Expectations for the time it takes to complete a vaccine clinical trial have been radically raised by the mRNA vaccines’ successes.
There are three key factors that are essential to the successful completion of a vaccine clinical trial:
Site-based studies have been challenged on all three fronts. They are subject to limited recruitment pools, greater inconvenience for participants, and fewer regular check-ins.
In the words of a patient who took part in one of Moderna’s COVID-19 vaccine trials, the experience of participating in the study was “exhausting” and required “seven visits to a hospital, 24 phone calls, dozens of diary entries, repeated batteries of questions about [his] private life, five blood draws, and numerous nasopharyngeal swabs.” While some of these requirements may be unavoidable, others can be minimized or made less arduous through the decentralization of certain steps in the trial process, improving the overall experience for the participant as well as the quality of the outcomes.
Some sponsors are hesitant to adopt models that don’t feature continued, direct interactions between provider and participant, fearing that adverse events may go undetected and that participants’ well-being might be at risk. These concerns can be addressed through smart hybrid study designs, which ensure the careful oversight of patients while reducing—or even eliminating—the number of site visits.
Contrary to certain assumptions, the integrated devices and intuitive apps now commonly used in hybrid trials enable real-time monitoring, which decreases the likelihood of an undetected adverse event. Virtual research organizations like ObvioHealth have evolved vaccine protocols, enabling trial coordinators to quickly identify any changes in health status, often more quickly than would be the case in a traditional trial. This is a game-changer for detecting adverse events. Virtual communication tools also increase the frequency of communication between the patient and researcher: Questions and concerns can be addressed, and AEs can be quickly processed through to resolution. Imagine a scenario in which a study participant does an initial visit with an HCP at a trial site, receives a vaccine, and returns home. Once the participant leaves the site, technology—such as ObvioHealth’s app—provides them with continuous access to a study team to report any reactions or side effects at the click of a button.
At Roche, the company’s global regulatory lead shared, "COVID-19 has been a catalyst and shows us what’s possible in the use of innovative technologies, combined with local health services, to meet the needs of patients at home.” This trend is further supported by a recent study published by Oracle, which indicates that 76% of researchers currently run decentralized clinical trials, and 38% of respondents report more than half of their trials are decentralized.
The ideal design to ensure the rapid and sensitive capture of AEs includes three unique components:
A range of communication tools allow participants to interact with the study team without leaving their homes and using whatever means are most convenient for them. These communication tools (text, video chats, phone calls, etc.) ensure patient safety while improving vaccine trial efficiency.
Fortunately, adverse events for most vaccines are infrequent. But, this means vaccine clinical trials must have large patient populations to detect them and ensure the accuracy of study results on a large scale. Finding and recruiting sufficient numbers of participants can be challenging. Drop-outs are also an issue and are especially common for longer and more burdensome studies. As a result, it is essential to have a robust participant pool to compensate for those who opt-out. Site-based recruitments can be very costly and inefficient; in fact, many sites can fail to recruit even a single patient. Virtualization can help to overcome these obstacles, enabling researchers to reach and recruit patients more cost-effectively using targeted digital media. The expansion of geographic reach makes it easier to recruit more patients more quickly.
Increasingly, researchers are complementing digital recruitment with minute clinic or pharmacy partnerships to expand study populations even further. These partnerships provide options for participants who may not be comfortable with digital enrollment or who seek the convenience of local access to staff. Participants can also be recruited online for local visits. According to the CDC, more than 90% of the U.S. population live within 5 miles of a community pharmacy, and patients visit these locations 12 times more frequently than their primary care provider. Therefore, pharmacists play an important role in providing care for patients, especially those in economically and geographically underserved populations.
In addition to recruitment and enrollment, these neighborhood clinics can serve as sites where participants go for follow-up blood draws or nasopharyngeal swabs. This allows participants to visit more convenient and familiar locations for follow-up visits.
Most vaccine trials require some in-person interaction with HCPs, especially at the beginning of a study when baseline evaluations and vaccine administration is needed. The start of trials is generally when patients feel the most motivated, making these appointments the least likely to be missed. As trials lag, and site visits compound, participants are more likely to want to drop out. This makes vaccine trials particularly challenging, because many require significant follow-up to determine efficacy and any ensuing AEs or SAEs.
