Real World Evidence

Accessing and Generating RWD

Leveraging Real World Data for Clinical and Observational Research

The abundance of data generated during routine health care is growing in significance and should be used for clinical and observational research. Patient electronic records, registries, data from pharmacy and social media, and wearable sensors have been increasingly used as eSources. This process requires strategizing, implementing novel data technologies, as well as close collaboration between pharmaceutical companies and organizations that possess the data. CHI’s 14th Annual Accessing and Generating RWD conference is designed to facilitate knowledge exchange around all aspects of real-time, real-world data generation, its quality, and applications. The stream includes two unique parts, each of which features its own set of topics and speakers.

Sunday, February 11

Part 1: Accessing and Generating RWD

SCOPE's 3rd Annual Masters of Clinical Research Golf Tournament* (Sponsorship Opportunities Available)8:00 am

*Limited space available. Separate registration and fee required for Golf.

Registration Open9:00 am

PRE-CONFERENCE WORKSHOPS

– 1:45 pm [In-Person ONLY] Open Workshop: Introducing ClinEco, SCOPE's B2B Clinical Trial Community and Marketplace1:00 pm

Sit down with a small cross-industry group for a 45-minute hands-on session to learn about and register for the new B2B clinical trial community and marketplace featuring 65+ companies. ClinEco unites sponsors, CROs, service providers, and sites to streamline partnering, vendor research, innovation, and learning. This year we are also introducing ClinEco Commons, a collaborative space where you can access, visit, and share valuable content as well as contribute to the wealth of knowledge within the SCOPE and ClinEco Community. Join the ClinEco community now at: clineco.io/register. To register for the workshop, please opt into this workshop by selecting the checkbox under ‘Conference Selection.' Open to all SCOPE attendees.

– 2:30 pm [In-Person ONLY] The Path towards Sustainable Trials Workshop1:00 pm

Reducing the Environmental Impact of Global Clinical Trials
Developing frameworks to define and manage sustainability risks, and effective guidelines to reduce the carbon footprint of clinical trial operations is a collaborative effort. Beyond positive environmental impacts, sustainable approaches are expected from stakeholders and can be a deciding factor for customer selection and attracting talent. This workshop will discuss the current hotspots of carbon emissions in clinical research and suggest introductory reduction strategies in relation to each. To register, please opt into this workshop by selecting the checkbox under ‘Conference Selection.’ Open to all SCOPE attendees. Sustainable Healthcare Coalition is a Partnering Organization at SCOPE.

Jason Lanier, Environmental Sustainability Focus Area, Director, Janssen Clinical Innovation (JCI)​

David Lumby, Executive Director, EHS, Thermo Fisher Scientific

SUNDAY AFTERNOON PLENARY SESSION:
KICK-OFF MULTI-STAKEHOLDER PLENARY KEYNOTE AND PARTICIPANT ENGAGEMENT AWARDS

3:00 pm

Organizer's Welcome Remarks & 3rd Annual Masters of Clinical Research Golf Tournament Awards

Micah Lieberman, Executive Director, Cambridge Healthtech Institute; Co-Founder, ClinEco

3:10 pm PANEL DISCUSSION:Plenary Keynote Introduction

Fareed Melhem, Senior Vice President, Head of Medidata AI, Medidata

3:15 pm PANEL DISCUSSION:

The Next Horizon of Clinical Research: A Multi-Stakeholder Panel on Integrating Research into the Care Continuum

Uli Broedl, Senior Vice President, Head of Global Clinical Development & Operations, Boehringer Ingelheim

Janice Chang, CEO, TransCelerate Biopharma, Inc.

Christoph Koenen, Head of Clinical Development & Operations, Pharma Research & Development, Bayer

Katherine Taylor, Head, Risk Evaluation & Adaptive Integrated Monitoring, Merck & Co., Inc.

This presentation will foster discussion between a diverse set of biopharma leaders representing health authorities, sponsors, sites, and industry consortia on the current and future opportunities facing global R&D, clinical care, and patient satisfaction. Specific topics discussed will include opportunities and barriers to giving patients access to clinical research as part of the care continuum.

3:45 pm

SCOPE's 8th Annual Participant Engagement Awards Introduction

Micah Lieberman, Executive Director, Cambridge Healthtech Institute; Co-Founder, ClinEco

3:50 pm

SCOPE's 8th Annual Participant Engagement Awards

PANEL MODERATORS:

Kelly McKee, Vice President, Decentralized Clinical Trials (DCT), Medidata; Co-Creator or the SCOPE Participant Engagement Award

David Sall, President & CEO, Marketing, Patient Enrollment Advisors LLC

Now in its 8th year, the Participant Engagement Award (PEA) recognizes innovation and change in how the industry communicates with participants in the fields of recruitment and retention in clinical trials. PEA embodies the values and personal accomplishments of Jerry Matczak, who sadly passed away soon after receiving the inaugural 2017 award. We dedicate this award to Jerry in the hopes that it will serve as a reminder of his ideals and accomplishments. SCOPE’s 2024 Participant Engagement Award program is brought to you by Cambridge Healthtech Institute (CHI)’s SCOPE.

PANELISTS:

Tricia Buchheit, Associate Director, Patient Recruitment, Alnylam Pharmaceuticals

Greg Christie, Chief Product Officer, StudyKIK

Gretchen Goller, Senior Director & Head, Patient Recruitment Solutions & Clinical Development Operations, Seagen, Inc.

