Adaptive clinical trials can cut pharma costs by 30%, but uptake still slow
This article was originally published in SRA
Executive Summary
Pharmaceutical companies could cut the cost of conducting clinical trials by up to 30% by using adaptive designs instead of relying on more traditional, non-adaptive trials designed for the same purpose1.
You may also be interested in...
New EU Filings
Obecabtagene autoleucel, Autolus Therapeutics’s investigational treatment for relapsed or refractory B cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia, is among the latest products that have been filed for review by the European Medicines Agency for potential EU marketing approval.
Moment Of Truth For Seven EU Filings; Cytokinetics To Make Its Case For Heart Failure Drug
The CHMP, the European Medicines Agency’s human medicines committee, will this week decide whether a range of new medicines merit being approved.
EMA Probe Finds No Link Between GLP-1s And Suicidal Thoughts & Actions
After reviewing the evidence from non-clinical studies, clinical trials, post-marketing surveillance data and other studies, the European Medicines Agency said there was no need to update the product information for 11 diabetes and weight management drugs.