Virtual components can help keep patients engaged to make long-term follow-ups more convenient, thus increasing retention. Protocols can be designed so face-to-face visits occur at the beginning of studies. As the trial progresses, an increasing proportion of communication can occur digitally.
Virtual clinical trials have benefits across therapeutic areas, but the unique nature of vaccine trials make virtual solutions particularly effective at ensuring safety, speeding vaccine approval and enabling longer-term follow-up. Virtual tools are helping vaccine trials demonstrate protection from viruses like COVID-19 while giving researchers the rich data they need to evaluate the long-term effects on patient immunity and overall health.
There are three key factors that are essential to the successful completion of a vaccine clinical trial:
Site-based studies have been challenged on all three fronts. They are subject to limited recruitment pools, greater inconvenience for participants, and fewer regular check-ins.
In the words of a patient who took part in one of Moderna’s COVID-19 vaccine trials, the experience of participating in the study was “exhausting” and required “seven visits to a hospital, 24 phone calls, dozens of diary entries, repeated batteries of questions about [his] private life, five blood draws, and numerous nasopharyngeal swabs.” While some of these requirements may be unavoidable, others can be minimized or made less arduous through the decentralization of certain steps in the trial process, improving the overall experience for the participant as well as the quality of the outcomes.
Some sponsors are hesitant to adopt models that don’t feature continued, direct interactions between provider and participant, fearing that adverse events may go undetected and that participants’ well-being might be at risk. These concerns can be addressed through smart hybrid study designs, which ensure the careful oversight of patients while reducing—or even eliminating—the number of site visits.
Contrary to certain assumptions, the integrated devices and intuitive apps now commonly used in hybrid trials enable real-time monitoring, which decreases the likelihood of an undetected adverse event. Virtual research organizations like ObvioHealth have evolved vaccine protocols, enabling trial coordinators to quickly identify any changes in health status, often more quickly than would be the case in a traditional trial. This is a game-changer for detecting adverse events. Virtual communication tools also increase the frequency of communication between the patient and researcher: Questions and concerns can be addressed, and AEs can be quickly processed through to resolution. Imagine a scenario in which a study participant does an initial visit with an HCP at a trial site, receives a vaccine, and returns home. Once the participant leaves the site, technology—such as ObvioHealth’s app—provides them with continuous access to a study team to report any reactions or side effects at the click of a button.
At Roche, the company’s global regulatory lead shared, "COVID-19 has been a catalyst and shows us what’s possible in the use of innovative technologies, combined with local health services, to meet the needs of patients at home.” This trend is further supported by a recent study published by Oracle, which indicates that 76% of researchers currently run decentralized clinical trials, and 38% of respondents report more than half of their trials are decentralized.
The ideal design to ensure the rapid and sensitive capture of AEs includes three unique components:
A range of communication tools allow participants to interact with the study team without leaving their homes and using whatever means are most convenient for them. These communication tools (text, video chats, phone calls, etc.) ensure patient safety while improving vaccine trial efficiency.
Fortunately, adverse events for most vaccines are infrequent. But, this means vaccine clinical trials must have large patient populations to detect them and ensure the accuracy of study results on a large scale. Finding and recruiting sufficient numbers of participants can be challenging. Drop-outs are also an issue and are especially common for longer and more burdensome studies. As a result, it is essential to have a robust participant pool to compensate for those who opt-out. Site-based recruitments can be very costly and inefficient; in fact, many sites can fail to recruit even a single patient. Virtualization can help to overcome these obstacles, enabling researchers to reach and recruit patients more cost-effectively using targeted digital media. The expansion of geographic reach makes it easier to recruit more patients more quickly.
Increasingly, researchers are complementing digital recruitment with minute clinic or pharmacy partnerships to expand study populations even further. These partnerships provide options for participants who may not be comfortable with digital enrollment or who seek the convenience of local access to staff. Participants can also be recruited online for local visits. According to the CDC, more than 90% of the U.S. population live within 5 miles of a community pharmacy, and patients visit these locations 12 times more frequently than their primary care provider. Therefore, pharmacists play an important role in providing care for patients, especially those in economically and geographically underserved populations.
