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2. 2. Ireland Cancer Center 2011 UH Case Medical Center. Philly vs. The Cleve. . . . Philly vs. The Cleve. . . Philly vs. The Cleve. . . So you have an idea??... Question 1. . Put it on paper: Letter of Intent. 3-5 pagesKey ingredientsRationale/Background ? why is this important?Objectives ? what do you hope to prove?Study population ? who are the patients?Procedures ? what is the intervention?Endpoints ? what will you measure?Statistics ? how will this study answer the question?Accrual ? can you do what you claim?.
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1. Navigating the Clinical Trials System and Clinical Trials in the Cooperative Groups Neal J. Meropol
Ireland Cancer Center, University Hospitals Case Medical Center
Case Comprehensive Cancer Center
Cleveland, OH
2. Ireland Cancer Center 2011UH Case Medical Center
3. Philly vs. The Cleve
4. Philly vs. The Cleve
5. Philly vs. The Cleve
6. So you have an idea……..
7. Question 1
8. Put it on paper: Letter of Intent 3-5 pages
Key ingredients
Rationale/Background – why is this important?
Objectives – what do you hope to prove?
Study population – who are the patients?
Procedures – what is the intervention?
Endpoints – what will you measure?
Statistics – how will this study answer the question?
Accrual – can you do what you claim?
9. What will make your LOI stand out?(everyone wants the same hot drug) Track record of you, your mentor, your institution
Evidence that you can get the work done – quickly (time = $)
Importance of the question – how will your study ultimately contribute to curing more patients with cancer?
Novelty of the question
Preliminary data; preclinical rationale – especially if from your lab, your institution
Cost vs. potential payoff
Complements other ongoing studies – elucidates mechanism
Well-written, no typos!
10. Resource needs will guide where you shop the concept Patients (single- vs. multi-institution)
Drugs
Diagnostics
Support for clinical trial staff, treatment, correlative studies
IRB/regulatory staff
Your time
Urgency to activate
11. Often, support for a clinical trial will come from more than 1 source NCI: CTEP, R03, R21, SPORE, R01, K’s, cooperative group, etc
ACS, AACR, ASCO –young investigator awards
Foundations
Philanthropy
Institutional support
Industry
12. Working with Industry: The Medical Science Liaison Your link with the main office
Can provide insight into the current portfolio of investigator-initiated studies
Can provide insight into company needs
Handle LOIs and assist in post-approval logistics
They seek to build good will
Your success is their success
They are not making decisions
It doesn’t hurt if your mentor has a relationship higher up in the organization to have them make contact
13. NCI Clinical Trials System NCI Program Descriptions
http://www.cancer.gov/aboutnci/organization/
Org Charts
http://www1.od.nih.gov/oma/manualchapters/management/1123/nci.pdf
17. The CTEP LOIhttp://ctep.cancer.gov/protocolDevelopment/letter_of_intent.htm Patient characteristics
Phase
Treatment plan
Rationale/Hypothesis
Lab correlates
Endpoints/Stats
Monthly accrual
18. CTEP Evaluation Criteria Strong scientific hypothesis
Supporting preliminary data and/or a strong rationale
Adequate patient accrual
Innovative and well-justified correlative studies
Ability to meet regulatory requirements
Not duplicative
Agent availability
Industry sponsor concurrence
19. Question 2
20. What is a Cooperative Group? Clinical Trials Cooperative Groups established in 1955
NIH U10 cooperative agreement (“assistance” rather than “acquisition” mechanism); compete every 6 years
Major emphases
definitive studies or preparatory efforts for these studies
combined modality approaches
translational research, correlating biologic insights gained from the laboratory with disease behavior and treatment outcome
Goals: Improve therapy, Adjunct studies, Cancer Control, Clinical trials methodology
20,000 patients enrolled annually; ~$100M annual budget
21. Cooperative Group Structure Three required components: headquarters, statistical/data management center, investigators/institutions
Four main type: disease (e.g. GOG), modality (e.g. RTOG), expertise (e.g. COG), multiumodality (e.g. ECOG)
Examples: ACOSOG, ACRIN, SWOG, RTOG, GOG, NCCTG, CALGB, ECOG, COG, NSABP
22. Disease vs. Modality Committees Disease Committees
the driver of phase III trials
Included as components of the U10 grant
