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The future of clinical trials and drug development: 2050

A workshop held at the 18th Annual Conference of the Pharmaceutical Contract Management Group in Krakow on 9 September 2022 asked over 200 delegates what the clinical trial landscape would look like in 2050. Issues considered included who will be running the pharmaceutical industry in 2050; how ‘hea...

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Autores principales: Hardman, Timothy C, Aitchison, Rob, Scaife, Richard, Edwards, Jean, Slater, Gill
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioExcel Publishing Ltd 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10259497/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37313038
http://dx.doi.org/10.7573/dic.2023-2-2
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author Hardman, Timothy C
Aitchison, Rob
Scaife, Richard
Edwards, Jean
Slater, Gill
author_facet Hardman, Timothy C
Aitchison, Rob
Scaife, Richard
Edwards, Jean
Slater, Gill
author_sort Hardman, Timothy C
collection PubMed
description A workshop held at the 18th Annual Conference of the Pharmaceutical Contract Management Group in Krakow on 9 September 2022 asked over 200 delegates what the clinical trial landscape would look like in 2050. Issues considered included who will be running the pharmaceutical industry in 2050; how ‘health chips’, wearables and diagnostics will impact on finding the right patients to study; how will artificial intelligence be designing and controlling clinical trials; and what will the role of the Clinical Research Associate, the critical observer, documenter and conductor of a clinical trial need to look like by 2050. The consensus was that, by 2050, if you are working in clinical trials, you will be a data scientist. We can expect to see an increasing role of new technologies and a new three-phase registration model for novel therapies. The first phase will involve an aspect of quality evaluation and biological proof-of-concept probably involving more preclinical modelling and engineered human cell lines and fewer animal studies than currently used. Once registered, new products will enter a period of adaptive clinical development (delivered as a single study) intended to establish safety. This phase will most likely take around 1–2 years and explore tailored options for administration. Investigations will most likely be conducted in patients, possibly in a ‘patient-in-a-box’ setting (hospital or healthcare centre, virtual or microsite). On completion of safety licencing, drugs will begin an assessment of efficacy in partnership with those responsible for reimbursement – testing will be performed in patients, possibly where individual patient involvement in safety testing will offer some reimbursement deal for future treatment. Change is coming, though its precise form will likely depend on the creativity and vision of sponsors, regulators and payers.
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spelling pubmed-102594972023-06-13 The future of clinical trials and drug development: 2050 Hardman, Timothy C Aitchison, Rob Scaife, Richard Edwards, Jean Slater, Gill Drugs Context Commentary A workshop held at the 18th Annual Conference of the Pharmaceutical Contract Management Group in Krakow on 9 September 2022 asked over 200 delegates what the clinical trial landscape would look like in 2050. Issues considered included who will be running the pharmaceutical industry in 2050; how ‘health chips’, wearables and diagnostics will impact on finding the right patients to study; how will artificial intelligence be designing and controlling clinical trials; and what will the role of the Clinical Research Associate, the critical observer, documenter and conductor of a clinical trial need to look like by 2050. The consensus was that, by 2050, if you are working in clinical trials, you will be a data scientist. We can expect to see an increasing role of new technologies and a new three-phase registration model for novel therapies. The first phase will involve an aspect of quality evaluation and biological proof-of-concept probably involving more preclinical modelling and engineered human cell lines and fewer animal studies than currently used. Once registered, new products will enter a period of adaptive clinical development (delivered as a single study) intended to establish safety. This phase will most likely take around 1–2 years and explore tailored options for administration. Investigations will most likely be conducted in patients, possibly in a ‘patient-in-a-box’ setting (hospital or healthcare centre, virtual or microsite). On completion of safety licencing, drugs will begin an assessment of efficacy in partnership with those responsible for reimbursement – testing will be performed in patients, possibly where individual patient involvement in safety testing will offer some reimbursement deal for future treatment. Change is coming, though its precise form will likely depend on the creativity and vision of sponsors, regulators and payers. BioExcel Publishing Ltd 2023-06-08 /pmc/articles/PMC10259497/ /pubmed/37313038 http://dx.doi.org/10.7573/dic.2023-2-2 Text en Copyright © 2023 Hardman TC, Aitchison R, Scaife R, Edwards J, Slater G on behalf of the Committee of the Pharmaceutical Contract Management Group https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/Published by Drugs in Context under Creative Commons License Deed CC BY NC ND 4.0, which allows anyone to copy, distribute and transmit the article provided it is properly attributed in the manner specified below. No commercial use without permission.
spellingShingle Commentary
Hardman, Timothy C
Aitchison, Rob
Scaife, Richard
Edwards, Jean
Slater, Gill
The future of clinical trials and drug development: 2050
title The future of clinical trials and drug development: 2050
title_full The future of clinical trials and drug development: 2050
title_fullStr The future of clinical trials and drug development: 2050
title_full_unstemmed The future of clinical trials and drug development: 2050
title_short The future of clinical trials and drug development: 2050
title_sort future of clinical trials and drug development: 2050
topic Commentary
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10259497/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37313038
http://dx.doi.org/10.7573/dic.2023-2-2
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