Accessing and Generating RWD

Regulatory Grade RWD Sources and Strategies

February 8 - 9, 2022 ALL TIMES EST

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 11th 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. Advisory Board: Dorothee Bartels, PhD, Global Head of RWE and Digital Sciences, UCB Aaron Kamauu, MD, Managing Director, Ikaika Health LLC Xia Wang, PhD, Director, Healthcare and Imaging Analytics, Data Science & AI, R&D, AstraZeneca Pharmaceuticals LP

Monday, February 7

8:00 am SCOPE’s Inaugural Masters of Clinical Research Golf Tournament

Connect with your peers and colleagues at SCOPE's Inaugural Masters of Clinical Research Golf Tournament. For more information on participating or how you can get involved as a sponsor, please visit the SCOPE Summit website for further details.

9:00 am Conference Registration Open (Gatlin Foyer)
2:00 pm User Group Meetings (ROOM LOCATIONS: St. John's 30 & 31 & St. John's 32)

Co-locate your User Group, a Workshop or even your company's Annual Meeting with SCOPE Summit. CHI will help market the event and manage logistical operations.  We will co-market prospective attendees and extend your users a discount to attend the entire SCOPE conference. We are here to work with you.  Use SCOPE as your gathering point! Learn more on the SCOPE Summit website.

KEYNOTE LOCATION: Gatlin A1 & A2

EVENING KICK-OFF PLENARY KEYNOTE & PARTICIPANT ENGAGEMENT AWARDS

5:00 pm KEYNOTE PRESENTATION:

Organizer's Welcome Remarks

Micah Lieberman, Executive Director, Cambridge Healthtech Institute (CHI)
Tarra Shingler, MS, Senior Vice President, Global Business Solutions, StudyKIK
5:10 pm KEYNOTE PRESENTATION: Engaging and Understanding Patient Behavior to Improve Accessibility, Retention and Outcomes
Panel Moderator:
Dana Edwards, Chief Commercial Officer, Circuit Clinical

Patient-centric drug development that incorporates patient experience coupled with behavioral science and real-world evidence is evolving the way in which sponsors and regulators bring new medicines to the patients. This executive panel will discuss emerging trends along with case studies that demonstrate how understanding patient need, beliefs and their healthcare journeys influences participation in clinical trials and impacts outcomes.

Panelists:
Vicky DiBiaso, MPH, BScN, Global Head, Patient Informed Development & Health Value Translation, Sanofi
Brendan O'Neill, Senior Director Patient Recruitment Programs, Clinical Development & Operations & Global Product Development, Pfizer Inc.
Gretchen Goller, Senior Director & Head, Patient Recruitment Solutions & Clinical Development Operations, Seagen, Inc.
Thad Wolfram, President, Matrix Clinical Trials, Matrix Clinical Trials
5:45 pm KEYNOTE PRESENTATION:

SCOPE's 2022 Participant Engagement Awards Introduction

David Sall, President & CEO, Marketing, Patient Enrollment Advisors LLC
5:50 pm KEYNOTE PRESENTATION:

SCOPE's 6th Annual Participant Engagement Awards

Panel Moderator:
David Sall, President & CEO, Marketing, Patient Enrollment Advisors LLC

Now in its 6th 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. 

Participant Engagement Awards Judges

Michelle Crouthamel, PhD, Head, Digital Sciences, AbbVie, Inc.

Kelly McKee, Vice President, Patient Recruitment and Registries, Medidata

Irfan Khan, CEO, Circuit Clinical

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

Kimberly Richardson, Research Advocate, Founder, Black Cancer Collaborative

Alicia Staley, MBA, Trial Volunteer & Cancer Survivor; Vice President, Patient Engagement, Medidata


Participant Engagement Awards Contestants: 

Angie Caprise, Senior Scientist, Global Trial Optimization, Merck & Co., Inc.