In addition to recruitment and enrollment, these neighborhood clinics can serve as sites where participants go for follow-up blood draws or nasopharyngeal swabs. This allows participants to visit more convenient and familiar locations for follow-up visits.
Most vaccine trials require some in-person interaction with HCPs, especially at the beginning of a study when baseline evaluations and vaccine administration is needed. The start of trials is generally when patients feel the most motivated, making these appointments the least likely to be missed. As trials lag, and site visits compound, participants are more likely to want to drop out. This makes vaccine trials particularly challenging, because many require significant follow-up to determine efficacy and any ensuing AEs or SAEs.
Virtual components can help keep patients engaged to make long-term follow-ups more convenient, thus increasing retention. Protocols can be designed so face-to-face visits occur at the beginning of studies. As the trial progresses, an increasing proportion of communication can occur digitally.
Virtual clinical trials have benefits across therapeutic areas, but the unique nature of vaccine trials make virtual solutions particularly effective at ensuring safety, speeding vaccine approval and enabling longer-term follow-up. Virtual tools are helping vaccine trials demonstrate protection from viruses like COVID-19 while giving researchers the rich data they need to evaluate the long-term effects on patient immunity and overall health.
Expectations for the time it takes to complete a vaccine clinical trial have been radically raised by the mRNA vaccines’ successes.
There are three key factors that are essential to the successful completion of a vaccine clinical trial:
Site-based studies have been challenged on all three fronts. They are subject to limited recruitment pools, greater inconvenience for participants, and fewer regular check-ins.
In the words of a patient who took part in one of Moderna’s COVID-19 vaccine trials, the experience of participating in the study was “exhausting” and required “seven visits to a hospital, 24 phone calls, dozens of diary entries, repeated batteries of questions about [his] private life, five blood draws, and numerous nasopharyngeal swabs.” While some of these requirements may be unavoidable, others can be minimized or made less arduous through the decentralization of certain steps in the trial process, improving the overall experience for the participant as well as the quality of the outcomes.
Some sponsors are hesitant to adopt models that don’t feature continued, direct interactions between provider and participant, fearing that adverse events may go undetected and that participants’ well-being might be at risk. These concerns can be addressed through smart hybrid study designs, which ensure the careful oversight of patients while reducing—or even eliminating—the number of site visits.
Contrary to certain assumptions, the integrated devices and intuitive apps now commonly used in hybrid trials enable real-time monitoring, which decreases the likelihood of an undetected adverse event. Virtual research organizations like ObvioHealth have evolved vaccine protocols, enabling trial coordinators to quickly identify any changes in health status, often more quickly than would be the case in a traditional trial. This is a game-changer for detecting adverse events. Virtual communication tools also increase the frequency of communication between the patient and researcher: Questions and concerns can be addressed, and AEs can be quickly processed through to resolution. Imagine a scenario in which a study participant does an initial visit with an HCP at a trial site, receives a vaccine, and returns home. Once the participant leaves the site, technology—such as ObvioHealth’s app—provides them with continuous access to a study team to report any reactions or side effects at the click of a button.
At Roche, the company’s global regulatory lead shared, "COVID-19 has been a catalyst and shows us what’s possible in the use of innovative technologies, combined with local health services, to meet the needs of patients at home.” This trend is further supported by a recent study published by Oracle, which indicates that 76% of researchers currently run decentralized clinical trials, and 38% of respondents report more than half of their trials are decentralized.
The ideal design to ensure the rapid and sensitive capture of AEs includes three unique components:
A range of communication tools allow participants to interact with the study team without leaving their homes and using whatever means are most convenient for them. These communication tools (text, video chats, phone calls, etc.) ensure patient safety while improving vaccine trial efficiency.
Fortunately, adverse events for most vaccines are infrequent. But, this means vaccine clinical trials must have large patient populations to detect them and ensure the accuracy of study results on a large scale. Finding and recruiting sufficient numbers of participants can be challenging. Drop-outs are also an issue and are especially common for longer and more burdensome studies. As a result, it is essential to have a robust participant pool to compensate for those who opt-out. Site-based recruitments can be very costly and inefficient; in fact, many sites can fail to recruit even a single patient. Virtualization can help to overcome these obstacles, enabling researchers to reach and recruit patients more cost-effectively using targeted digital media. The expansion of geographic reach makes it easier to recruit more patients more quickly.
