日常のヘルスケアにおいて生成される大量のデータは重要性を増しており、臨床および調査研究に使用する必要があります。患者の電子記録、レジストリ、薬局やソーシャルメディアからのデータ、ウェアラブルセンサーがeSourceとして利用されるようになってきています。このプロセスには、戦略立案、新たなデータ技術の実装、およびデータを所有する製薬企業と組織間の緊密な協力が必要です。CHIの第12回年次RWDへのアクセスと生成カンファレンスは、リアルタイムでのリアルワールドデータの生成、その品質、およびアプリケーションのあらゆる側面に関する知識交換を促進することを目的としています。2部構成となっており、それぞれに独自のトピックと登壇者が設けられています。第1部:リアルワールドデータへのアクセスと生成(2月7日〜8日)、第2部:臨床および調査研究のためのリアルワールドデータの活用(2月8日〜9日)
2月6日(月)
SCOPE's 2nd Annual Masters of Clinical Research Golf Tournament* 8:00 am
Connect with your peers and colleagues at SCOPE's 2nd Annual Masters of Clinical Research Golf Tournament.
*Limited space available. Separate registration and fee required for Golf.
Conference Registration Open9:00 am
Open Workshop: Introducing ClinEco, the New B2B Clnical Trial Community and Marketplace1:00 pm
Sit down with a small cross-industry group for a 45-minute hands-on session to learn about, share feedback, and register for free for the new B2B clinical trial community and marketplace. ClinEco unites sponsors, CRO's, service providers, and sites to streamline partnering and vendor selection. We are currently onboarding leaders in clinical research to: Explore the Ecosystem. Engage Partners. Exchange Capabilities. Walk-ins welcome. Open to all SCOPE attendees.
User Group Meetings2:00 pm
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.
Part 1: Accessing and Generating RWD
ROOM LOCATION: Gatlin A1 & A2
ADDRESSING RACIAL INEQUITIES IN CLINICAL TRIALS & PARTICIPANT ENGAGEMENT AWARDS
Lighting a “Beacon of Hope” to Address Racial Inequity in Clinical Trials, Health, and Education
Vicky DiBiaso, MPH, BScN, Global Head, Patient Informed Development & Health Value Translation, Sanofi
Launched in July 2021 as a $33.7M commitment from Novartis and the Novartis US Foundation, Beacon of Hope began as a 10-year collaboration to increase diversity among clinical trial participants and investigators; improve access to high-quality education and promising jobs; address inherent bias in the data standards, and find actionable solutions to environmental and climate issues that disproportionately affect health among communities of color. This session brings together leaders from collaborating partner companies Novartis, Sanofi, Merck, and one of the participating HBCUs to discuss how Beacon of Hope aims to improve the quality and inclusivity of clinical trials.
Rajbir Singh, MD, Executive Director of Precision Medicine and Health Equity Trials Design, Meharry Medical College
Priscilla Pemu, Doctorate, MBBS MS FACP, Associate Dean Clinical Research at Morehouse School of Medicine
Celia J. Maxwell, MD, Associate Dean for Research, Howard University College of Medicine, Medicine & Health Affairs, Howard University Hospital
SCOPE's 7th Annual Participant Engagement Awards Introduction5:40 pm
SCOPE's 7th Annual Participant Engagement Awards
Now in its 7th 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. PEA embodies the values and personal accomplishments of Jerry Matczak, who sadly passed away soon after receiving the inaugural 2017 award. We dedicate this award to Jerry in the hopes that it will serve as a reminder of his ideals and accomplishments. SCOPE’s 2023 Participant Engagement Award program is brought to you by Cambridge Healthtech Institute (CHI)’s SCOPE and is accepting submissions at: https://www.scopesummit.com/participant-engagement-award
SCOPE's Kick-Off Happy Hour6:30 pm

