The Latest

SEARCH BY KEYWORD
BROWSE BY Category
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.

Randomized Controlled Trials and Real-World Evidence

Article
October 13, 2022
The randomized controlled trial and the real-world study each have their places in the advance of medical science and the clinical translation of research. Understanding the limitations of each, and addressing those limitations where possible, are key to improving healthcare across broad population.
TABLE OF CONTENTS‍INTRODUCTIONCHALLENGES WITH EACH MODELRCT’S Cost and Duration Narrow Scope Lack of Long-Term Outcomes Limited Access Impact and Reliability Effective BiasRWE Motivating Clinicians (Investigators) Motivating Patients (Data Subjects) Study Design Data Context and Verification Data Ownership and Control Statistical and Clinical Significance Generating Useful Correlations Organized Collaboration Among CliniciansPUBLICATIONCONCLUSIONIntroduction For at least 150 years, “evidence-based medicine” has been at the heart of medical education and healthcare delivery in the Western world. Since at least 1946, the randomized controlled clinical trial (“RCT”) has been the “gold standard” for developing such evidence.However, RCT’s are expensive, lengthy, with restrictive inclusionary criteria and typically dedicated to a proprietary medical product. The consequence is limited clinical translation, to the detriment of patient care. A 2020 article in the Journal of Clinical Epidemiology reported that only 1 in 10 medical treatments is backed up by clinical evidence.Moreover, the level of evidence for RCT’s, compared with patient registries and other forms of studies, has been challenged in several contexts. In their extensive 2020 report on the topic, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services noted that “studies from patient registries and randomized controlled trials have important and complementary roles in evaluating patient outcomes.”Similarly, the Grading of Recommendations, Assessments, Development and Evaluation working group has noted:The FDA, EMA and other regulatory agencies have also recognized the limitations of traditional RCT’s in the context of clinical and policy decision-making. They have emphasized the importance of real-world evidence.RWE is also the foundation of healthcare reimbursement concepts such as value-based medicine. The U.S. 21st Century Cures Act, “Right-To-Try laws and similar legislation are based on the applicability of RWE. Real-world evidence is not only regularly used to support reimbursement, but also increasingly informs the healthcare decisions of patients.Studies based on real-world evidence take various forms, including pragmatic, “n of 1”, registries and others.Challenges With Each ModelThe randomized controlled trial and the real-world study each have their places in the advance of medical science and the clinical translation of research. Understanding the limitations of each, and addressing those limitations where possible, are key to improving healthcare across broad population groups.RCT’sCost and DurationThe quality of RCT’s comes at a price – high cost and a long duration. Typical expenditures can be well in excess of $20 million, with Phases 1 through 3 requiring five years or longer. Of course, much more – often in excess of $100 million – is spent on developing the device or drug which is the subject of the trial.It is therefore not surprising that only well-capitalized, for-profit firms account for the vast majority of RCT’s resulting in drugs or devices which are utilized in the clinical setting.As summarized below, this commercial motivation behind almost all true RCT’s is a major reason why, as mentioned above, only 10% of medical procedures are based on quality evidence. This is also why there is such a strong emphasis by regulators, lawmakers, payers, providers and patients on real-world evidence.Narrow ScopeGiven their enormous investment in product development and regulatory approval, commercial sponsors understandably wish to fashion RCT study designs providing the best chance of success while minimizing costs and time to market. This has important implications for inclusion and exclusion criteria, end-points, duration of each trial phase, population sample size, investigator selection, and forms of statistical analysis.Lack of Long-Term OutcomesA major deficiency of most RCT’s is the failure to capture long-term outcomes. When those outcomes are captured, it is often sporadic and with little correlation to the biological mechanism of action hypothesized for the product originally studied.The efficacy phase of an RCT may be as short as two years, while the true safety and efficacy profiles of a product may take many years to manifest themselves. Moreover, the consequences of this deficiency are magnified by the narrow scope of the original RCT compared with the large number of “excluded” patient populations for whom that product is utilized.Limited AccessRCT sponsors, including non-commercial ones, will usually broadly define and carefully protect the intellectual property surrounding the subject matter of the trial. This means that they will sharply limit the dissemination of any information regarding the trial as it progresses. Moreover, even after pre-market or other regulatory approval, original and full data will rarely be available to third-parties for independent analysis.Impact and ReliabilityThe limited inclusion/exclusion criteria of most RCT’s materially reduce their relevance to broader patient populations. Comorbidities, multiple medications, genetic markers, age, other treatments are among the clinical realities of most patients, but which the products and treatments supported by RCT’s fail to address. In prescribing a treatment path for her patient, a clinician may be – implicitly or explicitly – relying on an RCT dating from medical school ten years ago, which was published then five years earlier, and which has had little or no long-term follow-up data.Indeed, in the context of personalized, regenerative, “omics” and similar medical approaches, it is increasingly difficult to effectively translate RCT’s conclusions to modern clinical practice.Effective BiasPatients, providers and payers rely on regulators to ensure the accuracy and relevance of RCT data and conclusions. And, indeed, in developed countries the regulatory framework for pre-market