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Adapting international clinical trials during COVID-19 and beyond

BACKGROUND: The COVID-19 pandemic and resulting restrictions, particularly travel restrictions, have had significant impact on the conduct of global clinical trials. Our clinical trials programme, which relied on in-person visits for training, monitoring and capacity building across nine low- and mi...

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Autores principales: Thriemer, Kamala, Degaga, Tamiru Shibiru, Alam, Mohammad Shafiul, Adhikari, Bipin, Tripura, Rupam, Hossain, Mohammad Sharif, Christian, Michael, Ghanchi, Najia K, Mnjala, Hellen, Weston, Sophie, Ley, Benedikt, Rumaseb, Angela, Tadesse, Dagimawie, Teferi, Tedla, Yilma, Daniel, Lee, Grant, Unger, Holger, Sutanto, Inge, Pasaribu, Ayodhia Pitaloka, Ghimire, Prakash, Beg, Mohammad Asim, Price, Ric N
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: SAGE Publications 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9922661/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36772825
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/17407745231154215
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author Thriemer, Kamala
Degaga, Tamiru Shibiru
Alam, Mohammad Shafiul
Adhikari, Bipin
Tripura, Rupam
Hossain, Mohammad Sharif
Christian, Michael
Ghanchi, Najia K
Mnjala, Hellen
Weston, Sophie
Ley, Benedikt
Rumaseb, Angela
Tadesse, Dagimawie
Teferi, Tedla
Yilma, Daniel
Lee, Grant
Unger, Holger
Sutanto, Inge
Pasaribu, Ayodhia Pitaloka
Ghimire, Prakash
Beg, Mohammad Asim
Price, Ric N
author_facet Thriemer, Kamala
Degaga, Tamiru Shibiru
Alam, Mohammad Shafiul
Adhikari, Bipin
Tripura, Rupam
Hossain, Mohammad Sharif
Christian, Michael
Ghanchi, Najia K
Mnjala, Hellen
Weston, Sophie
Ley, Benedikt
Rumaseb, Angela
Tadesse, Dagimawie
Teferi, Tedla
Yilma, Daniel
Lee, Grant
Unger, Holger
Sutanto, Inge
Pasaribu, Ayodhia Pitaloka
Ghimire, Prakash
Beg, Mohammad Asim
Price, Ric N
author_sort Thriemer, Kamala
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The COVID-19 pandemic and resulting restrictions, particularly travel restrictions, have had significant impact on the conduct of global clinical trials. Our clinical trials programme, which relied on in-person visits for training, monitoring and capacity building across nine low- and middle-income countries, had to adapt to those unprecedented operational challenges. We report the adaptation of our working model with a focus on the operational areas of training, monitoring and cross-site collaboration. THE NEW WORKING MODEL: Adaptations include changing training strategies from in-person site visits with three or four team members to a multi-pronged virtual approach, with generic online training for good clinical practice, the development of a library of study-specific training videos, and interactive virtual training sessions, including practical laboratory-focused training sessions. We also report changes from in-person monitoring to remote monitoring as well as the development of a more localized network of clinical trial monitors to support hybrid models with in-person and remote monitoring depending on identified risks at each site. We established a virtual network across different trial and study sites with the objective to further build capacity for good clinical practice–compliant antimalarial trials and foster cross-country and cross-study site collaboration. CONCLUSION: The forced adaptation of these new strategies has come with advantages that we did not envisage initially. This includes improved, more frequent engagement through the established network with opportunities for increased south-to-south support and a substantially reduced carbon footprint and budget savings. Our new approach is challenging for study sites with limited prior experience but this can be overcome with hybrid models. Capacity building for laboratory-based work remains difficult using a virtual environment. The changes to our working model are likely to last, even after the end of the pandemic, providing a more sustainable and equitable approach to our research.
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spelling pubmed-99226612023-02-13 Adapting international clinical trials during COVID-19 and beyond Thriemer, Kamala Degaga, Tamiru Shibiru Alam, Mohammad Shafiul Adhikari, Bipin Tripura, Rupam Hossain, Mohammad Sharif Christian, Michael Ghanchi, Najia K Mnjala, Hellen Weston, Sophie Ley, Benedikt Rumaseb, Angela Tadesse, Dagimawie Teferi, Tedla Yilma, Daniel Lee, Grant Unger, Holger Sutanto, Inge Pasaribu, Ayodhia Pitaloka Ghimire, Prakash Beg, Mohammad Asim Price, Ric N Clin Trials Articles BACKGROUND: The COVID-19 pandemic and resulting restrictions, particularly travel restrictions, have had significant impact on the conduct of global clinical trials. Our clinical trials programme, which relied on in-person visits for training, monitoring and capacity building across nine low- and middle-income countries, had to adapt to those unprecedented operational challenges. We report the adaptation of our working model with a focus on the operational areas of training, monitoring and cross-site collaboration. THE NEW WORKING MODEL: Adaptations include changing training strategies from in-person site visits with three or four team members to a multi-pronged virtual approach, with generic online training for good clinical practice, the development of a library of study-specific training videos, and interactive virtual training sessions, including practical laboratory-focused training sessions. We also report changes from in-person monitoring to remote monitoring as well as the development of a more localized network of clinical trial monitors to support hybrid models with in-person and remote monitoring depending on identified risks at each site. We established a virtual network across different trial and study sites with the objective to further build capacity for good clinical practice–compliant antimalarial trials and foster cross-country and cross-study site collaboration. CONCLUSION: The forced adaptation of these new strategies has come with advantages that we did not envisage initially. This includes improved, more frequent engagement through the established network with opportunities for increased south-to-south support and a substantially reduced carbon footprint and budget savings. Our new approach is challenging for study sites with limited prior experience but this can be overcome with hybrid models. Capacity building for laboratory-based work remains difficult using a virtual environment. The changes to our working model are likely to last, even after the end of the pandemic, providing a more sustainable and equitable approach to our research. SAGE Publications 2023-02-11 2023-06 /pmc/articles/PMC9922661/ /pubmed/36772825 http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/17407745231154215 Text en © The Author(s) 2023 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) which permits any use, reproduction and distribution of the work without further permission provided the original work is attributed as specified on the SAGE and Open Access page (https://us.sagepub.com/en-us/nam/open-access-at-sage).
spellingShingle Articles
Thriemer, Kamala
Degaga, Tamiru Shibiru
Alam, Mohammad Shafiul
Adhikari, Bipin
Tripura, Rupam
Hossain, Mohammad Sharif
Christian, Michael
Ghanchi, Najia K
Mnjala, Hellen
Weston, Sophie
Ley, Benedikt
Rumaseb, Angela
Tadesse, Dagimawie
Teferi, Tedla
Yilma, Daniel
Lee, Grant
Unger, Holger
Sutanto, Inge
Pasaribu, Ayodhia Pitaloka
Ghimire, Prakash
Beg, Mohammad Asim
Price, Ric N
Adapting international clinical trials during COVID-19 and beyond
title Adapting international clinical trials during COVID-19 and beyond
title_full Adapting international clinical trials during COVID-19 and beyond
title_fullStr Adapting international clinical trials during COVID-19 and beyond
title_full_unstemmed Adapting international clinical trials during COVID-19 and beyond
title_short Adapting international clinical trials during COVID-19 and beyond
title_sort adapting international clinical trials during covid-19 and beyond
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9922661/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36772825
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/17407745231154215
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