Melissa Jane Bime, CoFounder & CEO, Infiuss Health

Melissa Gebhardt, Senior Director Business Development & CDx, Guardant Health

Fabio Gratton, Co Founder & CEO, CureClick LLC

Gwenn Oakes, Program Director, Global Trial Optimization, Merck

Adam Kleger, InVibe

Ian Greenfield, Tryl

Jeff Smith, Tryl

    Panelists:
    Michelle Crouthamel, PhD, Head, Digital Sciences, AbbVie, Inc.
    Kelly McKee, Vice President, Patient Recruitment and Registries, Medidata
    Irfan Khan, CEO, Circuit Clinical
    Gretchen Goller, Senior Director & Head, Patient Recruitment Solutions & Clinical Development Operations, Seagen, Inc.
    Kimberly Richardson, Research Advocate, Founder, Black Cancer Collaborative
    Alicia Staley, MBA, Trial Volunteer & Cancer Survivor; Vice President, Patient Engagement, Medidata
    Angie Caprise, Senior Scientist, Global Trial Optimization, Merck & Co., Inc.
    Melissa Jane Bime, CoFounder & CEO, Infiuss Health
    Melissa Gebhardt, Senior Director Business Development & CDx, Guardant Health
    Fabio Gatton, Co-Founder & CEO, THREAD Research (formerly inVine Labs)
    Adam Kleger, Head, Client Solutions, inVibe Labs
    Gwenn Oakes, Director, Global Trial Optimization, Merck & Co., Inc.
    Jeff Smith
    Ian Greenfield, CEO, Tryl
    6:35 pm SCOPE's Kick-Off Networking Happy Hour (Gatlin Terrace)
    7:45 pm Close of Day

    Tuesday, February 8

    7:15 am Registration Open (Gatlin Foyer)
    7:15 am Morning Coffee (Sponsorship Opportunity Available)

    KEYNOTE LOCATION: Gatlin A1 & A2

    NEW NORMAL IN PERI-PANDEMIC CLINICAL TRIALS & CONNECTED HEALTH AT SCALE

    8:05 am KEYNOTE PRESENTATION:

    Organizer's Welcome Remarks

    Micah Lieberman, Executive Director, Cambridge Healthtech Institute (CHI)
    Peyton Howell, Chief Commercial & Strategy Officer & President, Consulting, Parexel
    8:15 am KEYNOTE PRESENTATION:

    Fireside Chat: Fit-for-Future Data Operations in a Post-Pandemic World

    Demetris Zambas, Vice President & Global Head, Data Monitoring & Management, Pfizer Inc.
    Darren Weston, Senior Vice President, Integrated Data Analytics and Reporting (IDAR)and Janssen Clinical Innovation (JCI), Janssen Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
    Cynthia Pan, RPh, Senior Director, Therapeutic Area Operations Leader, Global Clinical Operations, Regeneron

    The COVID-19 pandemic continues to reshape our world and our approaches to clinical trials. During the last 20 months, the risk-benefit ratios of many innovative methodologies and technologies have inversed. Risk-averse organizations have grasped the realities that these new innovative methods are now the only means to efficiently execute clinical trials.  This new reality and the ongoing need for real-time data collection and consumption require new creative and live data flows. An additional ramification of this evolution has been a significant improvement in the level of collaboration required and realized within our organizations and with our external partners and technology providers. Let us discuss how we can cement this “New Normal” to not only maintain the momentum but to ensure these valuable innovations are sustainable.

    9:10 am

    Case Study: Moving Beyond the Promise of Connected Health, Learning from Implementation at Scale

    Adama Ibrahim, Director, Digital Solutions, Technology, Platforms, Data & Digital Global Drug Development, Novartis Pharma AG
    Justin Wright, MD, Vice President, Global Head Connected Health, Novartis

    At Novartis Global Drug Development, we have a vision to accelerate digital products by developing one or more “connected health” solutions (connected device, wearable, software as medical devices) into our drug programs over the next 5 years. This showcase of the Connected Health group, formed to deliver the vision, will focus on presenting the real work that has been done as a collaboration to bring these digital health tools to clinicians, patients, and to pharma research that improve the overall health care experience and improve access to trials. How does an integrated patient experience deliver more value to patients, providers, and payers? How do you give patients their own digital data so they can be more engaged in their treatment plans? How can Connected Health improve clinical workflow, communication, data exchange, and clinical research? How do you do this at scale, beyond a pilot?

