66
17
Actual Accrual Per Trial RangesComprehensive
Cancer Centers
18
Operational Efficiency Initiative
  • Identify the institutional barriers that
    prolong the time from concept approval to accrual
    of the first patient, and develop solutions for
    overcoming these barriers

Dilts, D. M. et al. J Clin Oncol 244553-4557
2006
19
Operational Efficiency Working Group
  • Charged by the NCIs Clinical Trials and
    Translational Research Advisory Committee (CTAC)
    to recommend strategies for reducing the time for
    activation of NCI-supported clinical trials
  • Co-Chairs Gabriel Hortobagyi, MD (MDACC) and
    James Doroshow, DCTD, NCI
  • 63 members representing the broad oncology
    community

20
OEWG Mission
  • Phase I Develop strategies and implementation
    tactics for reducing the time for initiation of
    Cooperative Group and Cancer Center trials
  • Reduce study activation time by at least 50
  • Optimize NCI, sponsor, and investigator
    interactions to reduce delays
  • Phase II Develop strategies and implementation
    tactics for reducing the time for completion of
    Cooperative Group and Cancer Center trials
  • Increase the percentage of studies successful in
    reaching accrual target
  • Assure timely completion of studies

21
OEWG Trial Activation Situations
  • Cooperative Group Phase II and III Trials
  • Cooperative Group Investigational Drug Branch
    (IDB) Trials
  • Cancer Centers Investigator-Initiated Trials
  • Cancer Centers Cooperative Group Phase II and
    Phase III Trials
  • Cancer Centers Investigational Drug Branch
    (IDB) Trials

22
Topics Outside OEWG Purview
  • Industry sponsored trials
  • OHRP regulated issues (i.e., consent forms)
  • CMS coverage determinations
  • State laws and requirements
  • Congressional funding mandates

23
OEWG Progress
  • For Cancer Centers and Cooperative Groups there
    is
  • Agreement on the components of the trial
    activation process to be examined
  • Agreement that timelines for opening all of the
    clinical trial types must be reduced by about 50
  • Agreement on existing barriers to speedy trial
    activation
  • Agreement that to substantively improve trial
    activation timelines will require major changes
    in every component of the system

24
OEWG Next Steps Timeline
  • Refine and prioritize recommendations
  • Develop implementation plans for prioritized
    recommendations
  • Next OEWG Meeting - September 16-17
  • Prepare report by end of 2009

25
Integrated Management
Extramural Clinical Trials Community
Clinical Trials and Translational Research
Advisory Committee (CTAC)
Coordinating Center for Clinical Trials (CCCT)
NCI Director
Clinical and Translational Research Operations
Committee (CTROC)
Divisions, Centers, and Offices
26
  • CCCT Staff Deborah Jaffe, Ray Petryshyn,
    LeeAnn Jensen, Steve Krosnick, Jean Lynn, Anna
    Levy, Sarah Fabian
  • START clauses
  • Judy Hautala and Dale Shoemaker from Science
    Technology Policy Institute (STPI)
  • Hogan and Hartson
  • Legal, business, and tech transfer staff from
    academic medical centers, cooperative groups, and
    industry

Acknowledgement
http//ccct.nci.nih.gov
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com