Increasingly, researchers are complementing digital recruitment with minute clinic or pharmacy partnerships to expand study populations even further. These partnerships provide options for participants who may not be comfortable with digital enrollment or who seek the convenience of local access to staff. Participants can also be recruited online for local visits. According to the CDC, more than 90% of the U.S. population live within 5 miles of a community pharmacy, and patients visit these locations 12 times more frequently than their primary care provider. Therefore, pharmacists play an important role in providing care for patients, especially those in economically and geographically underserved populations.
In addition to recruitment and enrollment, these neighborhood clinics can serve as sites where participants go for follow-up blood draws or nasopharyngeal swabs. This allows participants to visit more convenient and familiar locations for follow-up visits.
Most vaccine trials require some in-person interaction with HCPs, especially at the beginning of a study when baseline evaluations and vaccine administration is needed. The start of trials is generally when patients feel the most motivated, making these appointments the least likely to be missed. As trials lag, and site visits compound, participants are more likely to want to drop out. This makes vaccine trials particularly challenging, because many require significant follow-up to determine efficacy and any ensuing AEs or SAEs.
Virtual components can help keep patients engaged to make long-term follow-ups more convenient, thus increasing retention. Protocols can be designed so face-to-face visits occur at the beginning of studies. As the trial progresses, an increasing proportion of communication can occur digitally.
Virtual clinical trials have benefits across therapeutic areas, but the unique nature of vaccine trials make virtual solutions particularly effective at ensuring safety, speeding vaccine approval and enabling longer-term follow-up. Virtual tools are helping vaccine trials demonstrate protection from viruses like COVID-19 while giving researchers the rich data they need to evaluate the long-term effects on patient immunity and overall health.
There are three key factors that are essential to the successful completion of a vaccine clinical trial:
Site-based studies have been challenged on all three fronts. They are subject to limited recruitment pools, greater inconvenience for participants, and fewer regular check-ins.
In the words of a patient who took part in one of Moderna’s COVID-19 vaccine trials, the experience of participating in the study was “exhausting” and required “seven visits to a hospital, 24 phone calls, dozens of diary entries, repeated batteries of questions about [his] private life, five blood draws, and numerous nasopharyngeal swabs.” While some of these requirements may be unavoidable, others can be minimized or made less arduous through the decentralization of certain steps in the trial process, improving the overall experience for the participant as well as the quality of the outcomes.
Some sponsors are hesitant to adopt models that don’t feature continued, direct interactions between provider and participant, fearing that adverse events may go undetected and that participants’ well-being might be at risk. These concerns can be addressed through smart hybrid study designs, which ensure the careful oversight of patients while reducing—or even eliminating—the number of site visits.
Contrary to certain assumptions, the integrated devices and intuitive apps now commonly used in hybrid trials enable real-time monitoring, which decreases the likelihood of an undetected adverse event. Virtual research organizations like ObvioHealth have evolved vaccine protocols, enabling trial coordinators to quickly identify any changes in health status, often more quickly than would be the case in a traditional trial. This is a game-changer for detecting adverse events. Virtual communication tools also increase the frequency of communication between the patient and researcher: Questions and concerns can be addressed, and AEs can be quickly processed through to resolution. Imagine a scenario in which a study participant does an initial visit with an HCP at a trial site, receives a vaccine, and returns home. Once the participant leaves the site, technology—such as ObvioHealth’s app—provides them with continuous access to a study team to report any reactions or side effects at the click of a button.
At Roche, the company’s global regulatory lead shared, "COVID-19 has been a catalyst and shows us what’s possible in the use of innovative technologies, combined with local health services, to meet the needs of patients at home.” This trend is further supported by a recent study published by Oracle, which indicates that 76% of researchers currently run decentralized clinical trials, and 38% of respondents report more than half of their trials are decentralized.
The ideal design to ensure the rapid and sensitive capture of AEs includes three unique components:
A range of communication tools allow participants to interact with the study team without leaving their homes and using whatever means are most convenient for them. These communication tools (text, video chats, phone calls, etc.) ensure patient safety while improving vaccine trial efficiency.