Close of Day7:45 pm
2月7日(火)
Registration Open (Gatlin Foyer)7:00 am
Morning Brew & Pastries to Jumpstart Your Day (Sponsorship Opportunities Available) or Morning Coffee7:30 am
ROOM LOCATION: Gatlin A1 & A2
THE REALITY OF A TRIAL EXPERIENCE & NAVIGATING A GLOBAL CRISIS
Would I Want My Mother to Be Part of a Clinical Trial?
Virginia Nido, Global Head, Product Development Industry Collaborations, Genentech, a member of the Roche Group
For many years, our industry has been talking about becoming more patient-centric and innovative in our approach to clinical trials and all the great things we are doing to make clinical trials more convenient for participants. But have we really changed the experience for patients or are we just continuing to admire the problem? Would you really want YOUR mother to be part of one of your clinical trials? We need to get real. It should not take a pandemic to make changes to our protocols and processes and ways of working. But we still have so far to go and together we must continue to drive an uncomfortable level of change.
Navigating a Global Crisis: Pandemic, War, Hyperinflation, Supply Chain Disruptions…You Name It
Balazs Flink, Senior Director, Clinical Development Operations, Daiichi Sankyo, Inc.
Running a complex clinical trial involves a lot of moving pieces, forward planning, modeling, allocation of resources, and a neverending ability to adjust while maintaining the highest standards. It has never been easy, but many of us in the clinical research profession know how to do our part. The advent of DCTs, novel tech and data sources, and then the pandemic put us all to the test. However, we are now facing supply chain disruptions and other human/material resource challenges that make everything even more complicated. What is a clinical ops leader to do?
Help Us Set a Guinness World Record: Join Everyone for a Group Photo at 9:25 Sharp in the Keynote to Make History!9:30 am
Grand Opening Coffee & Refreshment Break in the Exhibit Hall (Sponsorship Opportunities Available) (Gatlin BCD)9:35 am

ROOM LOCATION: St. John's 24/25
RWD GENERATION: TOOLS AND APPROACHES
Recent Developments in Causal Inference and Real-World Evidence Generation
Demissie Alemayehu, PhD, Vice President, Biostatistics, Pfizer Inc.
With the growing interest in augmenting traditional randomized trials with data from other sources, there has been tremendous progress in the methodological and regulatory areas. We provide a review of emerging themes in the literature and address strengths and weaknesses of the trending approaches. Special emphasis will be given to current approaches around the issue of bias control, robustness of inferential validity, and use of modern analytics.
RWE and AI Are Growing Together
Dorothee B. Bartels, PhD, Chief Digital Officer, AETION
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.
Practical Tools Available to Advance Fit-for-Purpose Use of Real-World Data (RWD) in Regulatory Decision-Making
Rob Kalesnik-Orszulak, Senior Director, Global Regulatory Strategy, Bristol Myers Squibb
Two recently developed tools, now publicly available, aim to increase fit-for-purpose use of RWE/RWD in regulatory decision-making will be presented, including proposals for reducing barriers and building trust with health authorities.

Eddie Valaitis, Director, Pharma and Life Sciences, R&D Analytics & AI, PwC
Enrollment speed and discontinuation rate are key operational outcomes in clinical development. However, many factors including trial design, patient population, and selected countries impact these outcomes. We supplement traditional, structured trial data via an NLP pipeline to mine unstructured real-world data on the design of clinical trials to improve the predictive power of enrollment and discontinuation rate models. The predictions from these models are then used to accelerate clinical development.
Transition to Lunch12:40 pm

Warren Whyte, Vice President, RWE Sciences, ERACE Lead, ConcertAI
The FDA recognizes the need for diversified clinical trials, yet traditional approaches to doing so may increase cost & time to market for new therapeutics. Proposing a diversity and engagement strategy using real-world data & AI-enabled technologies to measure differences in cancer care across regions/ population groups for improved regionalized engagement; reassesses study protocols identifying enrollment barriers; locate community-based organizations & other advocacy groups to foster greater trust strengthening physician-patient interactions.
Coffee & Dessert Break in the Exhibit Hall (Sponsorship Opportunities Available) (Gatlin BCD)1:15 pm

