| Literature DB >> 31634011 |
Guillaume Marquis-Gravel1, Matthew T Roe1, Mintu P Turakhia2,3, William Boden4, Robert Temple5, Abhinav Sharma6,7, Boaz Hirshberg8, Paul Slater9, Noah Craft10, Norman Stockbridge5, Bryan McDowell11, Joanne Waldstreicher12, Ariel Bourla13, Sameer Bansilal14, Jennifer L Wong15, Claire Meunier16, Helina Kassahun17, Philip Coran18, Lauren Bataille19, Bray Patrick-Lake1, Brad Hirsch20, John Reites21, Rajesh Mehta22, Evan D Muse23, Karen J Chandross24, Jonathan C Silverstein25, Christina Silcox26, J Marc Overhage27, Robert M Califf28,29,30, Eric D Peterson1.
Abstract
The complexity and costs associated with traditional randomized, controlled trials have increased exponentially over time, and now threaten to stifle the development of new drugs and devices. Nevertheless, the growing use of electronic health records, mobile applications, and wearable devices offers significant promise for transforming clinical trials, making them more pragmatic and efficient. However, many challenges must be overcome before these innovations can be implemented routinely in randomized, controlled trial operations. In October of 2018, a diverse stakeholder group convened in Washington, DC, to examine how electronic health record, mobile, and wearable technologies could be applied to clinical trials. The group specifically examined how these technologies might streamline the execution of clinical trial components, delineated innovative trial designs facilitated by technological developments, identified barriers to implementation, and determined the optimal frameworks needed for regulatory oversight. The group concluded that the application of novel technologies to clinical trials provided enormous potential, yet these changes needed to be iterative and facilitated by continuous learning and pilot studies.Keywords: group processes; randomized controlled trials as topic; technology
Year: 2019 PMID: 31634011 DOI: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.119.040798
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Circulation ISSN: 0009-7322 Impact factor: 29.690