Fortunately, adverse events for most vaccines are infrequent. But, this means vaccine clinical trials must have large patient populations to detect them and ensure the accuracy of study results on a large scale. Finding and recruiting sufficient numbers of participants can be challenging. Drop-outs are also an issue and are especially common for longer and more burdensome studies. As a result, it is essential to have a robust participant pool to compensate for those who opt-out. Site-based recruitments can be very costly and inefficient; in fact, many sites can fail to recruit even a single patient. Virtualization can help to overcome these obstacles, enabling researchers to reach and recruit patients more cost-effectively using targeted digital media. The expansion of geographic reach makes it easier to recruit more patients more quickly.
Increasingly, researchers are complementing digital recruitment with minute clinic or pharmacy partnerships to expand study populations even further. These partnerships provide options for participants who may not be comfortable with digital enrollment or who seek the convenience of local access to staff. Participants can also be recruited online for local visits. According to the CDC, more than 90% of the U.S. population live within 5 miles of a community pharmacy, and patients visit these locations 12 times more frequently than their primary care provider. Therefore, pharmacists play an important role in providing care for patients, especially those in economically and geographically underserved populations.
In addition to recruitment and enrollment, these neighborhood clinics can serve as sites where participants go for follow-up blood draws or nasopharyngeal swabs. This allows participants to visit more convenient and familiar locations for follow-up visits.
Most vaccine trials require some in-person interaction with HCPs, especially at the beginning of a study when baseline evaluations and vaccine administration is needed. The start of trials is generally when patients feel the most motivated, making these appointments the least likely to be missed. As trials lag, and site visits compound, participants are more likely to want to drop out. This makes vaccine trials particularly challenging, because many require significant follow-up to determine efficacy and any ensuing AEs or SAEs.
Virtual components can help keep patients engaged to make long-term follow-ups more convenient, thus increasing retention. Protocols can be designed so face-to-face visits occur at the beginning of studies. As the trial progresses, an increasing proportion of communication can occur digitally.
Virtual clinical trials have benefits across therapeutic areas, but the unique nature of vaccine trials make virtual solutions particularly effective at ensuring safety, speeding vaccine approval and enabling longer-term follow-up. Virtual tools are helping vaccine trials demonstrate protection from viruses like COVID-19 while giving researchers the rich data they need to evaluate the long-term effects on patient immunity and overall health.
There are three key factors that are essential to the successful completion of a vaccine clinical trial:
Site-based studies have been challenged on all three fronts. They are subject to limited recruitment pools, greater inconvenience for participants, and fewer regular check-ins.
In the words of a patient who took part in one of Moderna’s COVID-19 vaccine trials, the experience of participating in the study was “exhausting” and required “seven visits to a hospital, 24 phone calls, dozens of diary entries, repeated batteries of questions about [his] private life, five blood draws, and numerous nasopharyngeal swabs.” While some of these requirements may be unavoidable, others can be minimized or made less arduous through the decentralization of certain steps in the trial process, improving the overall experience for the participant as well as the quality of the outcomes.
Some sponsors are hesitant to adopt models that don’t feature continued, direct interactions between provider and participant, fearing that adverse events may go undetected and that participants’ well-being might be at risk. These concerns can be addressed through smart hybrid study designs, which ensure the careful oversight of patients while reducing—or even eliminating—the number of site visits.
Contrary to certain assumptions, the integrated devices and intuitive apps now commonly used in hybrid trials enable real-time monitoring, which decreases the likelihood of an undetected adverse event. Virtual research organizations like ObvioHealth have evolved vaccine protocols, enabling trial coordinators to quickly identify any changes in health status, often more quickly than would be the case in a traditional trial. This is a game-changer for detecting adverse events. Virtual communication tools also increase the frequency of communication between the patient and researcher: Questions and concerns can be addressed, and AEs can be quickly processed through to resolution. Imagine a scenario in which a study participant does an initial visit with an HCP at a trial site, receives a vaccine, and returns home. Once the participant leaves the site, technology—such as ObvioHealth’s app—provides them with continuous access to a study team to report any reactions or side effects at the click of a button.
At Roche, the company’s global regulatory lead shared, "COVID-19 has been a catalyst and shows us what’s possible in the use of innovative technologies, combined with local health services, to meet the needs of patients at home.” This trend is further supported by a recent study published by Oracle, which indicates that 76% of researchers currently run decentralized clinical trials, and 38% of respondents report more than half of their trials are decentralized.
