Home
Scholarly Works
The role of early-phase trials and real-world...
Journal article

The role of early-phase trials and real-world evidence in drug development

Abstract

Phase 3 randomized controlled trials (RCTs), while the gold standard for treatment efficacy and safety, are not always feasible, are expensive, can be prolonged and can be limited in generalizability. Other under-recognized sources of evidence can also help advance drug development. Basic science, proof-of-concept studies and early-phase RCTs can provide evidence regarding the potential for clinical benefit. Real-world evidence generated from registries or observational datasets can provide insights into the treatment of rare diseases that often pose a challenge for trial recruitment. Pragmatic trials embedded in healthcare systems can assess the treatment effects in clinical settings among patient populations sometimes excluded from trials. This Perspective discusses potential sources of evidence that may be used to complement explanatory phase 3 RCTs and to speed the development of new cardiovascular medications. Content is derived from the 19th Global Cardiovascular Clinical Trialists meeting (December 2022), involving clinical trialists, patients, clinicians, regulators, funders and industry representatives.

Authors

Van Spall HGC; Bastien A; Gersh B; Greenberg B; Mohebi R; Min J; Strauss K; Thirstrup S; Zannad F

Journal

Nature Cardiovascular Research, Vol. 3, No. 2, pp. 110–117

Publisher

Springer Nature

Publication Date

February 1, 2024

DOI

10.1038/s44161-024-00420-4

ISSN

2731-0590

Contact the Experts team