August 2024

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Editorial Board

Content stream editors

Translational science
Gary Kelloff US National Institutes of Health
Ilan Kirsch Adaptive Biotechnologies Corp.

regulatory science
Isaac Rodriguez-Chavez 4Biosolutions Consulting

Patient engagement
Natasha Ratcliffe Patient Engagement Specialist
Thomas Smith Independent Patient Consultant

Data and Digital
Lisa Barbadora Barbadora Ink

VALUE AND ACCESS
Wyatt Gotbetter Parexel

Editorial Staff

Alberto Grignolo, Editor-in-Chief

Sandra Blumenrath, Managing Editor, Scientific Publications DIA Scientific Communications

Chris M. Slawecki, Managing Editor, Global Forum DIA Scientific Communications

Linda Felaco, Copy Editor and Proofreader

Regional Editors

AFRICA
David Mukanga Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation

ASEAN
Jin Shun Belief BioMed

AUSTRALIA/NEW ZEALAND
Richard Day University of New South Wales, Medicine, St. Vincent’s Hospital

CHINA
Ling Su Shenyang Pharmaceutical University, Lilly Asia Ventures

EUROPE
Emma Du Four Independent R&D/Regulatory Policy Professional

EUROPE
Isabelle Stoeckert Bayer AG Pharma

INDIA
J. Vijay Venkatraman Oviya MedSafe

JAPAN
Toshiyoshi Tominaga Keio University Hospital, Clinical and Translational Research Center

LATIN AMERICA
Cammilla Gomes Roche

US
Ebony Dashiell-Aje BioMarin

DIA Membership

Bringing together stakeholders for the betterment of global health care.

Connecting Novel Disease Gene Discoveries to Functional Characterization Research in Model Organisms
Philip Hieter
Michael Smith Laboratories
University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada
Philippe M. Campeau
Department of Pediatrics
Centre de Recherche du CHU Ste-Justine, Montreal, Canada
Kym M. Boycott
CHEO Research Institute
University of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON, Canada
T

he identification of the gene and causative mutation for a human disease is an important breakthrough for patients and clinicians. It provides a DNA diagnosis, which can help with family planning, connecting families affected by the same condition or clinicians who could better define or study the condition. However, it is fundamentally a descriptive, hypothesis-generating milestone. The question immediately becomes how knowledge of the causative mutation can be used to better treat the patient. The answer almost invariably lies in understanding the disease gene’s function and how it is regulated within its biological pathway. This is where the experimental power of model organisms plays such an important role.

Life-Limiting Illness: Understanding the People Behind the Protocol Population
Clare Campbell-Cooper
C

onsistently, patients participate in clinical trials for altruistic reasons, and this is never more true than when the clinical trial targets a disease with no cure, or a life-limiting diagnosis. Many are placing their hope in the trial that is running: that it will prolong survival and at the same time afford, critically, an increased quality of life and a delay of symptoms. As the industry tries to find cures for these illnesses, death naturally occurs. As many have said, life is a terminal condition; there is nothing new there, but how do we, as clinical researchers, design trials that are compassionate, can help patients have a good death, and can help caregivers both support their loved ones and themselves feel supported?

Rethinking Big Data Can Deliver New Advances Across the Product Lifecycle
Establishing a Clean Data Foundation Could Speed Time to Market for Innovative New Products
Stephan Ohnmacht
Veeva
T

he life sciences industry has long waited for big data to transform how new medicines are developed and delivered. With artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML) now coming of age, research and development teams can finally seize the opportunity if their data is clean, standardized, interoperable, and secure.

Remote Services and Technology in Clinical Trials Require More Regulatory Clarity for Investigators:
A Call to Action
Jimmy Bechtel
The Society for Clinical Research Sites
W

ith the continued implementation of technology and remote services in clinical trials, there is a persistent lack of clarity and understanding around regulatory oversight. Investigators and clinical research site staff have not been properly guided or coached on how to ensure continued oversight when these new trial execution elements are utilized. This ambiguity is unfortunately causing undue hesitation and reluctance to accept trials that incorporate remote services and technology, not to mention the serious consequences that this lack of clarity brings with it.

Elevating Quality Management through Analytics: Strategies, Case Studies, and Application in Pharmaceutical Organizations
Part 1: The Intersection of Analytics and Quality Management
Kevin Richards
AstraZeneca, Canada
Luke Cash
AstraZeneca, UK
T

here is a clear conceptual link between Quality Management and Analytics, encapsulated in the maxim “You can’t manage what you can’t measure.” In practice, however, many pharmaceutical organizations struggle to operationalize this idea: Quantifying quality is filled with challenges, both technical and organizational, including a lack of essential data, siloed teams, decentralized systems, and lack of a unified roadmap for uplifting quality reporting and analytics.

Elevating Quality Management through Analytics: Strategies, Case Studies, and Application in Pharmaceutical Organizations
Part 2: Making the Case for Analytics: Key Strategic Pillars
Kevin Richards
AstraZeneca, Canada
Luke Cash
AstraZeneca, UK
T

hese case studies serve as practical illustrations of how an analytical approach can make a meaningful impact in ensuring process adherence and enabling study quality oversight throughout the clinical trial lifecycle and across audience tiers within the organization. However, as alluded to in the introduction, analytical use cases always require collaboration and—importantly—sponsorship from other areas of the business. This section will outline a range of strategies for gaining endorsement for and removing barriers to implementation.