Otis Johnson, PhD, MPA, Principal Consultant, Trial Equity

Micah Lieberman, Executive Director, Cambridge Healthtech Institute; Co-Founder, ClinEco

Jeffrey Zucker, Principal Clinical Research Consultant

SCOPE's Big Game Tailgate4:35 pm

Everyone who’s been to SCOPE knows that the Kickoff Reception is NOT to be missed! This year, in honor of the Big Game, rep your favorite team while joining SCOPE sponsors, speakers and attendees for a pre “Big Game” celebration at the Rosen’s outdoor Event Lot.  Football jerseys or T-shirts encouraged, even if your team didn’t make the grade this year (for our European friends, YOUR football team jerseys are welcome too!). Sample some tailgate food, quench your thirst at the bar, and play some classic outdoor games.  This event is always a SCOPE favorite, so please join us directly after the Sunday afternoon plenary session!  

Close of Day5:50 pm

Monday, February 12

SCOPE’s Monday Morning Fun Run!7:00 am

Join SCOPE’s Coordinators for our 5K Fun Run!
All of us at Cambridge Healthtech Institute recognize the importance of integrating well-being and fitness into our work travel routines. We're excited to offer our support to faculty, sponsors, and attendees in fostering a culture of wellness. This is an easygoing, informal running (or walking) event. No time chips, running bibs, or energy bars—just a laid-back opportunity for a small group to start the day on a positive note. You can sprint, run, jog, walk, jog-and-talk, or walk-and-talk—the goal is to get up and get moving! Meet us in the Rosen Hotel’s front lobby near the birdcage at 7 am sharp!

RUN COORDINATORS:

Eileen Murphy, Associate Conference Producer, Production, Cambridge Healthtech Institute
Nate DePinto, Assistant Meeting Planner, Cambridge Healthtech Institute
Steve Wimmer, Vice President, Partnerships, Business Development, 1nHealth

Registration Open7:30 am

Morning Coffee7:30 am

Get Up and Go! Jumpstart your morning with a specialty made-to-order coffee and delicious treats, courtesy of our sponsors.

MONDAY MORNING PLENARY SESSION:
TRANSFORMING THE DEVELOPMENT PARADIGM & GENERATIVE AI IN CLINICAL TRIALS

8:30 am

Organizer's Welcome Remarks

Micah Lieberman, Executive Director, Cambridge Healthtech Institute; Co-Founder, ClinEco

8:35 am Plenary Keynote Introduction

Chris Crucitti, Chief Revenue Officer, Citeline

8:40 am PLENARY KEYNOTE PRESENTATION:

Time Is Life: Pfizer’s Approach to Accelerating Clinical Development

Robert Goodwin, Senior Vice President, Clinical Development and Operations, Pfizer Inc.

How do we transform the development paradigm to make trials more accessible, more convenient for the participants, less costly, and most importantly, get us the answers we need faster? Because when you’re a patient waiting for a new treatment, every minute matters. Pfizer recognizes that time is life and has set a bold ambition to reduce three additional years off their development timelines, after successfully cutting down more than two years already since 2016. Hear from Rob Goodwin, Senior Vice President and Head of Clinical Development & Operations, on what it takes to accelerate development without compromising quality, compliance, or patient safety.

9:05 am INTERACTIVE PANEL:

Use Cases of Generative AI in Clinical Trials: Beyond Can We...Where and When Should We?

PANEL MODERATOR:

Brian Martin, Head of AI, R&D Information Research; Research Fellow, AbbVie, Inc.

Where are we now as an industry with integrating and utilizing AI in clinical research? What is next is an open question and the possibilities are many and the hype is loud, but the more important question to ask is “why should we?” in each and every case. AI is a tool, but not always the right one or the most efficient one. Where are you in the journey of bringing Generative AI into CT? Should teams focus on technology and use cases like Diversity in CT inclusion and other specific applications? Why? How was value measured? What risks exist? Where do we choose not to use AI in clin ops and why? Dive in with our expert panel.

PANELISTS:

Neil Garrett, PhD, Head of Regulatory Medical Writing, Johnson & Johnson

Samar Noor, Vice President, Head of Statistical Programming, Global Biometric Sciences, Bristol Myers Squibb Co.

Hoifung Poon, PhD, General Manager, Health Futures, Microsoft Research

Prasanna Rao, Senior Director, Global Head of AI/ML, Global Biometrics and Data Management, Pfizer Research & Development

Grand Opening Coffee & Refreshment Break in the Exhibit Hall Best of Show Voting Opens9:35 am

SCOPE’s exhibit hall is a one-of-a-kind experience. With 240 leading clinical trial technology and services companies represented it’s easy to find new, innovative companies to partner with, and don’t forget to visit your existing partners to see their latest and greatest. Take a minute to vote for SCOPE’s Best of Show, grab some refreshments, charge your devices, or ham it up in a photo booth, but above all, wear comfy shoes; you’ve got some miles to cover!  

