Modernizing the Data Infrastructure for Clinical Research to Meet Evolving Demands for Evidence.
Journal
JAMA
ISSN: 1538-3598
Titre abrégé: JAMA
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 7501160
Informations de publication
Date de publication:
05 Aug 2024
05 Aug 2024
Historique:
medline:
5
8
2024
pubmed:
5
8
2024
entrez:
5
8
2024
Statut:
aheadofprint
Résumé
The ways in which we access, acquire, and use data in clinical trials have evolved very little over time, resulting in a fragmented and inefficient system that limits the amount and quality of evidence that can be generated. Clinical trial design has advanced steadily over several decades. Yet the infrastructure for clinical trial data collection remains expensive and labor intensive and limits the amount of evidence that can be collected to inform whether and how interventions work for different patient populations. Meanwhile, there is increasing demand for evidence from randomized clinical trials to inform regulatory decisions, payment decisions, and clinical care. Although substantial public and industry investment in advancing electronic health record interoperability, data standardization, and the technology systems used for data capture have resulted in significant progress on various aspects of data generation, there is now a need to combine the results of these efforts and apply them more directly to the clinical trial data infrastructure. We describe a vision for a modernized infrastructure that is centered around 2 related concepts. First, allowing the collection and rigorous evaluation of multiple data sources and types and, second, enabling the possibility to reuse health data for multiple purposes. We address the need for multidisciplinary collaboration and suggest ways to measure progress toward this goal.
Identifiants
pubmed: 39102333
pii: 2822037
doi: 10.1001/jama.2024.0268
doi:
Types de publication
Journal Article
Langues
eng
Sous-ensembles de citation
IM
Investigateurs
Ali B Abbasi
(AB)
Kaleab Z Abebe
(KZ)
Amy P Abernethy
(AP)
Stacey J Adam
(SJ)
Derek C Angus
(DC)
Jamy Ard
(J)
Rachel A Bender Ignacio
(RA)
Scott M Berry
(SM)
Deepak L Bhatt
(DL)
Kirsten Bibbins-Domingo
(K)
Robert O Bonow
(RO)
Marc Bonten
(M)
Sharon A Brangman
(SA)
John Brownstein
(J)
Melinda J B Buntin
(MJB)
Atul J Butte
(AJ)
Robert M Califf
(RM)
Marion K Campbell
(MK)
Anne R Cappola
(AR)
Anne C Chiang
(AC)
Deborah Cook
(D)
Steven R Cummings
(SR)
Gregory Curfman
(G)
Laura J Esserman
(LJ)
Lee A Fleisher
(LA)
Joseph B Franklin
(JB)
Ralph Gonzalez
(R)
Cynthia I Grossman
(CI)
Tufia C Haddad
(TC)
Roy S Herbst
(RS)
Adrian F Hernandez
(AF)
Diane P Holder
(DP)
Leora Horn
(L)
Grant D Huang
(GD)
Alison Huang
(A)
Nancy Kass
(N)
Rohan Khera
(R)
Walter J Koroshetz
(WJ)
Harlan M Krumholz
(HM)
Martin Landray
(M)
Roger J Lewis
(RJ)
Tracy A Lieu
(TA)
Preeti N Malani
(PN)
Christa Lese Martin
(CL)
Mark McClellan
(M)
Mary M McDermott
(MM)
Stephanie R Morain
(SR)
Susan A Murphy
(SA)
Stuart G Nicholls
(SG)
Stephen J Nicholls
(SJ)
Peter J O'Dwyer
(PJ)
Bhakti K Patel
(BK)
Eric Peterson
(E)
Sheila A Prindiville
(SA)
Joseph S Ross
(JS)
Kathryn M Rowan
(KM)
Gordon Rubenfeld
(G)
Christopher W Seymour
(CW)
Rod S Taylor
(RS)
Joanne Waldstreicher
(J)
Tracy Y Wang
(TY)