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Remote Cardiac Safety Monitoring through the Lens of the FDA Biomarker Qualification Evidentiary Criteria Framework: A Case Study Analysis
- Source :
- Digit Biomark, Digital Biomarkers, Vol 5, Iss 1, Pp 103-113 (2021)
- Publication Year :
- 2020
-
Abstract
- Clinical safety findings remain one of the reasons for attrition of drug candidates during clinical development. Cardiovascular liabilities are not consistently detected in early-stage clinical trials and often become apparent when drugs are administered chronically for extended periods of time. Vital sign data collection outside of the clinic offers an opportunity for deeper physiological characterization of drug candidates and earlier safety signal detection. A working group representing expertise from biopharmaceutical and technology sectors, US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) public-private partnerships, academia, and regulators discussed and presented a remote cardiac monitoring case study at the FNIH Biomarkers Consortium Remote Digital Monitoring for Medical Product Development workshop to examine applicability of the biomarker qualification evidentiary framework by the FDA. This use case examined the components of the framework, including the statement of need, the context of use, the state of the evidence, and the benefit/risk profile. Examination of results from 2 clinical trials deploying 510(k)-cleared devices for remote cardiac data collection demonstrated the need for analytical and clinical validity irrespectively of the regulatory status of a device of interest, emphasizing the importance of data collection method assessment in the context of intended use. Additionally, collection of large amounts of ambulatory data also highlighted the need for new statistical methods and contextual information to enable data interpretation. A wider adoption of this approach for drug development purposes will require collaborations across industry, academia, and regulatory agencies to establish methodologies and supportive data sets to enable data interpretation and decision-making.
- Subjects :
- Viewpoint - Review Article
Data collection
Computer science
cardiac
QH301-705.5
medicine.medical_treatment
digital health
Medicine (miscellaneous)
biomarkers
Health Informatics
Context (language use)
sensors
Digital health
Data science
Computer Science Applications
evidentiary criteria
Clinical trial
Biopharmaceutical
Drug development
medicine
Cardiac monitoring
Biology (General)
remote monitoring
Safety monitoring
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 2504110X
- Volume :
- 5
- Issue :
- 1
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Digital biomarkers
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....200450ccadff6854cb14a544580e5cd1