OpenClinica 2.5 Targets Industry-Sponsored Trials


OPEN SOURCE

By Deborah Borfitz

Oct. 27, 2008 | With its mid-September release of OpenClinica 2.5, Cambridge, MA-based Akaza Research has given pharmaceutical companies reason to take heed of the open source movement. Many features of the electronic data capture application are specifically designed for industry-sponsored clinical trials.

For starters, OpenClinica 2.5 runs out-of-box on the Oracle 10g database, not only the PostgreSQL open source database platform, says Project Manager Paul Galvin. Audit events can also be time stamped down to the second. It’s one of about 20 new auditing features of the new release.

Paul Galvin
Notable new site-specific capabilities include the ability to do complex cross-form and cross-field edit checks, ensuring only valid data get into electronic case report forms (CRFs), says Galvin. Investigators can also electronically sign for particular subject events or entire subject casebooks.

Study monitoring and query management tools and reports now include a “notes and discrepancies matrix” that allows users to get a full view, on a single page, of all new and open queries and notes regarding inconsistencies with sponsors’ data requirements, says Galvin. Monitors can close any queries that get a resolution proposal from sites. Full reports can be downloaded as a PDF or CSV file and put into an Excel database.

With OpenClinica 2.5, data extraction time has been slashed from five or six hours to two or three minutes for large data sets containing millions of items, says Galvin. That’s a particularly useful feature when running big trials with multiple sites involving thousands of subjects. The upgrade also allows the import of data from third-party systems specific to patient laboratory, imaging, treatment visits, and hospitalizations.

External users of OpenClinica have contributed translations into French, Italian, and Portuguese for the latest release, says Galvin. Several users are also working on ad hoc reporting features that could be added to the source code within the next six months. OpenClinica’s data extraction module currently provides limited reporting capability.

OpenClinica doesn’t yet have any large pharmaceutical companies in its user base, says Galvin. But some sizeable clinical research organizations and smaller pharmaceutical companies are users of the application and have signed up for OpenClinica Enterprise, a commercially packaged version of the system they can more easily validate and support within their organization, says Galvin. They’re also able to access 260 tests of version 2.5 – nearly double the number conducted with the last update. “We wanted to make sure we got full coverage of all the features implemented…[without] affecting anything that was working correctly in the previous version.”

Akaza is recognized as one of the Enterprise Support Network partners for the Cancer Biomedical Informatics Grid (caBIG) program of the National Institutes of Health. As part of this program, Akaza also offers deployment support and training for parties interested in adopting caBIG’s open source clinical trials applications, says Galvin.

To date, OpenClinica has been adopted in 76 countries, with registered community members totaling over 5,000, says Galvin. The standards-based software facilitates protocol configuration, design of CRFs, clinical data capture, and study/data management. It is freely available for download on the Web at openclinica.org.

________________________________

This story first appeared in eCliniqua,one of Bio-IT World’s free e-newsletters. Subscribe here.

Click here to login and leave a comment.  

0 Comments

Add Comment

Text Only 2000 character limit

Page 1 of 1

White Papers & Special Reports

10 Secrets to Recession-Proof Your Business
Sponsored by Coupa


Read this white paper to discover 10 strategies smart companies deploy to recession-proof their business.
Leaders generally face hard choices on how to mange a company during an economic downturn and
behave in one of three ways:
1) “The ostrich” - Preserve the status quo/hope for the best
2) “The bull in the china shop” - Blindly cut expenses across the board
3) “The fox” - Use the downturn to make your business more effective and position it for future growth

Learn how to behave “like a fox” and use a recession as a means to pounce on emerging trends.



High-Performance Computing in Life Science & Education
Sponsored by SGI and Intel
The varied collection of Bio-IT World articles and insights assembled in this BriefingON examine key trends in HPC infrastructure and how researchers are putting their best computational resources to use. Provided here are stories and lessons around the effective use of high performance computing in life science. Download the BriefingON.


Software Helps Doping Control Lab Streamline Results Management
Sponsored by Waters
The Karolinska University Hospital’s Doping Control Lab tests thousands of samples annually for stimulants, diuretics, and other masking agents. Increased regulatory pressure and new technologies increased the number of samples analyzed creating data management challenges. Waters® NuGenesis® Scientific Data Management System and TargetLynx™ Application Manager software were used to reduce the time required to calculate, review and search results.


Life Science Webcasts & Podcasts

Medidata Solutions

Rising Clinical Trial Delays and Costs - Addressing the Cause, Not the Symptoms

Protocol complexity is taking a toll on clinical study speed and efficiency: increasingly complicated and ambitious protocols are not only burdening sites and study volunteers but are also prolonging trials and increasing expenses. In response, sponsors have turned to global study placement, restructured site relationships and new site management practices, but the problem remains.

This podcast will discuss:

  • Why these responses address only the symptoms, not the underlying cause, of rising clinical trial delays and costs.
  • Results of a recent joint Tufts University / Medidata Solutions study.
  • New metrics benchmarking protocol design trends.
  • Systematic protocol design improvements and why they are essential to clinical trial performance excellence.

Speakers: Ken Getz, Senior Research Fellow at the Tufts Center for the Study of Drug Development, and Ed Seguine, General Manager, Trial Planning Solutions at Medidata.

Download Now



More Podcasts

Job Openings

Sequencing Instrument Software Team Leader – Oxford Nanopore Technologies, UK
We are seeking a highly motivated and dynamic individual to join our rapidly growing informatics team, to lead the development of the software and computing subsystem of our revolutionary DNA sequencing system. The candidate will be required to work to aggressive timelines within an agile development process. Visit www.nanoporetech.com/vacancies

Related Resources & Products

Biomedical Imaging: From Drug Target Discovery to Medical Diagnostics
Biomedical Imaging: From Drug Target Discovery to Medical Diagnostics
Electronic Data in Clinical Trials
Electronic Data in Clinical Trials
Adaptive Clinical Trial Designs
Adaptive Clinical Trial Designs




For reprints and/or copyright permission, please contact The YGS Group, 1808 Colonial Village Lane, Lancaster, PA;

(717) 399-1900 ext. 125, or via email to [email protected].