A Trial Activation Initiative to Accelerate Trial Opening in an Academic Medical Center

Therapeutic Innovation & Regulatory Science
Yun Jung ChoiTae Won Kim

Abstract

Delays in trial opening should be considered critical for the sake of not only the sponsor but the patients, as they may result in inequities of care. The Asan Medical Center, in Seoul, Korea, implemented a trial activation initiative in July 2012, in an aim to expedite the trial initiation timeline. Time intervals between trial initiation steps and the rate of institutional review board (IRB) and clinical trial agreement (CTA) parallel submission were assessed. A higher rate of parallel IRB and CTA submissions was observed after initiative implementation (25.5% vs 52.3%; P < .001). Initiative applications were shown to significantly accelerate the median trial opening time, from 114 to 81 days ( P < .001). Strategic processing of parallel submissions greatly shortened the median time required for trial initiation from 117 to 61 days compared with sequential submissions ( P < .001). A trial activation initiative including parallel IRB and CTA submissions is an effective tool for accelerating trial commencements.

References

Sep 30, 2006·Journal of Clinical Oncology : Official Journal of the American Society of Clinical Oncology·David M Dilts, Alan B Sandler
Nov 27, 2008·Nature Clinical Practice. Oncology·Vincent T DeVita
Feb 21, 2009·The New England Journal of Medicine·Seth W GlickmanKevin A Schulman
Sep 12, 2012·Current Clinical Pharmacology·Melvin GeorgeAdithan Chandrasekaran

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Citations

Jul 1, 2016·Therapeutic Innovation & Regulatory Science·Yun Jung ChoiTae Won Kim
Feb 26, 2016·Trials·Diego A MartinezBenjamin Djulbegovic
Jan 11, 2019·Clinical Trials : Journal of the Society for Clinical Trials·Colene BentleyStuart Peacock
Sep 23, 2020·Therapeutic Innovation & Regulatory Science·Jennifer LaiKit N Simpson

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