sharing ctms data between sponsors and cros
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Sharing CTMS Data Between Sponsors and CROs
June 21, 2012
Param Singh Vice President of Clinical Trial Management Solutions BioPharm Systems, Inc.
Welcome & Introductions
Param Singh Vice President of Clinical Trial Management Solutions
• 4+ years with BioPharm
• 11+ years of experience implementing Siebel Clinical
• 15+ Siebel Clinical implementations
Welcome & Introductions
CTMS Practice Services
Implementations
Manage implementations of Siebel Clinical, Siebel Clinical ASCEND, and Oracle Health Sciences LabPas.
Integrations Build interfaces between Siebel Clinical or LabPas and other clinical and non-clinical systems.
Training Develop and/or deliver standard and custom training classes and materials.
Process Guidance Provide insight, advice, and solutions to specific clinical trial management issues.
Today’s Agenda
Time (CDT) Topic
9:00-9:10 Welcome and Introductions
9:10-9:15 Clinical Trial Management Outsourcing Trend
9:15-9:20 Key Considerations for Data Sharing Methods
9:20-9:40 Discussion of Data Sharing Methods: 1. CRO Export / Sponsor Import 2. CRO Access to Sponsor CTMS 3. CRO-Sponsor CTMS Integration
9:40-9:45 Scenario-Based Analysis of Data Sharing Methods
9:45-10:00 Q&A
Current Industry Trends
• Rising costs of drug development – Average $4 billion per approved drug
• Government pressure to lower health care costs – One of the priorities of the Obama Administration
• Increased FDA scrutiny for product safety and uniqueness – Must be unquestionably safe and significantly different
• Greater demand for post-market studies – Long, complex, and expensive
• Competition from generics – Several expiring patents
Clinical Trial Management Outsourcing Trend
• Largest expense in drug development process: clinical trials – Account for nearly 70% of the total research and
development costs
• Most effective ways to lower costs: 1. Implement technology solutions
2. Outsource
• As of 2010, 50% of clinical trial activities are being outsourced
Clinical Trial Management Outsourcing Trend
• Total spending on CROs: – $9.8 billion in 2001
– $15 billion in 2007
– $24 billion in 2010
• Increasingly important role of CROs results in need for greater collaboration between sponsors and CROs – “A balance that includes ongoing communication, timely
access to data by sponsors, and project updates must be maintained in order to achieve successful relationships.”
-- Frost & Sullivan Research Analyst, Rinat Ariely
Choosing a Data Sharing Method: Key Considerations
• Data Turnaround – How quickly sponsor needs clean data available to them
• Resources – Sponsor/CRO resources available for scrubbing and/or converting data
– Sponsor resources available for training CRO users of CTMS
• Budget – Human resources, software licenses, system integrations
• Work Volume – Number of CROs involved, number of resources involved at each CRO,
number of studies being outsourced, complexity of studies
Method 1: CRO Export / Sponsor Import
Data is entered into the CRO CTMS, scrubbed by the CRO, exported from the CRO CTMS, converted to fit the sponsor CTMS requirements, and imported into the sponsor CTMS.*
*Process takes place for each data update for each outsourced study
Data Entry in CRO CTMS
Data Scrubbing by CRO
Export from CRO CTMS
Data Conversion
Data Import into Sponsor CTMS
Method 1: CRO Export / Sponsor Import
Benefits
• Inexpensive
• Easy to modify export/import formats
• Minimal technical skills required
• Low risk of sharing unclean data
• Low risk of sharing confidential data
Method 1: CRO Export / Sponsor Import
Drawbacks
• Data updates depend on clear communication between sponsor and CRO in an often hectic environment
• Mostly manual process – Need personnel and time to scrub and convert data before each import
for each outsourced study
• No automated data validation prior to importing – Potential for large number of errors to be investigated and corrected
• Data availability to sponsor can have long turnaround times
• Never any real-time data in sponsor CTMS
Method 2: CRO Access to Sponsor CTMS
Create Roles
• Create user roles in sponsor CTMS
• For each type of contracted resource performing data entry
Create Accounts
• Create accounts and assign roles to accounts
• For each contractor; at each CRO
Provide Credentials
• Provide usernames and passwords
• To each contractor; at each CRO
Direct Data Entry
• Each CRO contractor enters data directly into sponsor CTMS
Method 2: CRO Access to Sponsor CTMS
Benefits
• No technical skills required; only the ability to use the sponsor CTMS
• No export/import necessary
• No integration costs to incur
• No error logs to investigate and resolve
• All data is real-time in sponsor CTMS
Method 2: CRO Access to Sponsor CTMS
Drawbacks
• Requires time and resources to train personnel at each CRO
• Per-user license costs can be quite expensive
• Increases burden on CTMS Administrators to manage user roles and accounts
• Data standards can be difficult to enforce
• No opportunity for CRO to review data before it is made available to sponsor
• No error logs generated; errors must be found manually
• Mistakes must be corrected in sponsor’s production CTMS
Method 3: CRO-Sponsor CTMS Integration
• Sponsor defines desired: – Data points
– Business rules
• Sponsor CTMS integrated with each CRO CTMS
CRO CTMS’s
• Data entry
Integration Interface
• Pre-defined data points
• Business rules
Sponsor CTMS
• Auto-populated
• No human intervention
Method 3: CRO-Sponsor CTMS Integration
Benefits
• Scalable solution – No need to train CRO personnel on CTMS use; CRO resources can scale
up, scale down, or change as needed without impacting data sharing
– If designed in standard format, can be used with as many CROs as desired
• Saves time otherwise spent on data entry, data conversions, etc.
• Ensures higher data quality across all studies and integrated CRO partners
• Automatically checks for errors; sends notifications when found
• Provides clean data to sponsor as quickly as desired – Interface schedule is determined by sponsor
Method 3: CRO-Sponsor CTMS Integration
Drawbacks
• Can be expensive to implement
• CRO and sponsor resources still required to address errors
• Requires CRO agreement and cooperation
• If not designed using a standard format, could lock sponsor into using specific CROs
Scenario-Based Analysis of Data Sharing Methods
Scenario
“Superdrug” is a medium-sized pharmaceutical company with two products in the market and a handful of promising compounds in the pipeline. They currently manage all of their clinical trials in-house using Siebel Clinical, but they realized a few months ago that that model will not support their anticipated growth. So they underwent the process of identifying and qualifying CROs, and they have selected 3 finalists. They are now trying to decide the best method for collecting their CTMS data from these new partners.
Scenario-Based Analysis of Data Sharing Methods
Analysis of Key Considerations
Consideration Superdrug’s Situation
Data Turnaround Need data within 48 hours, but prefer to have it sooner.
Resources Limited internal resources available to deliver training; not a very tech savvy group; minimal support from IT department.
Budget Modest budget available, but required to provide air-tight business case for every major expenditure.
Work Volume All pipeline drugs are first-in-science, so upcoming trials will be long and complex; anticipating needing intense, lengthy support from CRO partners.
Scenario-Based Analysis of Data Sharing Methods
Selected Method: CRO-Sponsor CTMS Integration
• Send RFPs to 3 finalist CROs – Integration plan
– Reduced rates for long-term, exclusive contracts
– Include SLAs
• Use best proposal to draft business case for integration – Include savings projections
– Emphasize scalability, efficiencies, and data quality
• Once approved, choose an integration vendor who will build the integration in a standard format that can be used with any CRO
Q&A
Closing
Thank you for attending!
This webinar will be posted on www.biopharm.com
within 24 hours
psingh@biopharm.com
+1 877 654 0033
+44 (0) 1865 910200
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