Special Book Signing10:30 am

Barnett’s 2024/2025 Good Clinical Practice: A Question & Answer Reference Guide
Edited By: Donna Dorozinsky, RN, MSN, CCRC President and CEO, Just in Time GCP

LEARNING FROM PARTNERS

10:45 am Chairperson's Remarks

Craig Serra, Head of Clinical Research Scientific & Technical Engagement, Flatiron Health

10:50 am

Real-World Evidence: Leveraging RWD for Clinical and Observational Research

Demissie Alemayehu, PhD, Vice President, Biostatistics, Pfizer Inc.

In rare disease drug development and certain other areas of unmet medical need, RWD may be used to generate evidence for regulatory and related purposes. However, to ensure an adequate sample size for reliable inference, the data may need to be pooled from disparate sources. In such cases, it is essential to assess the combinability of the information from the different data sources. We review existing approaches and suggest recommendations, with particular emphasis on cases where either the sample size or the number of data sources is small.

11:15 am CO-PRESENTATION:

Health Systems as Key Partners for RWD Research 

John D. Chelico, MD, System Vice President & Chief Medical Information Officer, CommonSpirit Health

Eirini Scholosser, Founder & CEO, Dyania Health

This presentation will share a perspective of a large and modern health system on medical information in general, and on possibilities of partnership with pharmaceutical companies to move forward medical and clinical research.

11:40 am

Better Utilizing Real-World Data to Drive Clinical Research Success at AMCs (Phenotypes, Ontologies, Enclaves, and more)

Christopher Herrick, Vice President, Research Technology, Mass General Brigham

The MGB Hospital Integrated Research Organization (HIRO) empowers industry sponsors, sites, and clinicians to accelerate AMC-based research by streamlining study start-ups, fostering collaborative workflows, and harnessing data-driven insights for patient-centric study designs. Our robust multi-modal real-world data platform combined with our unique approach to working with outside organizations enables us to better identify, engage, and recruit patients and successfully support sponsors from feasibility to trial performance.

11:55 am

Transforming Healthcare Using Deep Data and Remote Monitoring

Michael Snyder, PhD, Stanford W. Ascherman Professor & Chair, Department of Genetics, Director, Center for Genomics & Personalized Medicine, Stanford University

Our present healthcare system focuses on treating people when they are ill rather than keeping them healthy. We have been using big data and remote monitoring approaches to monitor people while they are healthy to keep them that way and detect disease at its earliest moment presymptomatically. We use advanced multiomics technologies (genomics, immunomics, transcriptomics, proteomics, metabolomics, microbiomics) as well as wearables and microsampling for actively monitoring health. Following a group of 109 individuals for over 13 years revealed numerous major health discoveries covering cardiovascular disease, oncology, metabolic health and infectious disease. We have also found that individuals have distinct aging patterns that can be measured in an actionable period of time. Finally, we have used wearable devices for early detection of infectious disease, including COVID-19 as well as microsampling for monitoring and improving lifestyle. We believe that advanced technologies have the potential to transform healthcare and keep people healthy.

12:20 pm CO-PRESENTATION:First-in-Class AI JIT and RWE for Clinical Development

Ryan Kennedy, Senior Vice President, General Manager – Digital Trial Solutions, ConcertAI

Caroline Merilat, Director of Research Operations, QCCA and Exigent Network

Historically trials have fallen behind on the originally predicted schedule and often under-accrued the targeted number of enrolled patients. As the focus of biopharma innovations has become increasingly precise, hence narrower in the targeted patient characteristic, these issues are even more acute. This presentation addresses why JIT study designs, working within JIT-capable research networks, with JIT-optimized AI technologies, offer an alternative that operates at scale and increasingly represents a new standard.

Transition to Lunch12:50 pm

12:55 pm LUNCHEON PRESENTATION:Learning Faster from EHR Data: How Life Sciences-Health System Partnerships Are Changing Evidence Generation

Ryan Ahern, CMO, Life Sciences, Truveta

Discover how life sciences companies and health systems are collaborating to unlock clinical insights from EHRs at scale. We’ll discuss how ongoing collaboration can prevent or quickly resolve research roadblocks, highlight innovative methods for identifying patient cohorts, optimize trial design, improve clinical care, and outline the practical implications of real-world evidence generated through partnerships.

Coffee & Dessert Break in the Exhibit Hall1:25 pm

Special Book Signing1:30 pm

TRIAL TOKENIZATION CHALLENGES

2:20 pm Chairperson's Remarks

Michael Fronstin, Global Head of Client Partnerships and Commercialization, Oracle Life Sciences

2:25 pm

What Is Trial Tokenization and What Are the Benefits?

Aaron W. Kamauu, MD MS MPH, CEO, Navidence LLC

This presentation is designed to set the tone for the trial tokenization discussion and it will emphasize the role of various stakeholders involved in decision-making and process development around trial tokenization.

2:35 pm

Fit-for-Purpose Use of Various Types of Tokens

Thomas Dougherty, Director, RWE Partnerships and Innovation, RWE Center of Excellence, Pfizer Inc.

This presentation will elaborate on how clinical trial teams decide on which trials to tokenize and why.

2:45 pm

Various Methods of Tokenization & Selecting a Token Strategy

Akshay Vashist, Head of Medical and Real-World Data Analytics, Otsuka Pharmaceutical Co.

There are several methods of tokenization available on the market. Which one is the right fit for your goals? This talk will summarize existing approaches and point out strengths and weaknesses of each of them.

