Industry Trends

Loading...

Clinical Research
Off-shoring: A Country Attractiveness Index for Clinical Trials

By Mark P. Mathieu
For many years, pharmaceutical companies have been off-shoring manufacturing operations to lower-cost countries. Healthy margins and strong risk aversion have afforded pharmaceutical companies the luxury of staying close to home, for all but manufacturing activities. As financial pressures increase, pharmaceutical executives are finding that going offshore is not only less risky than it once was, but also too attractive to ignore.  Read More



Tailored Treatments Require New Trial Design Rules



Loading...

By Deb Borfitz

Aug 4, 2009 | When the clinical feasibility of molecular targeted agents (MTAs) is being tested, “faster answers” will require better use of creative trial designs and approaches, says Timothy Yeatman, president and CSO of M2Gen.

Most MTAs developed to date “don’t really target the right population” and thus patient response can be unpredictable. Clinical improvement also tends to be “incremental” when the MTA is taken in combination with an existing, fairly effective standard-of-care drug, as is typically required in phase II–III oncology trials.

M2Gen plans to improve the situation. The company supports the partnership between H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center & Research Institute and drug maker Merck in a personalized medicine initiative coined “Total Cancer Care.” (see, “Merck-Moffitt Partnership Breaks Down Silos”)  To date, the for-profit, wholly-owned subsidiary of Moffitt Cancer Center has collected tumor tissues from more than 36,000 patients in an effort to identify the biological markers unique to each tumor.

In the coming months, the Total Cancer Care Database will allow M2Gen investigators to identify patients with the desirable phenotype before a trial accrues, rather than testing each patient for a possible biomarker once a trial is underway. Doing so, Yeatman says, “has the potential to halve the time it takes to accrue [trial participants] and double the response rate of [tested] drugs.”

A similar database, known as the International Genomics Consortium, is headquartered at the non-profit Translational Genomics Research Institute (TGen) in Phoenix. Behind TGen’s drive to find the right drug for the right patient is the dismal 10–20% success rate for oncology treatment regimes based on tumor type, says Ramesh Ramanathan, medical director of TGen Clinical Research Services at Scottsdale Healthcare.

“Analyzing the huge amounts of data generated from molecular and genomic profiling of tumors and making it fit for the individual patient is critical,” says Ramanathan, and moreover, “requires close collaboration with experienced bioinformatics scientists.”

Even in phase I studies, Ramanathan says it is increasingly important to more selectively screen would-be study participants. Typically, therapies get tested across cancer types. Genentech veered from this norm by intentionally enrolling patients with advanced basal cell cancer in phase I trials of its targeted therapy GDC0449. The rationale is that 90% or more of these patients harbor aberrant Hedgehog genes the agent is known to inhibit.

Abandoning traditional trial design rules can also help make studies of MTAs less costly to conduct and more palatable to participants, says Yeatman. In phase I studies, for instance, it may make more sense to pinpoint the molecular drug effect (the so-called “target effect”) via pharmacodynamic assays than quantify the maximum tolerable dose.

Investigators might also want to measure surrogates for biological activity rather than escalate dosage to the point of toxicity. Many MTAs do not cause major side effects even at huge doses, “so we don’t learn anything” by escalating dosage, says Ramanathan. The important question is whether or not the drug gets into a cancer cell and affects its function. That means greater reliance on MRI scans, specialized PET scans, biopsies, and blood tests to see if proteins are being secreted by the tumor.

During a typical phase II, single-arm study, “response rate” may be an inadequate endpoint because the MTA—however efficacious it proves to be—isn’t getting compared head-to-head with the standard of care, says Yeatman. A randomized phase II trial would take a lot longer but provide better data. It’s not necessarily a worthwhile tradeoff. The compromise is to start with a single-arm study, “to see if you’re even in the ballpark” and, if so, follow up with a randomized phase II trial against the standard of care.

Ramanathan notes that MTAs often don’t shrink a cancer but rather make it inactive—sometimes for a long time. “You may have an effective agent and not realize it.” For this reason, older chemotherapy drugs are now being eyed as potential targeted agents.

It’s probably best to avoid measuring clinical effects directly related to the level of target inhibition, says Yeatman. “A cancer may have multiple molecular pathways that a tumor cell can use to escape a particular drug.” Unless the cancer happens to be addicted to a particular pathway or is a genetic mutation, a highly targeted MTA may actually be counter-productive.

 

Click here to log in.

0 Comments

Add Comment

Text Only 2000 character limit

Page 1 of 1

White Papers & Special Reports

oracle_clinical
eClinical Visions - Clinical Trial Management: Enabling Operational Efficiency
Sponsored by Oracle

Read how contributors from Genzyme, Duke Clinical Research Institute, Accenture, Oracle Health Sciences and others address some of the most pertinent challenges facing the biopharmaceutical industry including... Globalization of clinical trials driven by the need to reduce costs and recruit participants; greater outsourcing; escalating regulatory demands; increased trial complexity; and post-marketing studies. Download this paper to gain new insight into:

  • Recent progress made in addressing these challenges
  • Expert opinion on clinical trial management systems (CTMS) for improving trial efficiencies
  • How to cut trial costs and enhance the productivity of trial participants


oracle_RDC
Remote Data Capture – Acquisition and Analysis
Sponsored by Oracle

Today nearly half of all clinical trials are conducted electronically, and rising! Electronic Data Capture (EDC) technology provides industry-wide opportunities, along with challenges, that are being addressed. In this informative report industry experts and users from Pfizer, PPD, C3i and Oracle Health Sciences discuss the impact of EDC and its newest zero footprint; online iteration.  It can used anywhere, world-wide, where the Internet is available while placing greater onus on global trial support. The critical focus of this new technology is that it must support the work of the person at the heart of the clinical trial system– the investigator. Download this report to learn more about:

  • Trends and Issues in an Electronic Clinical Data Management World
  • The New Remote Data Capture Paradigm 
  • Improving and Monitoring Clinical Data Management in the eClinical Age
  • Optimizing and Supporting Remote Data Capture


oracle_video
Technology Video Report: A Day in the Life with Remote Data Capture (Next-Gen EDC)
Sponsored by Oracle
See why Oracle Remote Data Capture (RDC) Onsite is the next generation in electronic data capture with its user-friendly method to collect, clean, review, and verify clinical trial data. Providing unprecedented performance with real-time data capture, Oracle RDC Onsite simplifies source data verification. With a clear, consistent view of study data across all sites, the benefits include reduced monitoring time, decreased queries and discrepancies, and less time to database lock.



Life Science Webcasts & Podcasts

Predict or Perish! Shaping the Practices of Clinical Trials
Decisionview webinarSponsored by:  DecisionView

Predictive Analytics are a key differentiator in running your clinical trials successfully through 2010 and beyond. They will help you to optimize your patient enrollment, reduce your clinical operations costs and minimize your financial liability in the clinical supply chain. In this session, you will:
• Learn what predictive analytics are and what they are not
• Understand why you need predictive analytics to run your clinical trials, and
• Explore how predictive analytics will shape the future of clinical trials

Download Now. 

 



More Podcasts

Job Openings

The University of Washington Department of Genome Sciences is seeking a LINUX SYSTEMS ENGINEERING MANAGER to lead a team in a diverse scientific computing environment that includes multiple HPC systems, petascale storage, and custom application servers. Apply online at UW Hires for req number 61505.  http://www.washington.edu/admin/hr/jobs/

Loading...

For reprints and/or copyright permission, please contact The YGS Group, 3650 West Market Street, York, PA;

(717) 505-9701 ext. 125, or via email to Ashley.Zander@theYGSgroup.com.