and other approvals is extensive. However, the size, budgets and commercial realities of RCT sponsors should always be borne in mind. These are today, unfortunately, considerably greater that government-funded research and trials.RWEAs articulated by regulators and in the literature, trials and other studies based on real-world evidence should address the foregoing issues with RCT’s, especially in terms of the clinical translation of safe and efficacious therapies based on modern medical science.For example, a major theoretical advantage of RWE is the enormous amount of relevant data which could, potentially, be captured form the billions of clinical interventions delivered each year.In practice, however, there are several major challenges.Motivating Clinicians (Investigators)In the context of real-world evidence, the clinician is the “investigator”, and his everyday clinical cases are the raw material from which real-world data can be captured. Today’s practitioner is, however, already “over-worked and underpaid”. There is little reason for him to spend more time capturing, analyzing and seeking to derive statistically correlations – i.e., real-world evidence -- from real-world data.Motivating Patients (Data Subjects)A major cost component for RCT’s is patient enrollment and compliance throughout the multi-year timeline of a trial. As in a RCT, real-world evidence requires patient compliance in the providing of benchmark and follow-up data. In principle, most patients take a strong interest in their clinical outcomes. However, modern practice often fails to engage them in a manner capitalizing on this innate interest.Study DesignModern clinical medicine is increasingly complex, specialized and often isolating. The practitioner is unable to keep with quickly advancing developments in his particular sub-field, let alone in other areas which may have a direct bearing on his patient’s outcomes.To identify and capture the real-world data inherent in her everyday cases, she requires scientific/clinical expertise to design a real-world study protocol which is clinically efficient, yet statistically significant.Data Context and VerificationThe past decade has seen great interest in “big data”, artificial intelligence and other algorithm-based approaches to developing standards of care. However, these hopes have been largely dashed in most clinical contexts. The main challenges with large datasets – such as claims data, registries or aggregated EHR records -- are the lack of relevant clinical context, source verification and the absence of a connection to a posited biological mechanism of action.These same challenges must be met to achieve real-world evidence. Data Ownership and ControlAs mentioned, in an RCT data ownership and dissemination are tightly controlled by the sponsor. This means that clinically-significant interim results see the light of day years after they occur, if ever, making them of little value in everyday clinical translation.In theory, real-world data and evidence should be made available to patients and clinicians upon their generation. This requires appropriate consents, patient privacy compliance and other legal structures.Statistical and Clinical SignificanceThe underlying “n” of datasets from which real-world evidence is derived is a major component of its potential value. This allows flexibility in the study design compared with an RCT. Whereas a typical RCT trial will seek to maximize statistical power with a minimum and carefully defined population sample, a real-world study dataset is much larger, therefore potentially supporting several statistically significant correlations (real-world evidence.)Nevertheless, maximizing the value of a real-world dataset will depend on incorporating statistical expertise into the initial study design.Generating Useful CorrelationsAs mentioned, the “n” of real-world datasets can be much higher than that of a comparable RCT. Nevertheless, generating real-world evidence from those datasets depends on the application of clinical/scientific expertise, both in the original design as well as thoughtfully querying the resultant aggregated datasets.As with other best practices in real-world studies, study design and the generation of statistically significant correlations requires a careful accommodation of the dally realities of the busy clinician and his patient, from whom the foundational real-world flows.Organized Collaboration Among CliniciansModern practitioners are increasingly isolated in their professional lives due to their heavy caseloads, the hyper-specialization of medical disciplines and other clinical realities.This is a major challenge to real-world studies which, to achieve their full potential, require active collaboration among practitioners and medical scientists to help identify key clinical questions, efficient approaches to real-world data collections, useful queries for aggregated datasets, and the development of evidence-based standards of care.Clinicians innately want to collaborate. But the proper systems and processes need to be in place for them to do so in order to advance medicine through real-world evidence.PublicationEvidence-based clinical translation only occurs if practitioners are aware of the specific evidence which is relevant and usable in their everyday professional environment. Fortunately, modern communications channels and networking capabilities enable the rapid dissemination of real-world evidence as it is being developed.Indeed, adapting an “always-on” publication mindset with respect to possible study designs, approaches to efficient real-world data capture, clinically meaningful outcomes scoring formulae, patient compliance and similar matters spurs collaboration among clinicians leading to ever more valuable real-world evidence.ConclusionRandomized controlled trials will always have their place for product pre-market authorization and other regulatory hurdles which only large, well-capitalized product manufacturers can afford. However, real-world evidence will play a critical role in addressing the 90% of current treatments lacking adequate support.RegenMed works with providers, payers, medical societies and other healthcare constituencies in developing clinically-efficient, cost-effective and valuable real-world evidence programs.‍Contact us to learn more.Copyright © 2022 Regenerative Medicine LLC
See more
Arrow right

