Successful clinical trials are an orchestral performance
When I studied pharmacy at Rutgers University, I loved the science but I couldn’t see myself working in a lab environment. I wanted to interact with people and do something where I could apply the science in a communal setting. Clinical trials seemed to be a good fit. I first started my career as a clinical trial monitor. At that time, clinical trials were very different to what they are today. Trial data was collected by filling NCR (carbon-copy) forms. Monitors would travel to the sites to review and bring the handwritten data back to be entered into a data management system by a data entry team member, and then reviewed and queried by data managers. It could take months to obtain and clean just a small segment of clinical trial data. Randomization occurred by pulling drug kits off the shelf in numeric order as each new patient was enrolled. There were no systems in place to enable centralized randomization, complex stratification, or adaptive trials that can impact the quantity and order in which kits are dispensed. In fact, running a global trial was nearly impossible. The introduction of technologies like EDC (electronic data capture) and IRT (interactive response technology) were key enablers of the global trial, trial efficiency, and the more advanced trial designs that we see today.I was fortunate to work for one of the first companies to bring IRT technology to the clinical trials industry: a startup called Interactive Clinical Technologies Inc (ICTI). ICTI developed IRT for patient enrollment, randomization, and site inventory management. In 2000, the company was acquired by the Almac Group, which is where I’ve enjoyed working since. Almac is a contract development and manufacturing organization that provides a wide range of services, ranging from preclinical formulation all the way through to commercially-marketed product distribution. Over the course of my career, I’ve been fortunate to witness a dramatic shift in the way biopharma thinks about its R&D activities. As a result of the advancements in clinical trial technologies and methodologies over the last 25 years, specialization has emerged throughout the industry and paved the way for contract vendors and partners to act as functional service providers for esoteric areas of clinical development. This dynamic can add to the complexity of running modern trials and highlights the essential need for strong stakeholder management and partnership development. Making sure everyone is on the same page can be one of the most challenging aspects of clinical trial conduct – especially at a time when numerous protocol amendments and adaptive trial designs are becoming commonplace. To further exacerbate the complexity, stakeholders and functional contributors often operate in a very fragmented fashion, each working in their own silo, and usually only with the information needed to ensure their section of the choir is singing in tune. I’ve come to appreciate the importance of strong leadership, project management, and communication by the clinical trial manager. To orchestrate a successful clinical trial, the clinical trial manager must be the commanding maestro of the orchestra of specialized vendors that they conduct.