The ideal design to ensure the rapid and sensitive capture of AEs includes three unique components:
A range of communication tools allow participants to interact with the study team without leaving their homes and using whatever means are most convenient for them. These communication tools (text, video chats, phone calls, etc.) ensure patient safety while improving vaccine trial efficiency.
Fortunately, adverse events for most vaccines are infrequent. But, this means vaccine clinical trials must have large patient populations to detect them and ensure the accuracy of study results on a large scale. Finding and recruiting sufficient numbers of participants can be challenging. Drop-outs are also an issue and are especially common for longer and more burdensome studies. As a result, it is essential to have a robust participant pool to compensate for those who opt-out. Site-based recruitments can be very costly and inefficient; in fact, many sites can fail to recruit even a single patient. Virtualization can help to overcome these obstacles, enabling researchers to reach and recruit patients more cost-effectively using targeted digital media. The expansion of geographic reach makes it easier to recruit more patients more quickly.
Increasingly, researchers are complementing digital recruitment with minute clinic or pharmacy partnerships to expand study populations even further. These partnerships provide options for participants who may not be comfortable with digital enrollment or who seek the convenience of local access to staff. Participants can also be recruited online for local visits. According to the CDC, more than 90% of the U.S. population live within 5 miles of a community pharmacy, and patients visit these locations 12 times more frequently than their primary care provider. Therefore, pharmacists play an important role in providing care for patients, especially those in economically and geographically underserved populations.
In addition to recruitment and enrollment, these neighborhood clinics can serve as sites where participants go for follow-up blood draws or nasopharyngeal swabs. This allows participants to visit more convenient and familiar locations for follow-up visits.
Most vaccine trials require some in-person interaction with HCPs, especially at the beginning of a study when baseline evaluations and vaccine administration is needed. The start of trials is generally when patients feel the most motivated, making these appointments the least likely to be missed. As trials lag, and site visits compound, participants are more likely to want to drop out. This makes vaccine trials particularly challenging, because many require significant follow-up to determine efficacy and any ensuing AEs or SAEs.
Virtual components can help keep patients engaged to make long-term follow-ups more convenient, thus increasing retention. Protocols can be designed so face-to-face visits occur at the beginning of studies. As the trial progresses, an increasing proportion of communication can occur digitally.
Virtual clinical trials have benefits across therapeutic areas, but the unique nature of vaccine trials make virtual solutions particularly effective at ensuring safety, speeding vaccine approval and enabling longer-term follow-up. Virtual tools are helping vaccine trials demonstrate protection from viruses like COVID-19 while giving researchers the rich data they need to evaluate the long-term effects on patient immunity and overall health.
Expectations for the time it takes to complete a vaccine clinical trial have been radically raised by the mRNA vaccines’ successes.
There are three key factors that are essential to the successful completion of a vaccine clinical trial:
Site-based studies have been challenged on all three fronts. They are subject to limited recruitment pools, greater inconvenience for participants, and fewer regular check-ins.
In the words of a patient who took part in one of Moderna’s COVID-19 vaccine trials, the experience of participating in the study was “exhausting” and required “seven visits to a hospital, 24 phone calls, dozens of diary entries, repeated batteries of questions about [his] private life, five blood draws, and numerous nasopharyngeal swabs.” While some of these requirements may be unavoidable, others can be minimized or made less arduous through the decentralization of certain steps in the trial process, improving the overall experience for the participant as well as the quality of the outcomes.
Some sponsors are hesitant to adopt models that don’t feature continued, direct interactions between provider and participant, fearing that adverse events may go undetected and that participants’ well-being might be at risk. These concerns can be addressed through smart hybrid study designs, which ensure the careful oversight of patients while reducing—or even eliminating—the number of site visits.
Contrary to certain assumptions, the integrated devices and intuitive apps now commonly used in hybrid trials enable real-time monitoring, which decreases the likelihood of an undetected adverse event. Virtual research organizations like ObvioHealth have evolved vaccine protocols, enabling trial coordinators to quickly identify any changes in health status, often more quickly than would be the case in a traditional trial. This is a game-changer for detecting adverse events. Virtual communication tools also increase the frequency of communication between the patient and researcher: Questions and concerns can be addressed, and AEs can be quickly processed through to resolution. Imagine a scenario in which a study participant does an initial visit with an HCP at a trial site, receives a vaccine, and returns home. Once the participant leaves the site, technology—such as ObvioHealth’s app—provides them with continuous access to a study team to report any reactions or side effects at the click of a button.