Not all types of cancer are represented in every group
Modality Committees
Vary by group
May stand alone or be embedded in operations portion of U10 grant
May play supportive role or conduct studies
Examples: surgery, radiation, developmental therapeutics, pathology/laboratory science
Cross individual disease barriers
23. “Developmental Therapeutics” Committees May spearhead studies or conduct correlatives embedded in other trials
Pharmacogenetics
Population pharmacology
New drug development
Disease-independent correlatives
Orphan diseases
Special populations
Organ dysfunction, elderly
24. Question 3
25. How to break “in” Note: Cooperative Group leadership is dependent upon young investigators, and notices talent
Write a letter to introduce yourself to the group and committee chair
Have your mentor do the same; your local mentor can help by continuing to bring your name forward
Make an appointment to meet with the committee chair at the next group meeting
Contribute to discussion at meetings; be visible
Volunteer to write up old data
Pitch concepts; don’t forget about archival tissue and data
Written and oral presentations should be more complete and polished than those of established investigators
26. The Players at Macro Level
27. The Relationship with Industry The public system is dependent upon industry support
Pharma not only supplies drug; it is a major support mechanism for correlative science and increasingly for administrative costs ($ = accrual)
CRADAs (cooperative research development agreements) mandate dual sign-off
Find shared goals
Recognize your value and that of your industry partner
Remember: you are more than a source of patients
28. Levels of cooperative group review Disease committee chair
Disease committee core members
Your cooperative group’s executive committee and lab science committee
NCI disease Task Force
NCI disease Steering Committee
Cancer Therapy Evaluation Program (CTEP)
Then, write a protocol……….
29. NCI Steering Committees and Task Forces Implemented in response to NCI Clinical Trials Working Group report regarding conduct of phase III clinical trials
Effort to ensure involvement of all constituencies, including those not participating in cooperative groups (e.g. RO1 investigators, SPORE investigators)
Effort to improve coordination, reduce redundancy
Effort to streamline ultimate NCI review, by beginning CTEP involvement earlier in the development process
30. GI Steering Committee Charge Phase III concept development, evaluation, prioritization
Monitoring phase III trials
Large, multigroup randomized phase II trials
Organize State of the Science Meetings
Create Task Forces as appropriate
31. Example: Gastrointestinal Cancer
32. Protocol Development Process in the Public system
33. Question 4
34. Timelines
35. Process Flow Map: CALGB(Dilts, Sandler, Baker et al. JCO, 2006)
36. Calendar Day per Step: CALGB(Dilts, Sandler, Baker et al. JCO, 2006)
37. What can you do to keep the process moving? Get to know the protocol development team
Respond rapidly to requests
Keep an eye on the process
Ask how you can help – be proactive
Stay in touch with the contract team
38. Barriers to Success of Cooperative Phase III Trials Note: 50% of accrual comes from community oncologists; the ivory tower does not represent reality
Cooperative Group studies are not adequately reimbursed and cost the investigator money
Correlative study participation may not receive appropriate credit/reimbursement
Competition from industry trials
The system is heavily dependent on volunteerism
39. Key Criteria for a Successful Study Keep it simple
Ask an important clinical question
Ask one clinical question
Use a treatment that can’t be obtained outside of a trial
Involve patient advocates in design and beyond
Design a marketing strategy early, and implement early and often
40. Why conduct cooperative group research? Personal
You get to visit cool places and stay in nice hotels …...not
National platform with thought leaders
Access to infrastructure and patient resources; tissue and data, not merely patients
41. What defines a successful investigator-initiated study? You got it paid for and done
You presented the results and interacted with other experts with relevant interests
You published the results
You addressed an hypothesis
You contributed knowledge that leads to further exploration
You obtained results that will advance cancer treatment
You enjoyed the experience