Correlating PRP Dosage to Outcomes in Québec, Canada

Client News
September 28, 2022
It’s been two years since Health Canada released a position paper clarifying their regulations on autologous cell therapy products. Among their key requirements were redefining that “the process is the product” and that “products with proper process controls” could increase the probability that ...
It’s been two years since Health Canada released a position paper clarifying their regulations on autologous cell therapy products. Among their key requirements were redefining that “the process is the product” and that “products with proper process controls” could increase the probability that “products would be consistent in strength, quality and purity”. Thus, autologous cell therapies are “drugs” and are subject to the specific provisions for drugs under the Act. Platelet Rich Plasma, or PRP, falls within the exception zone of “lymphohematopoietic cells which are minimally manipulated and are intended for homologous use”. However, the fact that PRP is not currently regulated as a drug doesn’t mean the product yet delivers consistent strength, quality, or purity, nor does it consistently yield standardized outcomes for all patients.Martin Lamontagne, M.D. of La Clinique de Physiatrie et de Médecine du Sport Rockland is out to answer these pervasive questions around PRP variability, dosing, and patient outcomes. With the support of MDBiologix, and RegenMed’s inCytes™ platform, Dr. Lamontagne will begin capturing the long-term outcomes of his everyday PRP patients, including their pain and WOMAC outcomes measures up to one year post-injection. Furthermore, he will be performing benchside characterization on his PRP products, yielding useful correlations between PRP dosage and his patient’s self-reported outcomes. This information will help Dr. Lamontagne and his Canadian colleagues better predict and deliver optimal PRP outcomes, while also exploring possible procedural standards for other autologous cell therapies.To learn more about Dr. Lamontagne’s study, and please contact info@physiatrie.ca
See more
Arrow right

