TY - JOUR
T1 - Improving Cardiovascular Drug and Device Development and Evidence Through Patient-Centered Research and Clinical Trials
T2 - A Call to Action From the Value in Healthcare Initiative's Partnering With Regulators Learning Collaborative
AU - Warner, John J.
AU - Crook, Hannah L.
AU - Whelan, Karley M.
AU - Bleser, William K.
AU - Roiland, Rachel A.
AU - Hamilton Lopez, Marianne
AU - Saunders, Robert S.
AU - Wang, Tracy Y.
AU - Hernandez, Adrian F.
AU - McClellan, Mark B.
AU - Califf, Robert M.
AU - Brown, Nancy
N1 - Funding Information:
The American Heart Association Partnering with Regulators Learning Collaborative is part of the broader Value in Healthcare Initiative, a collaboration of the American Heart Association and the Robert J. Margolis, MD, Center for Health Policy at Duke University. The broader Value in Healthcare Initiative is supported in part by the American Heart Association and industry partners (Amgen, Bristol-Myers Squibb, the Bristol-Myers Squibb-Pfizer Alliance, and the Sanofi-Regeneron Alliance). American Heart Association volunteers (clinicians, patient representatives, and other experts) received reimbursement for travel to project meetings, but no other compensation was provided to Learning Collaborative members. The views of this article do not necessarily represent the views of the Learning Collaborative members or the organizations that they represent. Learning Collaborative members provided feedback on the content of this article, but the content of the article was independently determined by the Duke-Margolis Center, which is part of Duke University, and as such honors the tradition of academic independence on the part of its faculty and scholars. Neither Duke nor the Margolis Center takes partisan positions, but the individual members are free to speak their minds and express their opinions
Funding Information:
Dr Bleser has previously received consulting fees from Merck on vaccine litigation unrelated to this work and serves as Board Vice President (uncompensated) for Shepherd’s Clinic, a clinic providing free healthcare to the uninsured in Baltimore, MD. Dr Saunders has a Consulting Agreement with Yale–New Haven Health System for development of measures and development of quality measurement strategies for Center for Medicare & Medicaid Innovation Alternative Payment Models under Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Contract Number 75FCMC18D0042/Task Order Number 75FCMC19F0003, Quality Measure Development, and Analytic Support, Base Period. Dr Wang reports receiving research grants to the Duke Clinical Research Institute from Astra-Zeneca, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Cryolife, Chiesi, Merck, Portola, and Regeneron and receiving honoraria from AstraZeneca, Cryolife, and Sanofi. Dr Hernan-dez reports receiving research funding from American Regent, AstraZeneca, Merck, Novartis, and Verily and receiving consulting fees from Amgen, Astra-Zeneca, Bayer, Boston Scientific, Merck, Novartis, and Relypsa. Dr McClellan is an independent board member on the boards of Johnson & Johnson, Cigna, Alignment Healthcare, and Seer; co-chairs the Accountable Care Learning Collaborative and the Guiding Committee for the Health Care Payment Learning and Action Network; and receives fees for serving as an advisor for Cota and MITRE. Dr Califf is an employee of Verily Life Sciences and Google Life Sciences and is a board member of Cytokinetics. The other authors report no conflicts.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 Lippincott Williams and Wilkins. All rights reserved.
PY - 2020/7/1
Y1 - 2020/7/1
N2 - The pipeline of new cardiovascular drugs is relatively limited compared with many other clinical areas. Challenges causing lagging drug innovation include the duration and expense of cardiovascular clinical trials needed for regulatory evaluation and approvals, which generally must demonstrate noninferiority to existing standards of care and measure longer-term outcomes. By comparison, there has been substantial progress in cardiovascular device innovation. There has also been progress in cardiovascular trial participation equity in recent years, especially among women, due in part to important efforts by Food and Drug Administration, National Institutes of Health, American Heart Association, and others. Yet women and especially racial and ethnic minority populations remain underrepresented in cardiovascular trials, indicating much work ahead to continue recent success. Given these challenges and opportunities, the multistakeholder Partnering with Regulators Learning Collaborative of the Value in Healthcare Initiative, a collaboration of the American Heart Association and the Robert J. Margolis, MD, Center for Health Policy at Duke University, identified how to improve the evidence generation process for cardiovascular drugs and devices. Drawing on a series of meetings, literature reviews, and analyses of regulatory options, the Collaborative makes recommendations across four identified areas for improvement. First, we offer strategies to enhance patient engagement in trial design, convenient participation, and meaningful end points and outcomes to improve patient recruitment and retention (major expenses in clinical trials). Second, new digital technologies expand the potential for real-world evidence to streamline data collection and reduce cost and time of trials. However, technical challenges must be overcome to routinely leverage real-world data, including standardizing data, managing data quality, understanding data comparability, and ensuring real-world evidence does not worsen inequities. Third, as trials are driven by evidence needs of regulators and payers, we recommend ways to improve their collaboration in trial design to streamline and standardize efficient and innovative trials, reducing costs and delays. Finally, we discuss creative ways to expand the minuscule proportion of sites involved in cardiovascular evidence generation and medical product development. These actions, paired with continued policy research into better ways to pay for and equitably develop therapies, will help reduce the cost and complexity of drug and device research, development, and trials.
AB - The pipeline of new cardiovascular drugs is relatively limited compared with many other clinical areas. Challenges causing lagging drug innovation include the duration and expense of cardiovascular clinical trials needed for regulatory evaluation and approvals, which generally must demonstrate noninferiority to existing standards of care and measure longer-term outcomes. By comparison, there has been substantial progress in cardiovascular device innovation. There has also been progress in cardiovascular trial participation equity in recent years, especially among women, due in part to important efforts by Food and Drug Administration, National Institutes of Health, American Heart Association, and others. Yet women and especially racial and ethnic minority populations remain underrepresented in cardiovascular trials, indicating much work ahead to continue recent success. Given these challenges and opportunities, the multistakeholder Partnering with Regulators Learning Collaborative of the Value in Healthcare Initiative, a collaboration of the American Heart Association and the Robert J. Margolis, MD, Center for Health Policy at Duke University, identified how to improve the evidence generation process for cardiovascular drugs and devices. Drawing on a series of meetings, literature reviews, and analyses of regulatory options, the Collaborative makes recommendations across four identified areas for improvement. First, we offer strategies to enhance patient engagement in trial design, convenient participation, and meaningful end points and outcomes to improve patient recruitment and retention (major expenses in clinical trials). Second, new digital technologies expand the potential for real-world evidence to streamline data collection and reduce cost and time of trials. However, technical challenges must be overcome to routinely leverage real-world data, including standardizing data, managing data quality, understanding data comparability, and ensuring real-world evidence does not worsen inequities. Third, as trials are driven by evidence needs of regulators and payers, we recommend ways to improve their collaboration in trial design to streamline and standardize efficient and innovative trials, reducing costs and delays. Finally, we discuss creative ways to expand the minuscule proportion of sites involved in cardiovascular evidence generation and medical product development. These actions, paired with continued policy research into better ways to pay for and equitably develop therapies, will help reduce the cost and complexity of drug and device research, development, and trials.
KW - American Heart Association
KW - cardiovascular disease
KW - health policy
KW - risk
KW - standard of care
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U2 - 10.1161/CIRCOUTCOMES.120.006606
DO - 10.1161/CIRCOUTCOMES.120.006606
M3 - Article
C2 - 32683985
AN - SCOPUS:85088611241
SN - 1941-7713
VL - 13
SP - E006606
JO - Circulation: Cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes
JF - Circulation: Cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes
IS - 7
ER -