    9:55 am Grand Opening Coffee Break in the Exhibit Hall (Gatlin Ballroom BCD)

    ROOM LOCATION: Gatlin E2

    RWD IN PERI-PANDEMIC WORLD

    10:55 am

    Chairperson's Remarks 

    Boshu Ru, PhD, Associate Director, Real-World Data Analytics and Innovation, Center for Observational and Real-World Evidence (CORE), Merck & Co. Inc.
    11:00 am

    RWD Strategies in Peri-Pandemic World 

    Charles Makin, Global Head, Medical Health Outcomes Research, Biogen

    With the growing demand for new medicines to meet critical healthcare needs with speed and efficiency, it has become essential to explore novel approaches and data sources. Thanks to the prevailing digital revolution, and advances in predictive analytics and computing platforms, a new frontier has emerged to enhance the drug development process. We elucidate pertinent aspects of the use of real-world evidence in regulatory settings, with emphasis on study design, analytical strategies, data quality, and regulatory requirements

    11:30 am

    Connecting Clinical Research and Healthcare through Data Interoperability: The Case for HL7 FHIR

    Amy Cramer, Director, Global Product Development Strategic Partnerships, Pfizer Pharmaceuticals

    This presentation will explore how to bridge gaps between clinical research and clinical care to leverage the power of healthcare data to bring medicines to patients faster and reduce the burden place on researchers through the use of HL7 FHIR. 

    12:00 pm

    Novel Methods for Prospective Research Data Collection at the Point of Care

    Lauren Sutton, Director, Product Management, Clinical Research, Flatiron Health

    The electronic health record can be used and modified at the point of care to capture intentionally collected data for prospective research use cases. "Intentionally collected data" is data that is collected for the purpose of research and not per standard of care. We'll discuss a real example of how this was done in support of oncology clinical trials being run in the community setting.

    Joseph Zabinski, PhD, Senior Director, AI & Precision Medicine, OM1
    • Clinical trial success can be enhanced by finding the right patients - those more likely to qualify, more likely to respond, and less likely to experience adverse events
    • Trained on deep longitudinal data, AI algorithms can isolate these characteristics and identify patients most likely to have them
    • Successful 'last-mile' deployment of these algorithms is finally possible - and is critical to achieving actual real-world benefit
    1:00 pm Enjoy Lunch on Your Own
    1:35 pm Coffee and Dessert Break in the Exhibit Hall (Gatlin Ballroom BCD)

    DIGITAL EPIDEMIOLOGY

    Aaron Berger, Executive Director, US Late Stage Operations and RWE, UBC
    2:35 pm

    Epidemiology and Data Science: Creating a Powerful Mix of Skills and Goals

    Dorothee B. Bartels, PhD, Global Head of RWE and Digital Sciences, UCB

    The real-world data hype caused high expectations, including RCTs, might only play a minor role in future drug development. But they are rather complementary to RCT data and cannot replace them. Artificial intelligence may change drug development and time to market significantly, but will not replace past knowledge and experience. Real-World Evidence generation can be enhanced by AI and is key for public health.

    Ardy Arianpour, CEO & Co-Founder, Seqster

    To keep up with the rapidly changing environment and to emerge as a winner, life science enterprises need to embrace patient-centricity that provides longitudinal, comprehensive, and real-time Real World Data. Faster enrollment through automated, patient-mediated data collection leads to Real World Evidence as well as a decrease in time, cost and resources for clinical trials. Come see how Seqster is redefining Real World data collection through the patient.

     
    Sara Luisa Mintrone, Chief Marketing Officer, Marketing, Dedalus
    3:35 pm

    Machine Learning Methods For Causal Inference in Epidemiology Studies Using RWD

    William H. Crown, PhD, Distinguished Research Scientist, Brandeis University

    Considerable progress has been made in the ability to draw causal inferences from analyses of real world data (RWD). Machine learning (ML) methods provide powerful analysis tools that have traditionally been used for prediction and classification problems. However, they also show promise for outperforming traditional statistical causal inference methods if used in the context of a causal framework.  This presentation will provide an overview of the use of ML methods for causal inference in epidemiology.

    Joss Warren, Executive Director and Head of Strategy & Partnerships, THREAD

    Decentralization has become a central strategy for conducting clinical research over the past few years, and while the focus has often centered on clinical trials, the benefits of decentralization are magnified in the generation of real-world evidence (RWE). This session will focus on how decentralized research technologies can both optimize prospective RWE generation while creating opportunities to combine with existing RWD to provide a more comprehensive view of the research participant.