Meeting Highlights: DIA Global Annual Meeting 2024
Regulatory Roundup: Insights from Global Town Halls at DIA 2024
Sorcha McCrohan
DIA
R

egulators worldwide recently convened in San Diego for DIA’s Global Annual Meeting 2024 to discuss respective countries’ priorities and chart new horizons in reimagining regulatory processes, alignment, and collaboration. Regulatory representation at several Town Halls included intergovernmental bodies like the World Health Organization (WHO), international coalitions such as the International Coalition of Medicines Regulatory Authorities (ICMRA), and regional agencies including the US FDA, European Medicines Agency (EMA), Health Canada, ANVISA (Brazil), PMDA (Japan), and NMPA (China). The meeting also featured the Access Consortium, a coalition of regulatory authorities from Australia, Canada, Singapore, Switzerland, and the United Kingdom.

Around the Globe: Europe
EU HTA Regulation Joint Clinical Assessments: Ready for January 2025?
Isabelle Stoeckert, Elena Popa
Bayer AG
Inka Heikkinen
Lundbeck
EFPIA HTA Working Group
O

nly a few months remain before developers must follow a new market access route for new cancer products and advanced therapy medicinal products (ATMPs) in the European Union (EU). Traditionally, health technology assessments (HTAs)–evaluations of the clinical effectiveness and value of new medicines and devices–were conducted by individual EU member states. This approach led to redundancies and potential delays in bringing new treatments to patients, particularly on clinical benefit assessment. The EU HTA Regulation and the introduction of Joint Clinical Assessments (JCAs) aim to streamline these evaluations.

Around the Globe: Europe
How “Team Europe” Can Co-Create the Healthcare R&D Framework of Tomorrow
Magda Chlebus
European Federation of Pharmaceutical Industries and Associations (EFPIA)
Steffen Thirstrup
Alberto Ganan Jimenez
European Medicines Agency (EMA)
Katharina Nothelfer
AiCuris Anti-infective Cures AG
Pedro Franco
Merck Serono Limited
Annette Bakker
Children’s Tumor Foundation (CTF)
CTF Europe
Tim Chesworth
AstraZeneca
Jeevan Virk
Novartis
Virginie Hivert
EURORDIS-Rare Diseases Europe
Bert Leufkens
Utrecht University
Emma Du Four
Independent R&D/Regulatory Policy Professional
T

o meet the needs of patients and to drive competitiveness, Europe needs a consistent and predictable regulatory framework to attract investment and expertise and support innovation. Here’s how we can do it together.

Around the Globe: Europe
Health as a Common Good:
Can All Public Ministers Be Ministers of Health?
Juan E. del Llano Señarís
Alicia del Llano Núñez-Cortés

Fundación Gaspar Casal
I

n 2013, Margaret Chan, who served as Director-General of the World Health Organization (WHO) from 2006 until 2017, invited civil society to reflect on why all ministers around the world could be, to some extent, ministers of health: “Prevention must be the cornerstone of the global response to … diseases. Their root causes reside in non-health sectors. Collaboration among multiple sectors is imperative.” This disruptive approach is grounded on the “health in all policies” (HiAP) principle outlined in the 1993 Helsinki Declaration.

Around the Globe: US
Advancing Rare Disease Measurement With The Rare Disease COA Resource
Naomi Knoble
Division of Clinical Outcome Assessment (DCOA), ODES, OND, CDER, US FDA
Lindsey Murray
Rare Disease COA Consortium
I

t is estimated that more than 350 million people worldwide, approximately 10% of the global population, half of whom are children, live with a rare disease. Of these rare diseases, fewer than 10% have approved treatments. This significant unmet treatment need has been met with unprecedented response within the global scientific, biopharmaceutical, regulatory, and patient communities, including unprecedented growth in rare disease drug and gene therapy development and approvals. However, the well-known difficulties of conducting clinical trials (e.g., small samples, wide geographic distribution, heterogenous symptoms) and developing products for these rare indications persist, and identifying outcomes remains a hurdle. For efficacy endpoints based on clinical outcome assessments, COAs have not yet been identified, developed, or modified for most rare diseases.

We Are DIA
DIA Congratulates Americas 2024 Regional Inspire Award Winners

Our 2024 Americas Regional Inspire Award Winners

Portrait headshot close-up photograph view of Aaron J. Horowitz smiling
OUTSTANDING CONTRIBUTION TO HEALTH AWARD
Aaron J. Horowitz
Empath Labs
Portrait headshot close-up photograph view of Marcia Bailey smiling
EXCELLENCE IN SERVICE AWARD

Marcia Bailey
GSK, Canada

Portrait headshot close-up photograph view of Karla Childers grinning
EXCELLENCE IN SERVICE AWARD

Karla Childers
Johnson & Johnson

Portrait headshot close-up photograph view of Niam Vora smiling
2024 LEADER OF TOMORROW

Niam Vora
Doctor of Pharmacy Candidate 2024

eBook

Embrace the Opportunities in a Changing FDA Advisory Committee Landscape cover
eBook
New eBook: Achieving Excellence in Regulatory Information Management
Members of the DIA Regulatory Affairs Community working in Regulatory Information Management (RIM) have continued to update the RIM consensus white paper to bring you a complete publication in the form of best practices across the spectrum of RIM capabilities and functional interfaces: Achieving Excellence in Regulatory Information Management.
Thanks for reading our August 2024 Issue!
Views and opinions expressed in Global Forum are those of the authors alone and do not necessarily represent those of DIA or any other agency, organization, employer, or company. DIA does not guarantee the accuracy or completeness of any information published in Global Forum and will not be responsible for any errors, omissions, or claims for damages, including exemplary damages, arising out of use, inability to use, or with regard to the accuracy or sufficiency of the information contained in Global Forum.