DEFINITIONS AND DATA NEEDS
Clear, Consistent, and Computable Operational Definitions: Defining the Purpose and Data Needs for Real-World Evidence Generation
Aaron W. Kamauu, MD, Managing Director, Ikaika Health LLC
Recent guidance call for establishing data-specific operational definitions in protocols for real-world research. What are operational definitions, what do they consist of, and how can we maximize their usefulness? In this presentation, I propose a standards-based structure and method for generating clear and consistent operational definitions for study design elements that can be displayed in a human-readable format, as well as leveraged in computable ways across multiple RWD use cases.

Ying Tabak, PhD, VP, Global RWE & HEOR, UBC
Dr. Tabak will discuss leveraging technologies and innovations that enrich active registries with patient-reported outcomes, electronic health records, and claims data to generate comprehensive real-world evidence while safeguarding data quality, privacy, and security. Integrated RWD acquisition solutions reduce burden and create value for patients, healthcare providers, payers, and manufacturers, particularly for treatments that require long-term follow-up such as gene/cell therapies.
Mechanisms for Transferring Structured and Unstructured Data from the EHR at the Point-of-Care into Study EDC Systems
This session will focus on sharing outcomes of real studies that are using EHR to EDC applications to transfer data from EHR systems into EDC systems. We'll discuss how novel workflows, machine learning, and NLP can be implemented to augment the data available within the EHR that is eligible for transfer into EDC systems resulting in faster availability of high-quality study data.

Dr Chris Johnson, BM BCh, MA, FRCP, Chief Medical Information Officer and Associate Medical Director, Cambridge Biomedical Campus, Royal Papworth Hospital
Dr. Johnson discusses the opportunities and challenges of EHR-derived data for research from clinical and operational perspectives. Covering the enhancements adopted on the Cambridge Biomedical Campus to information governance, data extraction and a complex EHR environment focusing on meeting clinical, life sciences and regulatory requirements through partnership with Dedalus and the Dedalus’ Trials4Care portal. He will also present his experience of implementation and some of the early benefits realized.
ROOM LOCATION: St. John's 24/25
INTERACTIVE BREAKOUT DISCUSSION GROUPS
Concurrent breakout discussion groups are interactive, guided discussions hosted by a facilitator or set of co-facilitators to discuss some of the key issues presented earlier in the day’s sessions. Delegates will join a table of interest and become an active part of the discussion at hand. Bring your pharma, biotech, CRO, site, hospital or patient perspective to each of the discussions below. To get the most out of this interactive session and format please come prepared to share examples from your work, vet some ideas with your peers, be a part of group interrogation and problem solving, and, most importantly, participate in active idea sharing. Please visit the Interactive Breakout Discussion Groups Page for more information.
Welcome Reception in the Exhibit Hall (Gatlin BCD)5:00 pm

Close of Day6:30 pm
SCOPE out Pointe Orlando for an entertaining night out via our Courtesy Shuttle* (Sponsorship Opportunities Available)6:30 pm
*Courtesy shuttles will be available Tuesday and Wednesday 6:30-10:30pm (last pick up), bringing you to and from The Pointe Orlando.
The Pointe Orlando is an open air-entertainment destination, featuring local and brand names restaurants, bars, nightclubs, 20-screen movie theater, comedy club and family attractions.
Shuttles will run a continuous loop 6:30-10:30pm (last pick up) between Rosen Shingle Creek, Hilton Orlando, DoubleTree Orlando at SeaWorld, and Pointe Orlando.
On-site look for our courtesy shuttle signage directing you to pick up locations within the hotels.
2月8日(水)
ROOM LOCATION: Gatlin A3 & A4
BREAKFAST PRESENTATIONS

Caroline Jackson, Executive Vice President, Patient Services, mdgroup
Mobile health has a significant impact on patient retention and experience in clinical trials. However,it’s still under-utilized as there is a perception that more complex assessments and procedures cannot be conducted effectively in the home. This case study highlights how mdgroup worked with a client to implement complex sample collections in the homes of patients suffering from a rare disease, resulting in reduced travel burden and low dropout rates.