At Roche, the company’s global regulatory lead shared, "COVID-19 has been a catalyst and shows us what’s possible in the use of innovative technologies, combined with local health services, to meet the needs of patients at home.” This trend is further supported by a recent study published by Oracle, which indicates that 76% of researchers currently run decentralized clinical trials, and 38% of respondents report more than half of their trials are decentralized.
The ideal design to ensure the rapid and sensitive capture of AEs includes three unique components:
A range of communication tools allow participants to interact with the study team without leaving their homes and using whatever means are most convenient for them. These communication tools (text, video chats, phone calls, etc.) ensure patient safety while improving vaccine trial efficiency.
Fortunately, adverse events for most vaccines are infrequent. But, this means vaccine clinical trials must have large patient populations to detect them and ensure the accuracy of study results on a large scale. Finding and recruiting sufficient numbers of participants can be challenging. Drop-outs are also an issue and are especially common for longer and more burdensome studies. As a result, it is essential to have a robust participant pool to compensate for those who opt-out. Site-based recruitments can be very costly and inefficient; in fact, many sites can fail to recruit even a single patient. Virtualization can help to overcome these obstacles, enabling researchers to reach and recruit patients more cost-effectively using targeted digital media. The expansion of geographic reach makes it easier to recruit more patients more quickly.
Increasingly, researchers are complementing digital recruitment with minute clinic or pharmacy partnerships to expand study populations even further. These partnerships provide options for participants who may not be comfortable with digital enrollment or who seek the convenience of local access to staff. Participants can also be recruited online for local visits. According to the CDC, more than 90% of the U.S. population live within 5 miles of a community pharmacy, and patients visit these locations 12 times more frequently than their primary care provider. Therefore, pharmacists play an important role in providing care for patients, especially those in economically and geographically underserved populations.
In addition to recruitment and enrollment, these neighborhood clinics can serve as sites where participants go for follow-up blood draws or nasopharyngeal swabs. This allows participants to visit more convenient and familiar locations for follow-up visits.
Most vaccine trials require some in-person interaction with HCPs, especially at the beginning of a study when baseline evaluations and vaccine administration is needed. The start of trials is generally when patients feel the most motivated, making these appointments the least likely to be missed. As trials lag, and site visits compound, participants are more likely to want to drop out. This makes vaccine trials particularly challenging, because many require significant follow-up to determine efficacy and any ensuing AEs or SAEs.
Virtual components can help keep patients engaged to make long-term follow-ups more convenient, thus increasing retention. Protocols can be designed so face-to-face visits occur at the beginning of studies. As the trial progresses, an increasing proportion of communication can occur digitally.
Virtual clinical trials have benefits across therapeutic areas, but the unique nature of vaccine trials make virtual solutions particularly effective at ensuring safety, speeding vaccine approval and enabling longer-term follow-up. Virtual tools are helping vaccine trials demonstrate protection from viruses like COVID-19 while giving researchers the rich data they need to evaluate the long-term effects on patient immunity and overall health.
Expectations for the time it takes to complete a vaccine clinical trial have been radically raised by the mRNA vaccines’ successes.
There are three key factors that are essential to the successful completion of a vaccine clinical trial:
Site-based studies have been challenged on all three fronts. They are subject to limited recruitment pools, greater inconvenience for participants, and fewer regular check-ins.
In the words of a patient who took part in one of Moderna’s COVID-19 vaccine trials, the experience of participating in the study was “exhausting” and required “seven visits to a hospital, 24 phone calls, dozens of diary entries, repeated batteries of questions about [his] private life, five blood draws, and numerous nasopharyngeal swabs.” While some of these requirements may be unavoidable, others can be minimized or made less arduous through the decentralization of certain steps in the trial process, improving the overall experience for the participant as well as the quality of the outcomes.
Some sponsors are hesitant to adopt models that don’t feature continued, direct interactions between provider and participant, fearing that adverse events may go undetected and that participants’ well-being might be at risk. These concerns can be addressed through smart hybrid study designs, which ensure the careful oversight of patients while reducing—or even eliminating—the number of site visits.
