Contact Information: CONTACT INFORMATION: David Richardson 919-433-0216
According to Cutting Edge Information Research, Complex Contract Negotiations Delaying Clinical Trials
| Source: Cutting Edge Information
RESEARCH TRIANGLE PARK, NC--(Marketwire - October 8, 2008) - Clinical Trials are facing
significant delays due to hang-ups in contract negotiations, according to a
new report by Cutting Edge Information. According to "Streamlining
Clinical Trials," contract negotiations were cited by almost every company
surveyed as a source of significant delay, and this challenge ranked second
only to patient enrollment as an opportunity to speed up the clinical trial
process.
Private investigators and universities have different contract procedures,
but in both cases the number of people who are involved in the contracting
process creates bottlenecks and confusion. Some investigators are less
flexible about the legal language, which leads many companies to have
backup language ready to speed up the process. Finally, Institutional
Review Boards are often very particular about the company-specific
nondisclosure agreements.
According the report, some companies are entering into master agreements
with investigators and CROs to reduce the amount of haggling before each
trial. While master agreements require a significant time investment
upfront, in the end these agreements can save time and money.
"With complex contract negotiations taking place, pharmaceutical companies
are finding it more difficult to recoup their investments," says David
Richardson, research team leader at Cutting Edge Information. "Bottlenecks
in the contracting process extend development time, which reduces the
number of years a brand is on the market without generic competition."
"Streamlining Clinical Trials" (www.clinicaltrialbenchmarking.com) covers
resource allocation, performance measurement, continuous process
improvement, patient and investigator recruitment and adaptive trial
designs. Data includes clinical development budgets, clinical operations
team structures, performance measurement and management, clinical
operations hurdles and process improvement tools and tactics. The report
focuses on three aspects:
Patient Recruitment: Patient recruitment continues to dominate clinical
timelines and budgets. The report devotes an entire chapter to this
challenge, providing the latest trends and tools in recruitment.
Budgeting and Performance Assessments: Clinical project managers must set
clear performance expectations and measure and manage trials. The report
provides clinical spending benchmarks to assist in trial budgeting and
planning.
Clinical Operations Structure and Work Flow: Clinical trial management team
members must know their roles and responsibilities, and communication with
vendors and investigators must be seamless. The report outlines major
obstacles clinical teams face and presents real-company, proven solutions.