Insights

Post-COVID-19 Clinical Trial: Understanding Patient Centricity

Written by Halloran Consulting Group | May 12, 2020 6:10:00 PM

Lessons Learned from a Virtual Town Hall held on May 8, 2020

Much of the daily news focus is on the race to produce vaccines and therapies to combat the spread of COVID-19. While this work is undeniably important, we mustn’t lose sight of what keeps our industry running: the patients we serve. Despite being instrumental to our mission of making lifesaving therapies accessible to all, patient perspectives are far too often lost in the wake of “flashier” news about approvals, supply chains, and scientific breakthroughs.

Halloran’s seventh virtual town hall convened patients and patient advocacy experts for a discussion about how the very people we seek to serve are experiencing the pandemic. Patient centricity has been a buzzword in industry circles for quite some time now, with sponsors equating it to either reduced protocol assessments or increased use of technology in trials– but can a trial truly be patient-centric without obtaining direct input from the patient, to begin with? Our industry has a lot to learn about patient-centric trials but giving patients a voice will help us better understand their concerns, needs, and hopes so we can do our jobs better both during COVID-19 and after it loosens its grip on the world.

Patient perspective on participating in clinical trials during COVID-19

General patient concerns:

  • Supply chain and drug shortages
  • Stress around maintaining personal drug inventories while navigating the logistics of coordinating shipments, sitting on hold on pharmacy phone lines and adapting to a rapidly changing environment with little visibility into the rationale for those changes
  • The onus of “project managing” their treatment Blood shortages and donor matches
  • Home health aides entering patients’ personal space with limited personal protective equipment (PPE)
  • Trial delays/de-prioritization (especially among rare disease patients)
  • Fear that therapies may become unavailable or that trials will be paused

What sponsors can do:

  • Do not assume patients want trials to stop or that patients don’t want to come onsite.
  • Maintain a close connection with patient communities and with individual patients – these relationships are especially paramount during these times.
  • Over-communicate and over-engage with patients to keep them updated with the latest news on the status of their trial and any forthcoming changes of routine.
  • Actively engage with sites to better understand any creative solutions they may have implemented to mitigate patient burden and alleviate anxiety.

Patient perspective on participating in clinical trials after COVID-19

General patient perspective:

  • The introduction of virtual visits and remote capabilities is long overdue and very exciting. There’s hope within the patient community that these solutions will endure into post-COVID protocols. However, there are a couple of concerns:
    • Home health aides’ unregulated personal hygiene and lack of PPE;
    • Rapid construction and introduction of digital tools/portals that are challenging for patients to master and are rarely interoperable with other systems.
  • Despite excitement about virtual and remote visit solutions, patients are increasingly eager to get back onsite and to their “normal” routine.  Patients have been pleased with early innovation at sites that are still hosting patients in person, such as:
    • Insisting patients wait in their cars rather than in waiting rooms;
    • Providing escorts into the hospital or clinic;
    • Limiting or prohibiting persons accompanying patients at their visits;
    • Extending visit hours and treatment windows to facilitate distancing.
  • The power of touch is not to be underestimated, nor is the importance of predictability and consistency. For many patients, regular therapy is a source of comfort, and relationships with physicians and research teams are deeply meaningful.  Patients hope that technological innovation in our industry will not come at the expense of the personal bonds and emotional comforts of human interaction. From a practical standpoint, a physician will need to listen to a patient’s lungs, or closely inspect an allergic reaction. Telehealth doesn’t work for everyone or every malady.

What sponsors can do:

  • Continuously seek patient feedback to identify anxieties that can be mitigated through knowledge sharing or planning.
  • Never assume any single solution is “one-size-fits-all”. 
  • Recognize that telemedicine inevitably introduces mental health concerns by limiting human interaction.
  • Flexibility and choice will be critical in patient-centric trial design. Do as much as you can to build flexibility into new processes.
  • Identify channels that will enable you to communicate directly with patients about study impacts, process changes, modified timelines, etc.
    • Examples include sending communications to sites for distribution to patients or leveraging the ClinicalTrials.gov helpline.

Enabling patient-centric protocol design

Steps sponsors can take to build a patient-centric program:

  • Don’t use cost as an excuse.  In fact, incorporating patient feedback into the early stages of study design will increase recruiting efficiency and decrease the chances of needing to accommodate costly late-stage amendments.
  • Don’t use time as an excuse.  Build patient centricity into your protocol design as early in the process as possible, and continuously conduct collect patient feedback in parallel with other study activities. Talking to patients doesn’t have to be done in a vacuum.
    • Incorporating patient perspectives early allows sponsors to focus on endpoints that are important to the patient and scientifically meaningful – achieving the right balance will make your protocol more appealing to patients.
  • Understand the business case for patient centricity. Effective recruiting and retention + reduced later-stage amendments = increased savings and reduced spending.
  • Accept the fact that regulators have made significant progress incorporating patient centricity into policies and guidance. Regulatory bodies now expect patient-centricity by design.
  • Adopt a new standard: directly tie study milestones to patient feedback checkpoints, and do not allow studies to progress until patient perspectives have been adequately addressed. The sooner we all adopt patient centricity, the sooner it will become a universal expectation.
  • Recognize how easy it is to connect with patients and how willing they are to talk. Even rare disease patients are relatively easy to track down through advocacy groups. Patient communities are tight and well-networked, which means that getting in contact with a single patient can often open the door to an entire swath of that population.
  • When building out your Target Product Profile (TPP), trust that if you can bring value to patients, economic value will follow.
    • In fact, some forward-looking companies are now transitioning from the traditional TPP to a TPVP (Target Patient Value Product profile) which emphasizes the value to the patient and how to show that value starting at the inception of product development planning. Some unique changes can include:
      • Patient population (including how identified)
      • Trial design
      • Value proposition (possible including a likely standard-of-care (SOC) price comparison)
  • Recognize that we’re no longer living in a “doctor knows best” society – information is widely available, and patients do their research to make informed choices about their care. Sponsors should commit to doing that work on behalf of patients and to making their trials the easy choice when compared against other modes of treatment.

If there’s one good thing that comes out of this pandemic’s devastation, it’s a renewed energy toward putting patient perspectives back at the forefront of our work. As one panelist pointed out, it’s important to remember that “we’re all patients at one time or another” – we must find a way to let that empathy drive our work toward setting a new standard of patient centricity.

Please reach out to us if we can help in any way or would like to be included in any of our upcoming town halls.

CONTACT US

Laurie Halloran, CEO | lhalloran@hallorancg.com
Paola Murphy, Chief Client Officer | pmurphy@hallorancg.com
Katie McCarthy, Chief Development Officer | kmccarthy@hallorancg.com
Sheila Gwizdak, VP, Quality | sgwizdak@hallorancg.com
Kim Raymer, VP, Regulatory Affairs | kraymer@hallorancg.com
Jason Milovanovic, VP, Clinical Development | jmilovanovic@hallorancg.com