2:55 pm

Collaboration between RCT & RWD/RWE Teams

Lucinda Orsini, Vice President, Value and Outcomes Research, COMPASS Pathways

How can we bring together clinical trials and RWD teams? Organizations that solve this problem will definitely win a competitive advantage in the near future.

3:05 pm

Implementation of Trial Tokenization within a Pragmatic Randomized Trial: Learnings & Challenges

Emily Zacherle, Associate Director, Real-World Evidence, Novo Nordisk, Inc.

This presentation will provide an overview of key learnings and challenges from implementation of trial tokenization and data linkage within a pragmatic randomized clinical trial, such as driving efficiencies with early collaborative engagement and operationalizing tokenization at a single versus multi-site level.

3:15 pm PANEL DISCUSSION:

Clinical Trial Tokenization: Bringing RCT & RWD Together

PANEL MODERATOR:

Aaron W. Kamauu, MD MS MPH, CEO, Navidence LLC

Clinical Trial Tokenization: Bringing RCT & RWD Together. What is clinical trial tokenization, why is it beneficial to clinical research, and how do you implement these novel solutions effectively in your research and drug development programs? Come learn from experts in the field. Hear why these methods were important for their programs, the challenges they faced bringing RWD & RCTs together, and effective approaches to overcoming those challenges.

PANELISTS:

Emily Zacherle, Associate Director, Real-World Evidence, Novo Nordisk, Inc.

Akshay Vashist, Head of Medical and Real-World Data Analytics, Otsuka Pharmaceutical Co.

Lucinda Orsini, Vice President, Value and Outcomes Research, COMPASS Pathways

Thomas Dougherty, Director, RWE Partnerships and Innovation, RWE Center of Excellence, Pfizer Inc.

3:45 pm CO-PRESENTATION:

Development of a Site-and-Study Agnostic Patient Referral Model Based on Patient Matching Learnings

Alyssa Beckwith, Director, Strategic Program Leader, The Janssen Pharmaceutical Companies of Johnson & Johnson

Ariel Bourla, MD, PhD, Senior Director, Data Science and Digital Health, Johnson & Johnson R&D

As clinical trial designs become more complex, patients in community-based settings in the US have even less access to participate in clinical research. To this end, we have implemented different types of patient matching solutions and captured insights on what models work best on which patient populations, as well as key elements that universally enhance outcomes. We will discuss our current efforts directed towards our goal of improving timely identification of trial-eligible patients and successfully referring them to trial sites where they can access valuable study opportunities and contribute to future learnings.

4:10 pm Case Studies on AI-Driven Patient Recruitment

Wout Brusselaers, CEO, Deep 6 AI

The promise of AI in clinical research is here. It can contextualize patient journeys from unruly electronic medical record (EMR) data with unprecedented speed and precision. Through real-world examples, we will explore how AI is precisely matching patients to complex inclusion and exclusion criteria and surfacing hard-to-recruit patient populations. Attendees will hear the tangible impact AI has on optimizing study design, improving feasibility, and accelerating recruitment.

4:25 pm CO-PRESENTATION:RWD Enrichment Studies: Leveraging Tokenization in the Pre- and Post-Trial Periods to Inform Product Strategy

Irene Cosmatos, MSc, Senior Director, Epidemiology & Real-World Evidence, UBC

Jeff Lowry, Senior Director, Technology Solutions Services, UBC

Capturing data on the patient’s healthcare journey prior to and following participation in a research study builds a more complete understanding of their healthcare journey and increases the overall evidence yield. This presentation explores the use of tokenization and linkage to secondary healthcare data for generating insights on long-term treatment effectiveness and safety to enrich the learnings from the core study.

Welcome Reception in the Exhibit Hall4:55 pm

Close of Day6:15 pm

Evening Shuttles to Pointe Orlando6:30 pm

Shuttles will be available Monday and Tuesday 6:30-10:30 pm (last pick up), bringing you to and from Pointe Orlando.
Pointe Orlando is an open-air entertainment destination featuring local and brand-name restaurants, bars, nightclubs, 20-screen movie theater, comedy club, and family attractions.
Look for SCOPE shuttle signage at each of the SCOPE hotels: Rosen Shingle Creek, DoubleTree by Hilton Hotel Orlando at SeaWorld, Element Orlando International Drive, Residence Inn Orlando at SeaWorld, and Hotel Kinetic (soon being named Hotel Landy).

Tuesday, February 13

Registration Open8:00 am

BREAKFAST PRESENTATIONS

8:30 am BREAKFAST PRESENTATION OPTION #1:The New Frontier: How Intelligent Automation is Transforming Clinical Deployment

Colin Weller, General Manager, Evidence Generation Platform, Product, Medable

Join us as Colin Weller, GM, Evidence Generation Platform at Medable, unveils how intelligent automation technology reduces clinical trial deployment timelines and accelerates evidence generation at scale as shown in their latest results to reduce trial deployment timelines by 50%. Weller will discuss how Top-10 global pharmaceutical companies are benefiting from Medable’s novel technology, and how the expanded use of digital measures and biomarkers will continue to accelerate clinical development timelines. 