Dennis Akkaya, Chief Commercial Officer, myTomorrows
We would like to invite you to join us for an informative event about overcoming obstacles in recruiting patients for BioPharma clinical trials. During this event, we will delve into barriers such as lack of awareness and financial considerations that can impede clinical trial recruitment success. Additionally, impactful strategies to increase clinical trial participation and recruitment success will be shared.
ROOM LOCATION: St. John's 24/25
DATA SOURCES AND INTEGRATION STRATEGIES
Registries for RWE: Challenges and Opportunities
Rachel E. Sobel, PhD, Executive Director & Head, Pharmacoepidemiology, Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
This presentation will review the recent RWE guidance from FDA and EMA on registries, and describe some of the challenges and opportunities in using registries to support safety and effectiveness evaluations, with a focus on rare disease, pediatric, and pregnancy registries, including some practical examples. I will discuss future directions and areas for improvement.

‘Faster and Better’: Automating Data between Electronic Health Records and Electronic Data Capture Systems at Hospitals
Mats Sundgren, PhD, Senior Industry Scientific Director, i-HD (European Institute for Innovation through Health Data)
Nearly 50% of clinical trial data is duplicated between Electronic Health Records (EHRs) and Electronic Data Capture systems (EDCs), wasting time and valuable resources. The emergence of eSource-ready hospitals and new providers with applications addressing this historic interoperability challenge heralds a pivotal change in clinical trials. IgniteData’s cloud-based Archer technology transports regulatory grade, clinically validated patient data from EHRs to sponsors’ EDCs using HL7® FHIR and SMART on FHIR. Archer has the potential to fundamentally improve the delivery of clinical trials in hospital settings, that ultimately could lead to industry wide transformational change.

Kwame Marfo, Market Strategy and Innovation Lead, Clinical Development, Komodo Health, Inc.
Explore how RWD and sophisticated analytics software allow you to preview the impact inclusion/exclusion criteria will have on trial recruitment, before you launch. Understand why access to longitudinal patient insights are essential for recruitment efficiency, and how demographic insights + cohort modeling are advancing trial diversity and success.
Coffee Break in the Exhibit Hall (Sponsorship Opportunities Available)10:45 am

THE FDA RWD FRAMEWORK
The FDA Real-World Evidence (RWE) Framework: How It Impacts Clinical and Observational Research
Transition to Lunch12:45 pm
Part 2: Leveraging Real World Data for Clinical and Observational Research

Jessica Paulus, ScD, VP of Research, OM1
Structured data, what’s found in an electronic medical record, and unstructured data, what’s found in clinician notes, real-world data (RWD) provide valuable insights into treatment effectiveness and safety, gaps in care, reasons for discontinuation, and more. Yet, understanding how these data complement each other and how to choose appropriate data sources based on different evidence needs is critical to success.
Coffee & Dessert Break in the Exhibit Hall with "Best of Show Award" Winner Announcement (Gatlin BCD)1:20 pm

