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Creating An Efficient Clinical Trial Build System via The Clinical Trials Rapid Activation Consortium (CTRAC)

$300,161P30FY2020CANIH

University Of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison WI

Investigators

Linked publications, trials & patents

Paper 39638850Paper 39604703Paper 39580301Paper 39530524Paper 39527745Paper 39516197Paper 39484544Paper 39481346Paper 39474803Paper 39462136Paper 39452931Paper 39444276Paper 39443360Paper 39432401Paper 39414902Paper 39408582Paper 39407431Paper 39402986Paper 39399121Paper 39386576Paper 39386545Paper 39379374Paper 39374311Paper 39364328Paper 39358429Paper 39345631Paper 39335130Paper 39312186Trial NCT06608511Trial NCT06557733Trial NCT05985681Trial NCT05521698Trial NCT05107219Trial NCT03725761Trial NCT03722030Trial NCT03703492Trial NCT03656276Trial NCT03393741Trial NCT03387514Trial NCT03358563Trial NCT03356470Trial NCT03342378Trial NCT03304002Trial NCT03300557Trial NCT03209869Trial NCT03185871Trial NCT03028584Trial NCT03023202Trial NCT02955043Trial NCT02917629Trial NCT02876640Trial NCT02780401Trial NCT02719821Trial NCT02169284Trial NCT02096783Trial NCT02095145Trial NCT01999881Trial NCT01935960Trial NCT01901835Trial NCT01707004Trial NCT01625156Trial NCT01325311Trial NCT01263613Trial NCT01245205Trial NCT01243359Trial NCT01233505Trial NCT01218620Trial NCT01217450Trial NCT01158274Trial NCT01083641Trial NCT01004796Trial NCT00896974Trial NCT00666562Trial NCT00544596Trial NCT00499135Trial NCT00462969Trial NCT00415025Trial NCT00410605Trial NCT00227513Trial NCT00138203Trial NCT00109863Trial NCT00079014Trial NCT00052832Trial NCT00049712Trial NCT00036790Trial NCT00028652Trial NCT00023855Trial NCT00022412Trial NCT00005794Trial NCT00004872Patent 9867974Patent 9763597Patent 9603567Patent 9470697Patent 9161720Patent 8871458Patent 6974254Patent 6438202Patent 6114119Patent 6020178

Abstract

PROJECT SUMMARY Standard-of-care electronic health records (EHR)-based treatment plans support efficiency and quality through standardization. However, treatment-plan builds for clinical trials, irrespective of the number of patients, must be built from the ground up for each new trial and at each added site. Additionally, investigational treatment plans often require configurations for novel medications, numerous ancillary procedures, and research finance requirements. The current paradigm is costly, complex, and inefficient. Representatives of five cancer centers agreed to be part of the project?s Clinical Trials Rapid Activation Consortium (CTRAC). The project?s goal is to develop processes across multiple NCI-supported cancer centers that will facilitate the development of single builds of EHR clinical-trial treatment plans that can be deployed at multiple institutions in support of NCI- sponsored network studies. Members will investigate the question: can a small consortium of clinical trials sites develop methods to standardize workflows, drug formularies, drug administration procedures, and laboratory requirements leading to the creation of the components for a standardized, electronic, clinical trials build system? Specific aims are as follows: 1) To identify the tasks currently performed by EHR investigational treatment plans (SOPs, policies, and workflows) and to define differences among these SOPs at the individual member sites of the consortium; 2) To standardize the processes within each task where possible and document differences that would require modifications across sites; 3) To develop a master assessment of EHR treatment-plan modules that could be reused to perform components of the same research protocol tasks at multiple sites while maintaining compliance with the requirements of member organizations of the consortium; 4) To organize a leadership structure for the consortium that will work with the NCI and an EHR provider to oversee this initiative to assure that adequate progress is made toward the ultimate goal of creating a more automated electronic clinical-trial build system that will facilitate the activation of clinical trials across all NCI- supported networks; 5) To build standardized electronic clinical-trial build modules that could undergo future pilot testing at each institution for a specified group of NCI-sponsored clinical trials; and 6) To facilitate development of metrics for the new EHR processes that can demonstrate whether more consistent patient care, reduced medication errors, and fewer adverse events result from a standardized approach to clinical- trial build modules.

View original record on NIH RePORTER →