TY - JOUR
T1 - The need for novel trial designs, master protocols, and research consortia in transplantation
AU - Stegall, Mark D.
AU - Smith, Byron
AU - Bentall, Andrew
AU - Schinstock, Carrie
N1 - Funding Information:
In transplantation, several research consortia already exist. National consortia such as the Canadian Donation and Transplantation Research Program involve several centers in a single country. The Consortium for Organ Preservation in Europe, a consortium focused on developing novel organ preservation techniques, is a multicountry group sponsored by the European Society for Organ Transplantation and funded through the European Union's 7th Framework Programme. The ONE Study is a consortium aimed to study cellular therapy in solid organ transplantation. The Multicenter Transplant Alliance, a research consortium in the United States, is currently enrolling a trial examining patient‐reported outcomes related to immunosuppression. The National Institute of Immunology, Allergy, and Infectious Diseases sponsor the Clinical Trials in Organ Transplantation and The Immune Tolerance Network ; however, these consortia have focused mostly on early‐phase, highly innovative therapy rather than late‐stage registration trials. To our knowledge, none of these consortia have ongoing efforts to develop master protocols, surrogate endpoints, and the implementation of novel trial designs aimed at regulatory approval of new drugs.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd
PY - 2020/1/1
Y1 - 2020/1/1
N2 - Large multicenter, randomized controlled trials are the paradigm for determining the efficacy and safety of new therapies. However, applying this classical approach to many areas of transplantation is difficult. For most types of organ transplants, the number of transplants performed is too small for such a trial (lung, pancreas, or vascular composite transplantation are examples). In larger populations such as kidney transplantation, the major unmet needs commonly involve small subsets of patients (antibody-mediated rejection, recurrent renal disease, etc). This issue is not unique to transplantation and has been successfully overcome in other areas of medicine. In oncology, for example, novel trial designs such as adaptive trial design and master protocols are now relatively common. In addition, the existence of multicenter, ongoing clinical research consortia have greatly enhanced the successful implementation of these novel trial designs. In this manuscript, we examine how novel trial designs, master protocols, and research consortia might enhance studies in transplantation aimed at the regulatory approval of new agents. Our premise is that more efficient approaches to clinical trials already exist and, through a coordinated effort by researchers, the pharmaceutical industry, and regulatory bodies like the FDA, they can be implemented in transplantation.
AB - Large multicenter, randomized controlled trials are the paradigm for determining the efficacy and safety of new therapies. However, applying this classical approach to many areas of transplantation is difficult. For most types of organ transplants, the number of transplants performed is too small for such a trial (lung, pancreas, or vascular composite transplantation are examples). In larger populations such as kidney transplantation, the major unmet needs commonly involve small subsets of patients (antibody-mediated rejection, recurrent renal disease, etc). This issue is not unique to transplantation and has been successfully overcome in other areas of medicine. In oncology, for example, novel trial designs such as adaptive trial design and master protocols are now relatively common. In addition, the existence of multicenter, ongoing clinical research consortia have greatly enhanced the successful implementation of these novel trial designs. In this manuscript, we examine how novel trial designs, master protocols, and research consortia might enhance studies in transplantation aimed at the regulatory approval of new agents. Our premise is that more efficient approaches to clinical trials already exist and, through a coordinated effort by researchers, the pharmaceutical industry, and regulatory bodies like the FDA, they can be implemented in transplantation.
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U2 - 10.1111/ctr.13759
DO - 10.1111/ctr.13759
M3 - Article
C2 - 31889338
AN - SCOPUS:85078243800
SN - 0902-0063
VL - 34
JO - Clinical Transplantation
JF - Clinical Transplantation
IS - 1
M1 - e13759
ER -