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Maya Zlatanova: Setting the clinical trial up for success by listening to the healthcare ecosystem

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Manage episode 382347604 series 3526489
Content provided by Sam Parnell & Ivanna Rosendal, Sam Parnell, and Ivanna Rosendal. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Sam Parnell & Ivanna Rosendal, Sam Parnell, and Ivanna Rosendal or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

We speak to Maya Zlatanova, the CEO and Founder of Trialhub and FindMeCure about trial strategy for clinical trials. We speak about the amount of information necessary to digest in order to answer the many complex questions during trial start-up, and how starting from the templates of previous trials can both be time-saving, but may also limit your perspective on what is possible with this specific trial.

By asking the question of “what can go wrong” can help open the innovative power of clinical trial design. This can also help the understanding of patients and sites in the real world, and lead to better decisions. This question can also lead to better empathy with the stakeholders, and help anticipate some of the issues that may arise in the trial based on the design.

Finding data that can reliably support the answer for this question is another challenge yet to be solved. This is complicated further by the collaboration between the CROs and sponsors, where the responsibility to collect the data necessary to support key decisions may fall between two chairs.

Aligning your clinical trial to the real world would ideally lead to adjustments of the clinical trial as it is ongoing - but that is prohibitively expensive and difficult. When you are having trouble recruiting patients for your trial though, it may be worth the cost to pivot your trial during conduct. Here patient listening may be a way to understand what else might be possible for your trial.

Patient recruitment slowing down may be a lagging indicator of trouble with your trial design. Having conversations with your investigators proactively can help you uncover potential issues with your trial before they manifest as recruitment problems. Understanding the entire ecosystem that the clinical trial takes place in can help you understand which alternatives to participating in a trial the patients may value more.

Guest:

Maya Zlatanova: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mayazlatanova/

Trialhub and FindMeCure: https://trialhub.findmecure.com/

________
Reach out to Sam Parnell and Ivanna Rosendal
Join the conversation on our LinkedIn page

  continue reading

64 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 382347604 series 3526489
Content provided by Sam Parnell & Ivanna Rosendal, Sam Parnell, and Ivanna Rosendal. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Sam Parnell & Ivanna Rosendal, Sam Parnell, and Ivanna Rosendal or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

We speak to Maya Zlatanova, the CEO and Founder of Trialhub and FindMeCure about trial strategy for clinical trials. We speak about the amount of information necessary to digest in order to answer the many complex questions during trial start-up, and how starting from the templates of previous trials can both be time-saving, but may also limit your perspective on what is possible with this specific trial.

By asking the question of “what can go wrong” can help open the innovative power of clinical trial design. This can also help the understanding of patients and sites in the real world, and lead to better decisions. This question can also lead to better empathy with the stakeholders, and help anticipate some of the issues that may arise in the trial based on the design.

Finding data that can reliably support the answer for this question is another challenge yet to be solved. This is complicated further by the collaboration between the CROs and sponsors, where the responsibility to collect the data necessary to support key decisions may fall between two chairs.

Aligning your clinical trial to the real world would ideally lead to adjustments of the clinical trial as it is ongoing - but that is prohibitively expensive and difficult. When you are having trouble recruiting patients for your trial though, it may be worth the cost to pivot your trial during conduct. Here patient listening may be a way to understand what else might be possible for your trial.

Patient recruitment slowing down may be a lagging indicator of trouble with your trial design. Having conversations with your investigators proactively can help you uncover potential issues with your trial before they manifest as recruitment problems. Understanding the entire ecosystem that the clinical trial takes place in can help you understand which alternatives to participating in a trial the patients may value more.

Guest:

Maya Zlatanova: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mayazlatanova/

Trialhub and FindMeCure: https://trialhub.findmecure.com/

________
Reach out to Sam Parnell and Ivanna Rosendal
Join the conversation on our LinkedIn page

  continue reading

64 episodes

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