8:30 am BREAKFAST PRESENTATION OPTION #2:Medpace with Trialbee | How a Patient Recruitment Platform (PRP) Overcomes Global Challenges

Matt Walz, CEO, Business Operations, Trialbee

Miaesha Campbell, Senior Director, Patient Recruitment, Medpace

Join Miaesha Campbell (Medpace) and Matt Walz (Trialbee) for a practical discussion of global challenges a Patient Recruitment Platform (PRP) helps to overcome. Topics include….Data standardization across all recruitment sources; Consistent medical pre-qualification of all referrals; Human interaction with patients; Reducing burden on sites; and Actionable ROI analysis by channel. Attendees will learn how a PRP centralizes activity from all partners to improve recruitment globally.  

Transition to Sessions9:00 am

RWE—SUPPORTED REGISTRATION STUDIES

9:10 am

Chairperson's Remarks

Aaron W. Kamauu, MD MS MPH, CEO, Navidence LLC

9:15 am

eSource to EDC: Applying an Innovation-To-Scale

Paul Jacobs, Associate Director, Development Innovation, Regeneron Pharmaceuticals

The adoption of innovations within drug development takes many years, and solving the manual entry problem for clinical data capture is no different, even with recent momentum on interoperability of data standards and software solutions for digital transfer of clinical data from site eSource to Sponsor EDC. Paul Jacobs will share how Regeneron is using an ongoing innovation-to-scale approach that considers technology, people, and process to de-risk adoption, and embracing the learnings, challenges, and failures as a key part of the process.

9:35 am PANEL DISCUSSION:

Using RWD to Increase Patient Diversity in Clinical Trials

PANEL MODERATOR:

Marjorie Zettler, PhD, MPH, Senior Director, Clinical Science, Accutar Biotech

Recent FDA guidance recommends that sponsors develop a diversity plan for pivotal clinical trials, with enrollment goals for participants of different racial or ethnic backgrounds, as well as operational measures the sponsor intends to take in order to achieve those goals. How can real-world data and real-world evidence be leveraged to help prepare diversity plans and improve diversity in clinical trial participation? This panel discussion will explore opportunities, success stories, and challenges in using RWD/RWE to promote more representative clinical trials.

PANELISTS:

Dyan Bryson, Patient Engagement Strategist and Patient Advocate, Inspired Health Strategies

Jen Banks, Director, Project Management, Project Management, WEP Clinical

Wout Brusselaers, CEO, Deep 6 AI

Barry Leybovich, Senior Product Manager, Clinical Research, Flatiron Health, Inc.

Susan Zelt, RWE and Clinical Scientist, Yale University

10:15 am 20% of Surveyed Patients are Not Satisfied with Their Medications: Collecting Meaningful RWD from Challenging Patients

Erica Smith, PhD, Senior Vice President, Business Development and Marketing, Spencer Health Solutions

Psychiatric patients are extremely difficult to engage, as they historically have low adherence (50%) and high dropout rates (48-55%) in clinical trials. In this study, patient experience and satisfaction were evaluated in patients taking atypical anti-psychotics using spencer®, an in-home dispensing & RWD collection platform. Nearly 20% of patients were dissatisfied with treatment. Remarkably, these complex patients were 95% adherent and 92% compliant to daily surveys via spencer®.  

Coffee Break in the Exhibit Hall10:45 am

Special Book Signing10:50 am

INTERNAL COLLABORATION TO ADVANCE RWE AND CLINICAL TRIALS TEAMS

11:40 am Chairperson's Remarks

Christopher Heckman, VP, Global Project Delivery, Global Head, Real World Intelligence, Fortrea

11:45 am

Regulatory Environment Update for RWD Application in Clinical Trials 

Simon Dagenais, RWE Lead, Internal Medicine, Pfizer Inc.

Biopharma companies are investing in real-world data (RWD) for a variety of uses. The potential to transform RWD into real-world evidence (RWE) to support regulatory decisions, including new product approvals or label expansions, is a key factor in the development of the RWD/RWE industry. This presentation will provide an overview of FDA regulations related to RWD and RWE and describe how the regulatory environment can influence this field. The presentation will focus on the 21st Century Cures Act and the subsequent FDA guidance documents and demonstration projects related to RWD and RWE.

12:10 pm

Trial Success Starts with Real-World Data

Alexander Deyle, Vice President, Life Sciences, Clinical Research, Flatiron Health, Inc.

Gaelan Ritter, Senior Director, Innovation and Digital Health, Bristol Myers Squibb Co.

Currently, the data used to design clinical trial protocols are sourced from prior trials, key opinion leaders, and published data. Often such data is outdated and does not accurately represent current treatment patterns or natural disease history, and does not provide insights into the current patient population. Further, trial accrual remains a challenge. Incorporating high-quality, recent real-world data as a component of protocol development can solve the challenges that clinical development teams encounter when designing trial protocols. As a result, protocols can be more representative of the current natural history of disease for specific populations of interest, eligibility criteria can be optimized, and the volume of avoidable protocol amendments may be reduced. During this presentation, we will discuss details on how real-world data can be used to design study protocols and present a specific example in which this has been done. We will also highlight the outcomes seen in both protocol optimization and patient matching.

12:30 pm

Nordic Data on the Global Stage

Kirk Geale, PhD Candidate, CEO, Quantify Research

This talk will help stakeholders understand and utilize one of the world’s most important data regions outside of the US, Scandinavia. Many practitioners and decision-makers know that this data is world-class, but few have the necessary information and tools to make informed decisions about where, when, why, and how to use this data. This talk will add a valuable resource to stakeholders’ tool belts regardless of whether their focus is commercial, regulatory, or academic.

