The 2nd Annual Conference on Accelerating Patient Recruitment in Clinical Trials, held in London 27-28 March 2006 and organised by SMi, brought together speakers and delegates from a wide range of pharmaceutical and medical device companies and Contract Research Organisations (CROs). Many of the speakers enjoy direct responsibilities for ensuring patient studies are optimised within their companies, and that they run to budget and to agreed timelines. Over the course of the conference it emerged that, although speakers often shared similar patient recruitment problems, the approaches they take to address these issues now vary considerably between companies, as do their relative success rates. Some companies have replaced inefficient large advertising campaigns (that seldom produced sufficient patients anyway) with streamlined evidence-based patient recruitment methodologies that are adaptively agile to the particular requirements of each individual trial. Further, it became clear that, to assist both patient recruitment and investigator support and morale, 'best-practice' companies have been able to identify optimum managerial structures for handling their multinational clinical trials across large numbers of investigator sites across many countries. They have also been able to identify the factors that predispose to higher levels of patient recruitment and retention in different countries, and the most cost-effective solutions. Several companies shared how they benefit by the use of a range of support tools (patient databases, metrics and benchmarking, and cost-effectiveness analyses) to make better choices about their patient recruitment strategies (and their selection of investigator site where this impinges on rates of recruitment). Subsequently, some have now found out what works well and what doesn't. The audience seemed fascinated to learn by these experiences.
The issue of public and patient perceptions of clinical trials was at the forefront of many of the presentations, since a very high-profile incident during a drug trial, news of which immediately reached television and newspaper audiences globally, had occurred only days before in a nearby hospital. Everyone was aware that this crucially important new public image onslaught poignantly affects the livelihoods of almost all the speakers and delegates in the auditorium. This is because, as industry patient recruitment specialists, and as individuals, their future success depends on their own abilities to try to regain supportive perceptions of clinical trials within the general public. They are also aware that they now need to come up with the most effective reasoning for their patients to ensure they remain enrolled in existing trials, and to find the best ways to persuade patients to enrol in adequate numbers in all of their new prospective studies.
Contents
2nd Annual Conference on Accelerating Patient Recruitment in Clinical Trials - Programme
Introduction
About the author
Background
The importance of influencing public and patient perceptions of clinical trials on global and local levels
Strategies for accelerating patient recruitment
Strategies for increasing patient retention
Conclusions
References
Further reading
About The Author
Formerly senior lecturer in paediatric cardiology at Great Ormond Street Hospital in London, Dr Richard Wyse now has joint commercial and academic careers. He is the author of over 100 medical and scientific papers, and pharmaceutical industry articles in journals. He has also written four industry books, and several independent evidence-based medicine reports in various therapeutic areas. Commercially, he has worked for a CRO as Director of European Health Economics, and as Medical Director for a US pharmaceutical IT company, and a medical device company. He has been involved in a wide variety of industry clinical trials and several other areas of drug development for many years. Academically, he is currently a visiting professor in Saudi Arabia and President-Elect of the Division of Genetics at the Royal Society of Medicine. He is on the editorial board of several journals.
Richard has spoken at many academic and international pharmaceutical and medical device conferences, and has chaired 25 of them. Notably, he was global chairman of a major cardiac patient database initiative that involved 2700 hospitals worldwide, speaking at national conferences in a large number of first- and third-world countries. In this capacity he reported a landmark paper on risk prediction and outcomes in more than 600,000 US patients.
Conference Programme
Day one
Chairperson: John Needham, Chief Operating Offi cer, Patient Recruitment Strategy, LLC, USA
Keynote Address: Accelerating Patient Recruitment The Eisai standpoint
Karen Foley, Senior Director, Clinical Operations, Eisai Global Clinical Development, Eisai
Public Perceptions Of Clinical Research Studies: A global survey conducted in 2005
Rowena Dickerson, Associate Director, Fast4wD Ogilvy
Maslow's Hierarchy Of Needs And Clinical Trial Participation: Assessing, understanding and addressing the needs of potential study participants and their families
John Needham, Chief Operating Officer, Patient Recruitment Strategy, LLC
Accelerating The Patient Recruitment Process: The application of response technologies
Dr Simon Chapman, Chairman, essentiapharm
Getting The Message Right: Strategic And Tactical Application Of Marketing Practices To The Clinical Trial Arena: Global case studies for accessing and retaining the right patients
Janet Jones, Director, Patient Access & Retention, Kendle Kate Spencer, Business Unit Director, Langland
Global Patient Recruitment: Practical considerations and case studies
Beth Harper, Vice President, D. Anderson & Company
Operational And Legislative Aspects Of Paediatric Recruitment For Clinical Trials: New regulations stimulating paediatric research
Dr Richard Tiner, Medical Director, Association of the British Pharmaceutical Industry (ABPI)
Retention Of Patients In Clinical Trials: How do you avoid patient drop-out?
Jim Kremidas, Global Enrolment Optimisation, Eli Lilly
Day two
Chairperson: Beth Harper, Vice President, D. Anderson & Company, USA
Site Selection: Research site selection and evaluation
Dr Sue Tempest, Site Implementation & Training Manager, Merck Research Laboratories
Investigator Site Networks In Continental Europe: Implementing a recruitment campaign focusing on Germany
Dr Hans-Detlev Stahl, Chief Executive Officer, Clinpharm
Implementing And Driving Success Of International Patient Recruitment And Retention Strategies Through The Conventional Clinical Research Process At The Investigative Site: The CRO perspective
Tom Ruane, Director, Patient Recruitment, Quintiles
Country Study Managers: The Cornerstone for Successful Multinational Recruitment 2006 Survey - results and analysis
Jaime Cohen, Enrolment Manager, BBK Worldwide
The Role Of The Regulator: What did directives ever do for us?
Dr Malcolm Barratt-Johnson, Medical Assessor, Clinical Trials Unit, Medicines & Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA)
Methods And Metrics For Patient Recruitment Against Protocol Design: Recruitment success by design
Dr Alan Wade, Director, Community Pharmaceutical Services (CPS) Research
Candidate Qualification And Measurement Of Campaign Performance Metrics: A technological approach
Dr Bill Byrom, Product Strategy Director, ClinPhone Group Ltd
Recruiting Adults With Normal Lipid But Elevated Crp Levels: Budgetary implications on recruiting adults without disease and unknown CRP levels
Dr Ian Smith, Medical Director, Synexus
Patient Recruitment Best Practices Among Top Pharmacos: The Wise Investments initiative
Donald Greene, Vice President, Veritas Medicine