ROOM LOCATION: Gatlin A1 & A2
NEXT-GENERATION DATA SOURCES & BUILDING A ROADMAP FOR AN R&D ORGANIZATION
Faster, Better, Cheaper: The Increasing Role and Opportunities for Real-World Evidence in Informing Regulatory Pathways
Christopher Boone, PhD, Global Head, Health Economics & Outcomes Research, AbbVie, Inc.
An open dialogue on the facilitators, barriers, and open opportunities to effectively utilize RWE for informing regulatory pathways from a biopharma company perspective. Additionally, we will highlight some of the novel use cases and key lessons learned by biopharma companies in utilizing RWE for discovery and development purposes.
Advancing Evidence Generation of the Future
Amy Abernethy, MD, PhD, President, Clinical Studies Platforms at Verily; Former Principal Deputy Commissioner, FDA
Clinical research is undergoing a major shift, as we move towards continuous evidence generation to support accelerated drug development and approvals. In this talk, Dr. Abernethy will share her firsthand experience with the evolving use of real-world data and evidence at FDA during COVID. She'll speak to the need for quality longitudinal data sets, the role of technology, and how new approaches are transforming the clinical research field.
Fireside Chat: Future-Ready Operations: Building a Multi-Year Roadmap
Lynne M. Cesario, Executive Director, Global Lead Risk Based Monitoring Program, Pfizer Global R&D Groton Labs
With increases in complexity and new trial modalities, organizations need to constantly assess what the future needs. This chat will focus on the strategic choices and approaches to be considered, and how to plan out such a multi-year roadmap.
Booth Crawl & Refreshment Break in the Exhibit Hall (Sponsorship Opportunities Available). Last Chance for Viewing. (Gatlin BCD)3:25 pm

ROOM LOCATION: St. John's 24/25
RWE FOR TRIAL OPTIMIZATION
Sponsored Chairperson's Remarks (Opportunity Available)4:25 pm
Applying Quantitative Approaches in the Use of RWE in Clinical Development and Life-Cycle Management
Weili He, PhD, Distinguished Research Fellow, Head of Department, Medical Affairs and Health Technology Assessment Statistics, AbbVie, Inc.
In recent years, we have seen increasing usage of real-world data (RWD) and real-world evidence (RWE) in clinical development and life-cycle management, although many challenges remain. While there are numerous publications in RWD and RWE areas, strategic planning and tactical execution perspectives from an end-to-end process are still lacking, including the use of RWEs not only in regulatory settings but also in non-regulatory settings along with organizational infrastructure considerations. We attempt to fill this void by providing thoughts on addressing the key considerations.
Pragmatic Trials: Building the Bridge between Clinical Trials and Real-World Clinical Practice
Helene Nordahl, PhD, Director, Real World Data Science & Innovation, Novo Nordisk, Inc.
Pragmatic trial designs can build the bridge between clinical trials and clinical practice, providing valuable real-world evidence, with the rigor of randomized clinical trials, to inform treatment decisions of payers, clinicians, employers, patients, and for regulatory purposes moving forward. Leveraging real-world healthcare data and linkage to claims data offers the opportunity to address novel endpoints. Operational lessons learned from conducting pragmatic trials will be shared along with case examples.

Erica Smith, PhD, Sr. Vice President, Business Development & Marketing, Sales and Marketing, Spencer Health Solutions
Clinical trials in psychiatry have one of the lowest likelihoods of approval - but what can be done? The spencer SmartHub connects patients to clinical sites and care teams, demonstrating 97% adherence and 90% engagement in patients in the real world - including psychiatric patients. This provides sponsors the ability the assure medication adherence while potentially reducing enrollment and replacement of non-adherent and non-compliant patients, leading to strong ROI.
Diversity in Clinical Trial Populations: How Using Real-World Evidence Can Help Achieve It
Marjorie Zettler, PhD, MPH, Executive Director, Clinical Science, Regor Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
Amid growing awareness of disparities in representation, in 2022 the FDA issued a guidance document recommending the prospective development of clinical trial diversity plans to address the inclusion of representative numbers of patients from racial and ethnic subgroups. Real-world evidence can be used to better understand differences in disease prevalence, diagnosis and treatment patterns among marginalized populations. Real-world evidence can also inform trial eligibility criteria, guide site selection, and assist with planning for post-marketing data collection to ensure diversity.
Close of Day6:30 pm
SCOPE out Pointe Orlando for an entertaining night out via our Courtesy Shuttle* (Sponsorship Opportunities Available)6:30 pm
*Courtesy shuttles will be available Tuesday and Wednesday 6:30-10:30pm (last pick up), bringing you to and from The Pointe Orlando.
The Pointe Orlando is an open air-entertainment destination, featuring local and brand names restaurants, bars, nightclubs, 20-screen movie theater, comedy club and family attractions.
Shuttles will run a continuous loop 6:30-10:30pm (last pick up) between Rosen Shingle Creek, Hilton Orlando, DoubleTree Orlando at SeaWorld, and Pointe Orlando.
On-site look for our courtesy shuttle signage directing you to pick up locations within the hotels.
2月9日(木)
Registration Open (Gatlin Foyer)7:15 am
ROOM LOCATION: Gatlin A1 & A2
BREAKFAST PRESENTATIONS