Transition to Lunch12:45 pm

12:50 pm LUNCHEON PRESENTATION:Patient Perspectives on Clinical Trial Recruitment and Participation

Ria Westergaard, Director, Product Strategy for Clinical Trial Solutions, Intelligence Solutions, Evernorth Health Services

Listening to and incorporating insights from patients is key to simplifying study designs for improved study enrollment, health equity, and outcomes. This session focuses on combining patient feedback with real world evidence including:

  • Understanding unmet needs and which outcomes matter most to real patients
  • Identifying challenges to enrollment and building solutions into study design
  • Coupling data with patient engagement and feedback from study planning through recruitment

Coffee & Dessert Break in the Exhibit Hall Best of Show Winner to be Announced1:20 pm

SCOPE’s hall this year is bigger than ever; there’s no way to cover it all in just one break. So, after lunch, grab some dessert and a cup of coffee and visit all those booths that you just couldn’t make it to this morning. Stay to hear our Best of Show Winner announcement and congratulate the winner! 

Special Book SIgning1:25 pm

Part 2: Leveraging RWD for Clinical and Observational Research

TUESDAY AFTERNOON PLENARY SESSION:
MODERNIZING TRIALS WITH FDA & INTERSECTION OF INNOVATIVE DEVELOPMENT MODELS AND INVESTMENT APPROACHES

2:20 pm

Organizer's Welcome Remarks

Marina Filshtinsky, MD, Executive Director, Conferences, Cambridge Healthtech Institute; Co-Founder, ClinEco

Micah Lieberman, Executive Director, Cambridge Healthtech Institute; Co-Founder, ClinEco

2:25 pm Chairperson's Remarks

Jie Wu, PhD, Co-Founder & CDO, Segmed, Inc.

2:30 pm PANEL DISCUSSION:

Fireside Chat with FDA on Modernizing Clinical Trials

PANEL MODERATOR:

Ken Getz, Executive Director and Professor, Tufts Center for the Study of Drug Development, Tufts University School of Medicine

Prospectively randomized, placebo-controlled clinical trials are often the most powerful tool that we have for answering fundamental questions about the safety and efficacy of new medical products. But greater efficiency is needed, as clinical trials are becoming more costly and complex to administer. Moreover, many of the new products that we’re being asked to evaluate aren’t easily evaluated using these traditional approaches. At the same time, new technologies and sources of data and analysis make better approaches possible. FDA has been engaged in a comprehensive effort to advance new innovations and to enable the modernization of clinical trials, so what does this mean to you and to our industry? 

PANELISTS:

Kevin Bugin, PhD, Deputy Director, Operations, Office of New Drugs (OND), FDA Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER)

Marsha Samson, PhD, Analyst, Office of Medical Policy, FDA

3:00 pm CROSS-INDUSTRY PANEL:

Intersection of Innovative Development Models and Investment Approaches That Move the Needle at the Portfolio Level

PANEL MODERATOR:

Jacob LaPorte, PhD, Co-Founder, Prisma Therapeutics

New to SCOPE 2024—we bring together for the first time, a business-focused panel of strategics from the pharma, investor, healthcare, CRO, and technology start-up communities, to discuss partnership models that drive much needed innovation in clinical trials and impact development at the portfolio level. How can Pharma manage risks and investments while continuing to remain at the forefront of drug development, clinical research, and trial technology? Which alternative business models and risk-sharing partnerships can support innovation in a resource-constrained environment? Where are the opportunities and the ROI from such partnerships? Which emerging technologies are showing growth and investment and are moving the needle in clinical research?

PANELISTS:

Angela DeLuca, Vice President, Head of Oncology & Cell Therapies Clinical Operations, Global Development Office, R&D, Takeda

Michael Greeley, Co-Founder & General Partner, Healthcare Technology, Flare Capital Partners

Michelle Longmire, Co-Founder & CEO, Medable, Inc.

Sam Srivastava, CEO, WCG

Booth Crawl & Refreshment Break in the Exhibit Hall (Opportunities Available) Last Chance for Viewing3:30 pm

Join your colleagues in the Exhibit Hall for one last visit. Enjoy SCOPE’s “Booth Crawl,” where sponsoring booths have a silent competition to see who can serve the most fun or fancy food and drink. Visit their booths to see for yourself! Take a final lap around the hall and enjoy time with your newfound friends and partners. 

RWD-POWERED CLINICAL TRIAL DESIGN AND EXECUTION

4:30 pm Chairperson's Remarks

Michael Eckrote, VP, R&D Solution Sales, HealthVerity

4:35 pm PANEL DISCUSSION:

RWD-Informed Trial Design and Operations

PANEL MODERATOR:

John Cai, MD, PhD, Executive Director, Real-World Data Analytics and Innovation, Merck

Efforts in real‐world data (RWD) and real‐world evidence (RWE) to expedite and enrich the development of new biopharmaceutical products have accelerated in the last several years. This panel discussion will cover opportunities and challenges using real-world case studies of RWD-based trial design and operations.

PANELISTS:

Zhaoling Meng, PhD, Associate Vice President & Global Head, Clinical Modeling & Evidence Integration, Sanofi

Laszlo Vasko, Senior Director, Clinical Innovation R&D IT, Janssen Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

Edwin A. White, Director, Trial Optimization, Metrics Analytics & Performance, Merck

Xiaoyan Wang, PhD, Senior Vice President, Life Science Solutions, Intelligent Medical Objects Inc.