    INTERACTIVE BREAKOUT DISCUSSIONS

    4:35 pm Find Your Table and Meet Your Moderators
    4:40 pm Interactive Discussions

    Interactive Discussions are informal, moderated discussions, allowing participants to exchange ideas and experiences and develop future collaborations around a focused topic. Each discussion will be led by a facilitator who keeps the discussion on track and the group engaged. For in-person events, the facilitator will lead from the front of the room while attendees remain seated to promote social distancing. For virtual attendees, the format will be in a Zoom room. To get the most out of this format, please come prepared to share examples from your work, be a part of a collective, problem-solving session, and participate in active idea sharing. Please visit the Interactive Discussion page on the conference website for a complete listing of topics and descriptions.

    5:25 pm Welcome Reception in the Exhibit Hall (Gatlin Ballroom BCD)
    6:40 pm Close of Day

    Wednesday, February 9

    7:15 am Registration Open (Gatlin Foyer)
    BREAKFAST PRESENTATIONS

    Come enjoy a breakfast with your peers while listening to your choice of two compelling industry presentations.

    Kyle Hogan, President, Datacubed Health

    Sponsors and CROs need more than change management to operationalize decentralized trials. In this session, Kyle Hogan will outline the approaches sponsors and CROs can take to build value in the decentralized trial participant journey, from pre-implementation to study launch and monitoring. 

    Andrea Valencia Dremelj, Director BioPharma Business Operations, Biopharma, SOPHiA GENETICS

    Delays in clinical trial patient enrollment are significant challenges for sponsors, especially for biomarker-targeted investigational therapies associated with rare genomic variants. Join us and discover the solutions offered by SOPHiA GENETICS, leveraging insights from multimodal datasets - including 770’000 genomic profiles - curated across 780+ healthcare institutions. We can better enable biomarker-driven clinical trials in oncology and inherited rare disorders to meet recruitment goals by identifying potential sites worldwide.

    8:15 am Session Break

    ROOM LOCATION: Gatlin E2

    DATA INTEROPERABILITY

    8:20 am

    Chairperson's Remarks 

    Aaron W. Kamauu, MD, Managing Director, Ikaika Health LLC
    8:25 am

    Use-Case Specific Relevance and Quality Assessment For Real-World Data (RWD) – Implementation and Outlook

    Boshu Ru, PhD, Associate Director, Real-World Data Analytics and Innovation, Center for Observational and Real-World Evidence (CORE), Merck & Co. Inc.

    The variety and fragmentation of healthcare data across institutions and software programs continue to pose a challenge for researchers to select “fit-for-purpose” real-world data (RWD). We designed a Use-case specific Relevance and Quality Assessment (UReQA) framework1 to evaluate the fitness of commercial RWD offerings in the US and implemented Oncology use cases of real-world time-to-treatment discontinuation. We are expanding the framework to support more use cases and additional therapeutical areas.

    Aaron Berger, Executive Director U.S. Late Stage Operations and RWE, UBC
    Dana Hosseini, Chief Business Officer and Co-Founder, Seqster

    Data acquisition in observational studies has been disrupted now that interoperability solutions enable the use of real world data for research. One solution that is fundamentally changing observational research is patient mediated electronic medical record release, which allows the patient to obtain their consolidated medical record and contribute to research directly. Join us for a discussion on the application of this RWD technology to enable modernized observational and direct-to-patient study designs.

    9:25 am

    To Replicate or Continue to Learn in the Real-World?

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

    A number of studies have been conducted to examine if real-world evidence (RWE) generated from real-world data (RWD) can replicate findings from randomized clinical trials (RCTs). In addition to asking such replication questions, researchers may ask what can be learned from the differences between RCT evidence and RWE, and decision-makers may even ask whether such differences can be predicted. This presentation will cover several use cases across the Pharma, Payer/HTA, and regulatory settings that require different questions to be addressed.

    Ria Westergaard, Product Strategy Lead, Evernorth Intelligence Solutions, Evernorth

    Despite an abbreviated approval pathway, a relatively small number of biosimilars have been approved and an even smaller number have entered the marketplace. Slow uptake has stakeholders looking for strategies to optimize adoption in the future. This session will discuss real-world data research using medical and pharmacy claims to reveal the proportion of prescriptions for originator product versus biosimilar as well as switching patterns.