Canine Survivability by Breed: Ardent’s K9-ACV Registry

Client News
September 22, 2022
Ardent Animal Health (Lexington, KY) and researchers from the University of Kentucky Markey Cancer Center have developed a customized cancer treatment for dogs, known as K9-ACV1. The aim of this vaccine is to trigger the canine patients’ immune system to identify the cancer as a foreign ...
Ardent Animal Health (Lexington, KY) and researchers from the University of Kentucky Markey Cancer Center have developed a customized cancer treatment for dogs, known as K9-ACV1. The aim of this vaccine is to trigger the canine patients’ immune system to identify the cancer as a foreign invader. The safety and efficacy of this vaccine are not yet formally established, and these treatments are delivered under 9 CFR 103.3 via USDA Center for Veterinary Biologics oversight, and through supervision/prescription of a licensed veterinarian. A formal clinical trial featuring blinded randomization of patients’ responses associated to the standard of care has been submitted for formal licensure.Ardent has begun capturing the real-world outcomes associated with administration of their K9-ACV vaccine, and subsequent survivability of their canine patients. In this example of real-world evidence, patients were subdivided by breed, and their survival post diagnosis was plotted. The resulting graph shows a growing divergence in postdiagnosis lifespan of different canine breeds. For example, Rottweilers (n=5) experienced a median of 336 days of survival after their cancer diagnosis, while Labrador Retrievers (n=16) had a median survival of only 148.5 days, or roughly half as long. Overall, the data suggests that as genetic variation exists across canine breeds, it may impact the outcomes of cancer treatments. In addition to breed specific survival, Ardent is tracking long-term survival of approximately 1,000 dogs median survival times across a variety of cancer types.As a greater quantity of data is collected, and further correlations are made, Ardent Animal Health hopes that these data will help veterinarians and their patient’s families make more informed choices about cancer treatment. Additionally, real world cancer disease progression in dogs can also inform future human studies. Ardent and its fund Breakthru Strategies (Milwaukee, WI) are committed to bridging the gap between human and animal health. Its partnered mission is to strengthen the human-animal bond, while positively impacting innovation in human and animal health.Find out more about Ardent or its K9-ACV Therapy here: https://ardentanimalhealth.com/canine-cancer/[1] Yannelli JR, Wouda R, Masterson TJ, et al. Development of an autologous canine cancer vaccine system for resectable malignant tumors in dogs. Vet Immunol Immunopathol. 2016;182:95-100. doi:10.1016/j.vetimm.2016.10.011
See more
Arrow right

Patient Recruiting and Continued Engagement

Article
September 14, 2022
The modern patient has become accustomed to high-quality user-experiences in all her dealings as a consumer. Many clinical settings fail to meet these expectations. RegenMed recognizes the realities of today’s busy clinician and provides the solution in a turnkey, efficient and burden-free manner.
TABLE OF CONTENTS‍INTRODUCTIONVALUE-ADDED PATIENT ENGAGEMENT The Importance Of First Impressions Creating a Powerful First Impression Sustaining Patient Engagement Delivering On The PromisesSOLUTIONS The Key: Developing and Publishing “Real-World Evidence” Turnkey, Burden Free and Low CostIntroductionThe modern patient, in her everyday life, has become accustomed to high-quality user-experiences in all her dealings as a consumer. These experiences influence her healthcare delivery expectations, leading her to look for and evaluate:Multiple providers.Professional credentials, reviews and other forms of patient testimonials.Value for price.Access to reliable and useful information.Interactions personalized to her patient history, perceived condition and ultimate clinical intervention, continuing post-clinically.An efficient, predictable and welcoming clinical experience.Many clinical settings – even large hospital groups – fail to meet these expectations due to various financial, technological and personnel issues. These are no longer acceptable excuses, however, since comparable consumer expectations are regularly met by other heavily regulated and operationally-complex verticals – for example financial services. Value-Added Patient EngagementThe Importance Of First ImpressionsIt is the rare provider who does not have its own website. It is the rare patient who does visit that site to evaluate practitioner credentials, testimonials, procedure descriptions, pricing, and other elements. The patient is also evaluating alternative providers and procedures not only through competing providers’ sites, but through the myriad other sources easily accessible to him.A provider’s website is therefore its all-important “first impression”. Frequently, however, those online experiences are deficient, especially when compared with the those in other aspects of a potential patient’s life.Creating A Powerful First ImpressionAt the minimum, a provider’s website should clearly convey at least five fundamental elements:Professional credentials of the treating clinician specifically relevant to a potential patient’s indication or complaint.A description of the proposed clinical intervention for that indicationAn overview of the evidence supporting positive long-term outcomes for that intervention.Testimonials from other patients with similar indications.A description of the approach to monitoring of patient progress.These five elements give the practitioner the best chance of a consultation or at least inquiry from an educated and qualified patient.Ideally, the provider’s site goes well beyond the foregoing five elements – for example, providing efficient initial patient history entry, well-produced educational materials, multi-media assets featuring specific clinicians, etc. Best practices for early prospective patient engagement also include professional use of social media platforms.Sustaining Patient EngagementFor the patient, there is always a “patient journey”. That journey begins with symptoms, and continues through discussions with friends and families, Internet research, consultations with one or more clinicians, one or more procedures, and ideally recovery. (For many patients, unfortunately, the journey continues with revisions and other subsequent procedures.)Best clinical practice is of course to take the time to understand the patient’s history, in her own words, monitor long-term outcomes and continually improve evidence-based standards of care. However, workload, financial and other realities of contemporary medical practice usually prevent even the best-intentioned clinicians from doing so.Given the realities of today’s healthcare delivery, the treating physician typically accompanies her patients on only a small part of their journeys. This fundamental “disconnect” not only leads to deep dissatisfaction by both the patient and the clinician, but it is also often a cause of sub-optimal care.Delivering On The PromisesIt is one thing to “talk the talk”; the practitioner must also be able to “walk the walk”. From his everyday experience as a skeptical consumer, a prospectivepatient has become used to well-designed websites, followed by poor execution. Healthcare regulators are also highly attuned to misleading claims fromproviders. The website design and content should represent a road-map of the actuallongitudinal clinical experience – a roadmap not only for the prospectivepatient, but for the practitioner himself.‍SolutionsThe Key: Developing and Publishing “Real-World Evidence”Within the busy clinical practice of every provider lies the foundation of value-added patient recruitment and long-term engagement – real-world evidence. Such RWE is not only the language which regulators and payers speak, but also the language patients speak. By using modern and clinically-efficient platforms to harness this real-world evidence, a provider is able to:educate, recruit and retain patients;collect from, and report back to, patients germane pre-, peri- and post-clinical information;establish clinically-useful correlations from aggregated real-world datasets;support reimbursement, as well as legal/regulatory compliance;develop and publish compelling, fresh and evidence-based multi-media materials for website, conference, social media or other publication;enhance its professional reputation with patients, as well as among healthcare peers.Turnkey, Burden Free and Low CostThrough its clinical-grade inCytes™ and Benchmarc™ platforms, RegenMed helps large and smaller provider around the world develop and generate value from real-world evidence.In the context of patient recruitment and long-term engagement, RegenMed also works with providers to:Include “digital front doors” within their websites for secure patient enrollment, comprising not only demographic data, but also clinical benchmark information tailored to the selected indication and proposed intervention.Integrate as needed with calendaring or other practice management software.Provide the patient with high quality and evidence-based digital and in-office education materials customized for specific indications and procedures.Ensure long-term compliance with clinical recommendations, as well as outcomes reporting.Monitor post-clinical adverse events.Create videos and other multimedia presentations featuring the practitioner and/or her patients in the context of evidence-based outcomes and other best clinical practices.Publish that content on the provider’s website, social media channels and other platforms.RegenMed recognizes the financial and practice realities of today’s busy clinician. It provides its products and services in a turnkey, efficient and burden-free manner. Contact us today to find out more.Copyright © 2022 Regenerative Medicine LLC
See more
Arrow right

