(Press-News.org) BOSTON (March 20, 2015) - A study reported in this week's Science Translational Medicine found that qualified investigators are more likely to respond to opportunities for clinical trials if they are contacted by an institution-specific point person, or navigator.
Jonathan M. Davis, MD, Tufts Clinical and Translational Science Institute (CTSI) Director of Regulatory Affairs and Chief of Newborn Medicine at Floating Hospital for Children at Tufts Medical Center and a multi-institution team of child health researchers instituted the Point-Person Project, a pilot study that built a national network of navigators to find investigators with the bandwidth and expertise to respond to pediatric clinical research opportunities.
Multisite clinical trials are inherently complex and time-consuming. Clinical trials involving children face even greater challenges, with small patient populations and few investigators trained in pediatric therapeutics development. The Point-Person Project seeks to find these investigators and solicit their participation in a variety of clinical research projects for industry as well as individual investigators.
"If studies can't draw enough investigators to participate, patients and industry will suffer," says Dr. Davis. "When a research opportunity presents itself, we need to rapidly assemble a team of experts who can commit to participation and patient enrollment. The navigators find and connect these experts to get things underway."
The project designated 84 navigators at 55 institutions supported by the Clinical and Translational Science Awards (CTSA) program, funded through the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (NCATS). Over the course of one year, 289 investigators from 40 institutions responded to research opportunities, with 16 sites involved in start-up or enrollment of at least one trial. One research group that formed as a result of the Point-Person Project published a manuscript, developed a full clinical trial protocol, and submitted an Investigational New Drug (IND) application for approval by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA).
"Overall, our pilot project increased awareness of, and conversation about, planned clinical trials," says Dr. Davis. "Unfortunately, though, many investigators who initially expressed interest chose not to participate for a variety of reasons, but the most concerning was because industry-sponsored studies - required by law - typically don't lead to academic achievement."
Despite these challenges, Dr. Davis thinks the Point-Person model should be adopted nationally and the CTSA sites function as a clinical trials network. "We still have a lot of work to do," he says. ""Going forward, initiatives like the Point-Person Project will be more successful with a national infrastructure for clinical trials, institutional investment in clinical and translational research, and investigator education about regulatory requirements and good clinical practice. With these elements, and a network of navigators across the country, we'll be better equipped to design and conduct studies that benefit children."
INFORMATION:
The authors of the Point-Person Project include:
William E. Smoyer, MD, Nationwide Children's Hospital
Edward M. Connor, MD, Children's National Medical Center
W. Charles Huskins, MD, Mayo Clinic
Cindy Pastern, RN, Vanderbilt University
Mary Purucker, MD, PhD, National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences
Elisabeth C. Schrader, Quintiles, Inc.
Cynthia R. Jackson, DO, Quintiles, Inc.
Frederick J. Kaskel, MD, PhD, Montefiore Medical Center
Steven Hirschfeld, MD, PhD, National Institute for Child Health and Human Development.
The project was supported by the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences, award numbers UL1TR0001064, UL1TR000075, UL1TR000073, UL1TR000135, and UL1TR001070. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of NCATS, FDA, or the Eunice Kennedy Shriver NICHD.
About Tufts Clinical and Translational Science Institute (CTSI)
Tufts CTSI, a National Institutes of Health (NIH)-supported partnership among all the schools and hospitals of Tufts University, Northeastern University, Brandeis University, RAND, and healthcare industry and community organizations, was established in August 2008. Its purpose is to accelerate the translation of laboratory and medical research into clinical use, widespread medical practice, and into improved healthcare delivery and health policy. It connects people to research resources, consultation, and education, and fosters collaboration with scholars of all disciplines and with community members, with the ultimate goal of improving the health of the public. Tufts CTSI is currently funded by the NIH National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences, award number UL1TR001064.
About Tufts Medical Center
Tufts Medical Center is an exceptional, not-for-profit, 415-bed academic medical center that is home to both a full-service hospital for adults and Floating Hospital for Children. Conveniently located in downtown Boston, the Medical Center is the principal teaching hospital for Tufts University School of Medicine. Floating Hospital for Children is the full-service children's hospital of Tufts Medical Center and the principal pediatric teaching hospital of Tufts University School of Medicine. Tufts Medical Center is affiliated with the New England Quality Care Alliance, a network of nearly 1,800 physicians throughout Eastern Massachusetts.
URBANA, Ill. - Distillers dried grains with solubles, or DDGS, are increasingly common in swine diets in the United States. In recent years, different types of DDGS have come on the market.