5:15 pm

Deriving External Control Arms from RWD to Enhance the Value of Phase 1 Trials

Ding Jiang, PhD, Senior Manager Biostatistics, Global Biometrics & Data Sciences, Bristol Myers Squibb Co.

The study investigates deriving external control arms (ECA) from real-world data (RWD) to enhance the value of single-arm Phase 1 trials. It applied various methods such as G-computation, digital twins, propensity score matching, and inverse probability treatment weighting. All methods reduced bias in projecting treatment effects in Phase 3 trials compared to no adjustment, with digital twins offering the least biased estimates.

5:35 pm Revolutionizing Patient Identification with Clinical AI that Decodes Vast Datasets in Milliseconds

Karim Galil, MD, CEO, Mendel

Discover how life sciences companies are leveraging clinical AI to interpret vast datasets at an unprecedented pace, finding the right trial participants more efficiently than ever. This session will share data demonstrating that industry-specific clinical AI outperforms general domain LLMs and explore the science behind creating true, physician-like intelligence where other deep learning-centric approaches have fallen short.

Close of Day6:05 pm

Evening Shuttles to Pointe Orlando6:30 pm

Shuttles will be available Monday and Tuesday 6:30-10:30 pm (last pick up), bringing you to and from Pointe Orlando.
Pointe Orlando is an open-air entertainment destination, featuring local and brand names restaurants, bars, nightclubs, 20-screen movie theater, comedy club, and family attractions.
Look for SCOPE shuttle signage at each of the SCOPE hotels: Rosen Shingle Creek, DoubleTree by Hilton Hotel Orlando at SeaWorld, Element Orlando International Drive, Residence Inn Orlando at SeaWorld, and Hotel Kinetic (soon being named Hotel Landy).

Wednesday, February 14

Registration Open7:15 am

BREAKFAST PRESENTATION

7:45 am BREAKFAST PRESENTATION:Empowering Clinical Operations Professionals: Harnessing AI to Enhance Outcomes

Scott Chetham, CEO & Co-Founder, Faro Health, Inc.

Generative AI, machine learning, and large language models are all over the news and have the potential to impact every aspect of Clinical Development. As Clinical Development professionals, how can we differentiate the hype from reality and have an educated voice to assess the risk and rewards of these rapidly evolving technologies? Join Faro to explore current, upcoming, and hyped trends. Understand the challenges in adopting these technologies in Clinical Development.

Transition to Sessions8:15 am

DIGITAL DATA FLOW MANAGEMENT AND VISUALIZATION

8:25 am

Chairperson's Remarks

Hui Zhang, PhD, Senior Director, Digital Office, Eli Lilly and Company

8:30 am CO-PRESENTATION:

Magnol.AI—Engineering Large Wearable Sensor Data towards Digital Measures

Regan Giesting, Senior Software Engineer, Digital Health Office, Eli Lilly & Company

Leah Miller, Software Engineer, Digital Health Office, Eli Lilly & Company

Guangchen Ruan, Associate Director, Research & Development, Eli Lilly & Company

Hui Xiao, Advisor, Software Engineering, Eli Lilly and Company

Hui Zhang, PhD, Senior Director, Digital Office, Eli Lilly and Company

While many industry players promote the ability to ingest wearable sensor data, what matters more than that is how to uncover data insights and turn these data into intelligence. Come hear about one of the industry's best examples of what a Sensor Cloud should (and can) do to ensure dBM research is done efficiently and rigorously.

9:00 am CO-PRESENTATION:

Strategies and Considerations in Handling and Analyzing Digital Health Technology Data Streams

Sarthak Chatterjee, PhD, Postdoctoral Fellow, Merck & Co., Inc.

Jie Ren, PhD, Director, Data Science, Global Digital Analytics & Technologies, Merck & Co., Inc.

The large volume and high complexity of DHT data presents unique challenges for data handling and analysis. Here, we present systematic capability build to address such challenges and enable handling and analysis of DHT data in a robust and scalable manner. We’ll discuss efforts on cloud-computing infrastructure build, data/algorithm organization, and algorithm literacy development. Such analytical capabilities around DHT data could support broader adoption of DHT-enabled measures in clinical trials.

9:30 am No Code Requirement: Pre-Trial Insights for Operational Excellence

Joseph Roettgen, PharmD, Area Vice President, Life Sciences, Komodo Health

The next generation of clinical development analytics means universal access and usability of real-world data within a software solution that requires no coding experience. Now, clinical development teams can surface pre-trial insights within minutes. 

 

To help drive operational excellence, we will cover examples of identifying ideal trial sites and investigators, optimizing protocol design, and increasing trial diversity with patient cohort modeling.

 

DIGITAL BIOMARKERS INFRASTRUCTURE; NOVEL PATIENTS DATA SOURCES

9:45 am

Harnessing Multimodal Data Analytics in Clinical Research: ORBIT, Multimodal Data Hub for Precision Medicine

Alex Li, Director, Data Science Platform, Janssen R&D LLC

The Oncology Research Biomarker Innovation Tower (ORBIT) establishes a cohesive and unified multimodal biomarker data hub across clinical studies as part of the Med.ai ecosystem. ORBIT enables accurate and real-time analysis of site, patient, sample, biomarker, and diagnostic data, providing actionable insights to study teams while transforming decision-making and streamlining operations.