MSCs for Knee Osteoarthritis: Bioxcellerator’s Ongoing Real World Study

Client News
September 8, 2022
Bioxcellerator, located in Medellin, Colombia, treats patients from around the world with its unique, expanded MSC therapy from Wharton’s Jelly. They have been tracking their patients’ outcomes for over a year, and have granted us permission to share the following early and RWE derived insights: ...
Bioxcellerator, located in Medellin, Colombia, treats patients from around the world with its unique, expanded MSC therapy from Wharton’s Jelly. They have been tracking their patients’ outcomes for over a year, and have granted us permission to share the following early and RWE derived insights:This ongoing study focuses on every knee osteoarthritis case treated at Bioxcellerator (they have similar ongoing studies for other indications).The primary endpoint is the WOMAC scale, which is answered easily by patients from their own mobile devices.The study currently has 120 patients, 25 of whom have reached the 6-month time point.Out of those 25, WOMAC scores were reduced by an average of ~55%, indicating substantially reduced pain (+ is the plotted mean).Diving deeper, 6 of the 25 patients were non-responders, reporting very little change from their baseline measurement. Of the remaining 19, the average WOMAC score reduction was ~75%, demonstrating an even greater diminishment of pain.These follow up data are crucial to helping Bioxcellerator better understand their patients’ outcomes, communicate those expected outcomes to new patients, and achieve more predictable outcomes for all. Upcoming insights will include identifying the patient criteria more commonly associated with non-responders, as well as obtaining statistically significant 12 month follow-ups.To learn more about Bioxcellerator, click here.
See more
Arrow right
Nothing was found. Please use a single word for precise results.
Stay Informed.
Subscribe for our newsletter
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.