Lisa Moneymaker, Chief Technology & Product Officer, Saama
Our industry is challenged to find the right resources to drive operational best practice. There is also an expectation to move at the “speed of Covid” for every trial. It feels like an either/or.
However, you can have both. You can accelerate timelines with fewer resources.
Join this exciting session to learn about:
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The biggest time and resource drains on clinical trials
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Applying AI/ML to improve efficiency
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Challenging your own internal processes to get to market faster
Session Break8:15 am
ROOM LOCATION: St. John's 24/25
RWD SOLUTIONS WITH PATIENTS IN MIND
How Do Patients Benefit by Reuse of Data (RCT and RWD) across Clinical Development?
Manish Khatri, Director & Scientific Lead Data 42, Global Drug Development, Novartis Pharma AG
Traditionally clinical development process always relied on bespoke evidence generation specific to the development phase. Rapidly growing volumes of individual patient-level data and the pace of technology enabling advanced analytics, is the pharmaceutical industry duplicating parts of clinical research? What is the value of data and evidence that already exists? This presentation will cover the many lives a patient's data can and should have.

Ryan Moog, Head of Clinical Trials, Life Sciences, Datavant
Healthcare data is more voluminous than ever, but data fragmentation is a generational hurdle in the conduct of clinical trials, impacting investigators' ability to understand the 360-degree view of a patient. This presentation will discuss real-world examples for how access to both de-identified and identified patient data can support better clinical trials that account for a patient’s full journey before, during, and after a trial.
Unlocking the Power of RWE through Tokenization to Accelerate R&D and Drive Patient Impact
Ankit Lodha, Director, Data Science Portfolio Management, Johnson & Johnson
Implementation of tokenization in clinical trials to enhance data collection and insight generation without increasing operational burden. Executed first-in-industry innovation project to link clinical trial data with real-world data (RWD) via tokenization to enable real-world effectiveness studies and long-term follow-up (LTFU) resulting in groundbreaking real-world evidence generation prior to licensure.
Ethical Use of AI: GMLP in Clinical Trials
Prasanna Rao, Head, AI & Data Science, Data Monitoring and Management, Clinical Sciences and Operations, Global Product Development, Pfizer Inc.
This panel will address critical issues of AI applications in clinical development from the ethical use of AI point of view.
Ethical Use of AI: GMLP in Clinical Trials
Networking Coffee Break (Gatlin Foyer)10:45 am
STRATEGY LEVEL DATA SOLUTIONS
More Than Just Reports! - Transformative Journey to Bring Higher Impact

Malaikannan Sankarasubbu, VP, AI Research, Saama
Clinical trials are digitizing rapidly and manual data management processes can’t scale to handle the volume of new data.
However, by applying artificial intelligence (AI) to key data management processes, sponsors and CROs can master these new challenges effectively - with existing resources.
Join this exciting session to learn how AI can be used to identify patterns and anomalies, recommend coding terms, surface critical actions, clean data automatically, and more.
Transition to Lunch12:40 pm
SCOPE Send Off Luncheon Presentation (Sponsorship Opportunity Available) or Enjoy Lunch on Your Own12:45 pm
Closing Remarks1:15 pm
Scope Summit 2023 Adjourns1:20 pm
* 不測の事態により、事前の予告なしにプログラムが変更される場合があります。