    Shuta Mitomo, Director, Digital and Innovation Planning, CRO Business, CMIC Group
    Yohei Hayashi, Specialist, Health Economic and Outcomes Research/Real World Evidence Department, CRO Business, CMIC Group

    When utilizing RWD, the selection of the medical information database used for analysis is an important consideration. It is necessary to understand the insurance system in Japan and recognize the characteristics of each database. This presentation will take a deep dive into the current system and database utilized in Japan and provide tips for database selection and how it should be selected according to target disease area and desired result.

    10:25 am Coffee Break in the Exhibit Hall (Gatlin Ballroom BCD)

    REGULATORY GRADE RWD

    11:25 am

    Developing a Quality Management Checklist to Support Audits of Real-World Data (RWD) Used in Regulatory Submissions

    Jerome Calmejane, Senior Director, GCP Quality Assurance, Janssen Pharmaceuticals, Johnson & Johnson

    This session will focus on TransCelerate’s work on a forthcoming proposal for a quality management checklist to support audits of RWD used for regulatory decision-making.

    11:55 am Transition to Lunch
    Jennifer Duff, Watson Health Life Sciences, eClinical and Client Solutions Leader, Product Management, IBM Watson Health
    Alice Landis-McGrath, MD, Watson Health Associate Chief Health Officer, HOPE, IBM Watson Health

    Complexity and challenges in clinical trials are well-known, but are magnified when organizations underinvest in the quality of data and the industry expertise of their partners. Join IBM Watson Health for lunch and hear real examples of how organizations are seeing a meaningful impact in their studies with quality real-world data and partnership with industry experts.

    12:30 pm Coffee and Dessert Break in the Exhibit Hall(Gatlin Ballroom BCD)
    1:30 pm Close of Part A Conference. Join Plenary Keynotes and stay on for Part B of SCOPE Summit!*

    KEYNOTE LOCATION: Gatlin A1 & A2

    DIVERSITY, EQUITY & INCLUSION (DE&I) AND SPEAKING THE LANGUAGE OF BUSINESS AND LEADERSHIP

    1:30 pm KEYNOTE PRESENTATION:

    Welcome Remarks from CHI and the SCOPE Team

    Micah Lieberman, Executive Director, Cambridge Healthtech Institute (CHI)

    Thank you all for being here from the SCOPE team: Micah Lieberman, Dr. Marina Filshtinsky, Kaitlin Kelleher, Bridget Kotelly, Mary Ann Brown, Ilana Quigley, Patty Rose, Julie Kostas, and Tricia Michalovicz

    1:35 pm

    Why Advancing Inclusive Research is a Moral, Scientific, and Business Imperative

    Meghan McKenzie, Principal, Inclusion, Patient Insights and Health Equity, Chief Diversity Office, Genentech

    Our industry is rightfully focused on the importance of diversity, equity, and inclusion in clinical trials. Many of us have been focused on this in our work and/or in our advocacy, both inside and outside of our organizations for some time. Why is inclusivity so important to PIs and patients? Why is it both a moral and a business imperative? Learn why representation in clinical research matters for your patients and how it shapes good science. The face of the world is changing and your success is tied to reaching ethnic minorities.

    2:45 pm Booth Crawl & Refreshment Break in the Exhibit Hall (Gatlin Ballroom BCD)
    2:00 pm KEYNOTE PRESENTATION:

    Implicit Bias Around Advocacy and Decision Making: Metrics of DE&I and Speaking the Language of Business and Leadership

    Panel Moderator:
    Kimberly Richardson, Research Advocate, Founder, Black Cancer Collaborative

    What is the perspective of Black professionals and patient advocates as the medical and scientific industries grapple with effective ways to engage minority population?  Where are their voices being heard and what can we learn from the cultural experiences they weave into their research methodologies and daily practices? Panelists will share their perspectives on how the Black voice should be included in advocacy and public and private aspects of clinical research. 

    Panelists:
    Karriem Watson, PhD, Chief Engagement Officer, NIH
    Monique Phillips, Global Diversity and Inclusion Lead, Bristol Myers Squibb Co.
    Nikhil Wagle, MD, Assistant Professor, Harvard Medical School, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute

     






    SCOPE Summit Europe

    2025 Conference Programs

    Clinical Trial Venture, Innovation & Partnering *
    *Separate Registration Required