Literature DB >> 32048941

Improving the Time to Activation of New Clinical Trials at a National Cancer Institute-Designated Comprehensive Cancer Center.

Erin Williams1,2, Timothy J Brown2, Patrice Griffith2, Asal Rahimi1,2, Rhonda Oilepo2, Hans Hammers1,2, Theodore W Laetsch1,3,4, Penny Currykosky1, Susan Partridge5, Muhammad S Beg1,2.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: The time it takes a performing site to activate a clinical trial can directly affect the ability to provide innovative and state-of-the-art care to patients. We sought to understand the process of activating an oncology clinical trial at a matrix National Cancer Institute-designated comprehensive cancer center.
METHODS: A multidisciplinary team of stakeholders within the cancer center, university, and affiliate hospitals held a retreat to map out the process of activating a clinical trial. We applied classical quality improvement and Six Sigma methodology to determine bottlenecks and non-value-added time in activating a clinical trial. During this process, attention was paid to time to pass through each step, and perceived barriers and bottlenecks were identified through group discussions.
RESULTS: The process map identified 66 steps with 12 decision points to activate a new clinical trial. The following two steps were instituted first: allow parallel scientific committee and institutional review board (IRB) review and allow the clinical research coordination committee, a group that determines university interest and feasibility, to review protocols independent of the IRB and scientific committee approval. The clinical research coordination committee continues to track the activation time, and this framework is used to identify additional improvement steps.
CONCLUSION: By applying quality improvement methodologies and Six Sigma principles, we were able to identify redundancies in the process to activate a clinical trial. This allowed us to redesign the process of activating a clinical trial at a matrix comprehensive cancer center. More importantly, the process map provides a framework to maintain these gains and implement additional changes and serves as an example to deploy across the campus and at other similar institutions.

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Year:  2020        PMID: 32048941     DOI: 10.1200/OP.19.00325

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  JCO Oncol Pract        ISSN: 2688-1527


  2 in total

1.  Trial Sponsorship and Time to Reporting for Phase 3 Randomized Cancer Clinical Trials.

Authors:  Timothy A Lin; Clifton David Fuller; Vivek Verma; Walker Mainwaring; Andres F Espinoza; Austin B Miller; Amit Jethanandani; Dario Pasalic; Prajnan Das; Bruce D Minsky; Charles R Thomas; David R Fogelman; Vivek Subbiah; Ishwaria M Subbiah; Ethan B Ludmir
Journal:  Cancers (Basel)       Date:  2020-09-16       Impact factor: 6.639

2.  Moving Beyond the Momentum: Innovative Approaches to Clinical Trial Implementation.

Authors:  Cathy Eng; Emerson Y Chen; Jane Rogers; Mark Lewis; Jonathan Strosberg; Ramya Thota; Smitha Krishnamurthi; Paul Oberstein; Rang Govindarajan; Gary Buchschacher; Sandip Patel; Davendra Sohal; Taymeyah Al-Toubah; Philip Philip; Arvind Dasari; Hagan Kennecke; Stacey Stein
Journal:  JCO Oncol Pract       Date:  2021-02-03
  2 in total

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