Contrary to certain assumptions, the integrated devices and intuitive apps now commonly used in hybrid trials enable real-time monitoring, which decreases the likelihood of an undetected adverse event. Virtual research organizations like ObvioHealth have evolved vaccine protocols, enabling trial coordinators to quickly identify any changes in health status, often more quickly than would be the case in a traditional trial. This is a game-changer for detecting adverse events. Virtual communication tools also increase the frequency of communication between the patient and researcher: Questions and concerns can be addressed, and AEs can be quickly processed through to resolution. Imagine a scenario in which a study participant does an initial visit with an HCP at a trial site, receives a vaccine, and returns home. Once the participant leaves the site, technology—such as ObvioHealth’s app—provides them with continuous access to a study team to report any reactions or side effects at the click of a button.
At Roche, the company’s global regulatory lead shared, "COVID-19 has been a catalyst and shows us what’s possible in the use of innovative technologies, combined with local health services, to meet the needs of patients at home.” This trend is further supported by a recent study published by Oracle, which indicates that 76% of researchers currently run decentralized clinical trials, and 38% of respondents report more than half of their trials are decentralized.
The ideal design to ensure the rapid and sensitive capture of AEs includes three unique components:
A range of communication tools allow participants to interact with the study team without leaving their homes and using whatever means are most convenient for them. These communication tools (text, video chats, phone calls, etc.) ensure patient safety while improving vaccine trial efficiency.
Fortunately, adverse events for most vaccines are infrequent. But, this means vaccine clinical trials must have large patient populations to detect them and ensure the accuracy of study results on a large scale. Finding and recruiting sufficient numbers of participants can be challenging. Drop-outs are also an issue and are especially common for longer and more burdensome studies. As a result, it is essential to have a robust participant pool to compensate for those who opt-out. Site-based recruitments can be very costly and inefficient; in fact, many sites can fail to recruit even a single patient. Virtualization can help to overcome these obstacles, enabling researchers to reach and recruit patients more cost-effectively using targeted digital media. The expansion of geographic reach makes it easier to recruit more patients more quickly.
Increasingly, researchers are complementing digital recruitment with minute clinic or pharmacy partnerships to expand study populations even further. These partnerships provide options for participants who may not be comfortable with digital enrollment or who seek the convenience of local access to staff. Participants can also be recruited online for local visits. According to the CDC, more than 90% of the U.S. population live within 5 miles of a community pharmacy, and patients visit these locations 12 times more frequently than their primary care provider. Therefore, pharmacists play an important role in providing care for patients, especially those in economically and geographically underserved populations.
In addition to recruitment and enrollment, these neighborhood clinics can serve as sites where participants go for follow-up blood draws or nasopharyngeal swabs. This allows participants to visit more convenient and familiar locations for follow-up visits.
Most vaccine trials require some in-person interaction with HCPs, especially at the beginning of a study when baseline evaluations and vaccine administration is needed. The start of trials is generally when patients feel the most motivated, making these appointments the least likely to be missed. As trials lag, and site visits compound, participants are more likely to want to drop out. This makes vaccine trials particularly challenging, because many require significant follow-up to determine efficacy and any ensuing AEs or SAEs.
Virtual components can help keep patients engaged to make long-term follow-ups more convenient, thus increasing retention. Protocols can be designed so face-to-face visits occur at the beginning of studies. As the trial progresses, an increasing proportion of communication can occur digitally.
Virtual clinical trials have benefits across therapeutic areas, but the unique nature of vaccine trials make virtual solutions particularly effective at ensuring safety, speeding vaccine approval and enabling longer-term follow-up. Virtual tools are helping vaccine trials demonstrate protection from viruses like COVID-19 while giving researchers the rich data they need to evaluate the long-term effects on patient immunity and overall health.
Virtual clinical trials aren’t just a buzzword—these research models are here to stay. In fact, the global market for virtual clinical trials is expected to reach $12.9 billion by 2030, according to Grand View Research.
The use of real world data in clinical trials is a hot topic. Doctors, biotech and pharmaceutical companies alike point to the tremendous potential to leverage this data to improve health outcomes.