"Ethanol plants use different procedures to produce DDGS, which results in different end products," said Hans H. Stein, a professor of animal sciences at University of Illinois.
"To produce conventional DDGS, the corn is cooked to gelatinize starch prior to fermentation. However, uncooked DDGS can also be used if specific enzymes are used to pre-digest the starch prior to fermentation. ...
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. - March 20, 2015 - Medicine obviously can't do much good if it sits on a pharmacy shelf. Yet more than one-quarter of the acne patients surveyed by Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center researchers didn't get medications prescribed by their dermatologists.
Among the 143 acne patients who participated in the study, 27 percent failed to obtain all of their medications, including both prescription drugs and over-the-counter products. Those who were prescribed two medications had the highest rate of primary non-adherence - not getting a medication or not using ...
Philadelphia, PA, March 20, 2015 - A new study provides the first evidence that the mediator complex subunit 15 (MED15) may play a crucial role in the pathophysiology of head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC). MED15 overexpression was found to be associated with higher mortality rates in HNSCC patients with cancer recurrence, particularly in oral cavity/oropharyngeal tumors, according to the study published in The American Journal of Pathology. MED15 overexpression was also associated with heavy alcohol consumption, which is an HNSCC risk factor.
HNSCC is the sixth ...
Researchers at the University of Rochester and their collaborators have developed a way to transfer 2.05 bits per photon by using "twisted light." This remarkable achievement is possible because the researchers used the orbital angular momentum of the photons to encode information, rather than the more commonly used polarization of light. The new approach doubles the 1 bit per photon that is possible with current systems that rely on light polarization and could help increase the efficiency of quantum cryptography systems.
Quantum cryptography promises more secure communications. ...
FORT LAUDERDALE-DAVIE, Fla. - Tigers - they are some of nature's most beautiful, deadly and endangered species. In fact, living tigers are severely endangered in fragmented geographic areas across Asia - some reports show their numbers as low as 3,000 wild individuals. While there are efforts to help protect these magnificent creatures, more was needed in terms of research into the genetics of tigers.
Nova Southeastern University researcher Stephen O'Brien was part of a team of research scientists from China, the United Kingdom, Israel, Russia and Qatar that looked at ...
A new study in Marketing Science, a journal of the Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences (INFORMS), finds that most firms do not use the skimming or penetration strategies that deliberately overprice or underprice new products.
Skimming or Penetration? Strategic Dynamic Pricing for New Products appears in the Articles in Advance Section of Marketing Science. The research was conducted by Martin Spann, Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich; Marc Fischer, University of Cologne and University of Technology, Sydney; and Gerard J. Tellis, Marshall School ...
Measuring the concentration of leukemia cells in patient bone marrow during the first 46 days of chemotherapy should help boost survival of young leukemia patients by better matching patients with the right intensity of chemotherapy. St. Jude Children's Research Hospital investigators led the research, which appears in the March 20 edition of the journal Lancet Oncology.
The findings stem from a study of 498 children and adolescents with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) enrolled in a St. Jude-led protocol between 2000 and 2007. The clinical trial was the first to use ...
MANHATTAN, Kansas -- Kansas State University scientists have released findings of a complex, two-year study of the genomic diversity of wheat that creates an important foundation for future improvements in wheat around the world.
Their work has produced the first haplotype map of wheat that provides detailed description of genetic differences in a worldwide sample of wheat lines. In genetics, a haplotype map is a powerful tool for transferring sequence-level variation to multiple gene mapping projects.
"All of these new, genomic-based strategies of breeding promise ...
EAST LANSING, Mich. - Recycling plastic works; additives to biodegrade plastic do not.
A new study from Michigan State University shows that several additives that claim to break down polyethylene (i.e., plastic bags) and polyethylene terephthalate (i.e., soda bottles) simply don't work in common disposal situations such as landfills or composting.
"Making improper or unsubstantiated claims can produce consumer backlash, fill the environment with unwanted polymer debris and expose companies to legal penalties," said Susan Selke, co-author of the study and MSU packaging ...
The March 2015 issue of Language, the flagship scholarly journal of the Linguistic Society of America, is now available online:
https://muse.jhu.edu/journals/language/toc/lan.91.1.html
Highlights of the March issue include a paper on the origins of Indo-European languages which has already been the subject of significant interest, as well as the inaugural article of Language's new online section for "Phonological Analysis".
"Ancestry-constrained phylogenetic analysis supports the Indo-European steppe hypothesis", by Will Chang, Chundra Cathcart, David Hall and Andrew ...