10:10 am

Does Your Drug Have an App? The Role of Digital Biomarkers in Shaping Digital Drug Solutions across Therapeutics Areas

Amir Lahav, ScD, Founder and CEO, SkyMed Digital; Advisor, Pharma & MedTech

What motivates pharma to go beyond the pill?  Emerging trends in Digital Biomarkers and Software-as-Medical-Device (SaMD) enabled the development of companion apps for commercial drugs. This approach allows pharma companies to remotely track medication side effects and monitor disease symptoms based on real-time digital measures otherwise not accessible using traditional RWE studies. What makes digital drug solutions successful? How are they regulated? What is the role of AI in empowering patients to make healthier choices?

10:30 am CO-PRESENTATION:

Optimizing Real-World Evidence through Crowdsourcing and AI to Address Regulatory Requirements, Trial Inclusion, and Patient Voice

Yael Elish, Founder & CEO, StuffThatWorks

Caroline Redeker, Senior Vice President, Corporate Development, Advanced Clinical

Matt Veatch, Managing Director, Revesight Consulting

Born from its world-class WAZE heritage, StuffThatWorks is a unique patient-centric RWE platform providing patient-centric RWE data collection at scale. As WAZE reinvented transportation, its founders now seek to rediscover how crowd-sourcing people’s health data can eliminate obstacles to potentially life-saving treatments and accelerate research productivity. This session outlines how the pressing need for real-world data requires new perspectives and designs drawing on the crowd-sourcing, data mining success of one of the world’s most proven AI platforms now demonstrated to access clinical trial and patient care insights in one place. StuffThatWorks already draws on the consent of three million people and spans 1250 chronic conditions. The platform generates 1.3B data points on participants' lives, conditions, genetics, treatments, effectiveness, side effects, and more. In addition to structured self-reporting data, participants can add EMR, Wearables, and geospatial data, providing users with a SAS-based patient engagement dashboard with navigation by inclusion and exclusion criteria, diversity and representation scores, and proximity to principal investigators. Centered around the innovation sector’s pledge—to improve people’s lives—StuffThatWorks also supports non-profit collaboration to encourage philanthropic patient-directed research organizations to tap into the potential of the community platform and data infrastructure to accelerate diagnosis and treatment delivery. In this session, you will hear from a WAZE founder who has now turned attention to another navigational need—accelerating the pathway to life-saving therapies.

Networking Coffee Break10:45 am

SYNTHETIC DATA IN CLINICAL TRIALS

11:05 am

Chairperson's Remarks

Dorothee B. Bartels, PhD, Associate Professor (Apl. Professor) for Public Health and Epidemiology, Medizinische Hochschule Hannover

11:10 am

Synthetic Data for Health Data Sharing and Enhancement

Lucy Mosquera, Research Associate, Electronic Health Information Lab at Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario; Senior Director of Data Science, Replica Analytics an Aetion Company

This session will introduce synthetic data generation for health data. Case studies will be presented to show synthetic data as a privacy enhancing technology that facilitates data sharing and as a means of enhancing clinical trial data.

11:30 am

Using Machine Learning to Augment and Inform Clinical Trial Design: Use-Cases from Multiple Therapeutic Areas

Khaled Sarsour, PhD, Vice President, Data Science and Digital Health; Real World Evidence & Advanced Analytics, Janssen Pharmaceuticals

This presentation will share several case studies in various therapeutic areas of challenges and solutions of AI and ML implementation in clinical trial design.

11:50 am

Driving Drug Development with Synthetic Data

Dooti Roy, PhD, Director, Global Biostatistics and Data Sciences, Boehringer Ingelheim Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

Using artificial patients for drug development or medical device development is a promising field, only if the models can reach the required complexity and can be truly representative of the human population.

12:10 pm PANEL DISCUSSION:

AI in Clinical Research and RWE: Synthetic Data and Beyond

PANEL MODERATOR:

Dorothee B. Bartels, PhD, Associate Professor (Apl. Professor) for Public Health and Epidemiology, Medizinische Hochschule Hannover

PANELISTS:

Zhaoling Meng, PhD, Associate Vice President & Global Head, Clinical Modeling & Evidence Integration, Sanofi

Lucy Mosquera, Research Associate, Electronic Health Information Lab at Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario; Senior Director of Data Science, Replica Analytics an Aetion Company

Khaled Sarsour, PhD, Vice President, Data Science and Digital Health; Real World Evidence & Advanced Analytics, Janssen Pharmaceuticals

Dooti Roy, PhD, Director, Global Biostatistics and Data Sciences, Boehringer Ingelheim Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

Transition to Lunch12:40 pm

12:45 pm LUNCHEON PRESENTATION:Enabling a Clinical Information Highway

Kim Walpole, Associate Principal, ZS

Explore the transformative potential in drug development. We’ll share how technology can facilitate a seamless flow of clinical information, connect stakeholders and stream data-driven decision-making. By harnessing cutting-edge technology, the industry will be able to accelerate medical research, enhance patient care and revolutionize the way clinical trials are conducted. Join us to discover the future of a clinical information highway, where data-driven insights drive healthcare forward.

SCOPE Summit 2024 Adjourns1:15 pm






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