WUSS 2009 CDISC for the Medical Device and Diagnostic Industry: An Update Carey Smoak Team Leader...

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WUSS 2009 CDISC for the Medical Device and Diagnostic Industry: An Update Carey Smoak Team Leader CDISC Device SDTM Sub-team

Transcript of WUSS 2009 CDISC for the Medical Device and Diagnostic Industry: An Update Carey Smoak Team Leader...

WUSS 2009

CDISC for the Medical Device and Diagnostic Industry: An Update

Carey SmoakTeam Leader

CDISC Device SDTM Sub-team

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Overview• Device Team

• Importance of Devices

• Differences between Devices and Pharma

• Team Mission Possible

• Unique Device Identifier

• Current Status

• SAS and CDISC

Device Team• >50 Team Members

– Industry Experts– CDISC Representatives– FDA Representatives

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Device Team• Industry Experts

– U.S. and Europe– Areas of Expertise

• Diagnostics• Imaging• Implantable Devices

– Membership is open to anyone who wants to participate

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Device Team• CDISC

– SDS (Submission Data Standards)

– CDASH (Clinical Data Acquisition Standards Harmonization)

• FDA

– CDRH (Center for Devices and Radiological Health)

– CBER (Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research)

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Importance of Devices• Devices in and of themselves are

important:– heart stents may save peoples’ lives– blood screening assays help to keep the

blood supply safe

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Importance of Devices• FDA

– Last year (Jan-Nov, 2008), 697 Premarket Approvals (PMAs) were approved by CDRH

– During the same time frame, 67 New Drug Applications (NDAs) were approved by CDER

– This is not intended to imply that devices are more important than therapeutic products

– Rather the point is simply that devices are important

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Importance of Devices• Devices are also important when used in

conjunction with therapeutic products– Contrast agents in imaging devices may be

used to monitor therapeutic agents – Drug eluting heart stents may be used to treat

cardiovascular disease– Diagnostic assays may be used to determine

if a therapeutic product will work in a patient • targeted therapies and companion diagnostics

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Differences between Devices and Pharma

• Paper by Greg Campbell (CDRH)

– A medical device is anything that is not either a drug or a biologic product

– Mechanism of action

• Medical devices are usually physical

• Pharmaceutical products are usually chemical or biological.

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Differences between Devices and Pharma

– Type of Product

• Medical devices can be therapeutic, diagnostic or something else

• Pharmaceutical products are usually therapeutic

– Research

• Medical devices are invented

• Drugs (new chemical entities) are generally discovered

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Differences between Devices and Pharma

– Development• Medical devices can be altered during clinical

development• Once on the market a newer, improved version

may be in development• Consequently, the life-cycle of a medical device

may only be as short as a couple of years• In contrast, drugs are usually on the market for

many years

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Differences between Devices and Pharma

– Approval

• Medical devices are approved through the Premarket Approval (PMA) application process

• A single confirmatory study is often sufficient for approval

• In contrast, drugs are approved through the New Drug Application (NDA) process

• Drug development is characterized by Phases I through IV clinical trials.

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Differences between Devices and Pharma

– Companies

• There are more than 25,000 medical device companies registered with the FDA

• Medical device companies are usually small (the median size is less than 50 employees)

• In contrast, there are relatively few pharmaceutical companies

• Pharmaceutical companies tend to be large

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Differences between Devices and Pharma

– Products

• There are tens of thousands of medical devices

• The number of drug numbers in the thousands

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Differences between Devices and Pharma

• In device studies, data is collected about:

– Instruments

– Assays

– Specimens

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Differences between Devices and Pharma

• This data does not currently fit into any CDISC domain

– “Houston, we have a problem.”

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Team Mission Possible• Determine how device submission

requirements fit within the context of SDTM

• Identify gaps and ways to address them

• Develop device domains as needed

Team Mission Possible• February, 2009 INTRAchange

– Device Team met with CDASH team and representatives from AdvaMed

– Forged a strategy to:• Review the 16 CDASH domains• Create new device domains as needed

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Team Mission Possible• Review of 16 CDASH domains

– CRF analysis sub-team– Collected more than 170 CRF from 40+

device companies

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Team Mission Possible• Create new device domains:

– Device properties– Device disposition– Device accountability– Device malfunctions

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Team Mission Possible

• Device Properties (DP)– Properties and/or characteristics about a

device– Findings observation class domain

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Team Mission Possible

Domain DPTESTCD DPTEST DPORRES DP DPMODEL Model

Number ABCDEF

DP DPSNUM Serial Number

123456

DP DPSVER Software Version

1.2.3

Team Mission Possible• Device Malfunctions

– May or may not be related to an Adverse Event

• MedDRA• Unique Device Identifier

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Unique Device Identifier• On September 27, 2007 the FDA

Amendments Act of 2007 was signed into law

– This act includes language related to the establishment of a Unique Device Identification System

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Unique Device Identifier– This new system when implemented will

require:• the label of a device to bear a unique identifier • the unique identifier to be able to identify the

device through distribution and use • the unique identifier to include the lot or serial

number if specified by FDA

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Unique Device Identifier– This unique device identifier is currently a

work in progress by the FDA

– For more information, please go to www.fda.gov/cdrh/ocd/udi

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New Domain Procedure• An Initial Consensus Version (ICV) of the new SDTM

and CDASH domains are achieved & other specific fields/terminology for the 16 CDASH Domains.

• Submit to CDISC Technical Leadership Committee and follow the Consensus Process.

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CDASH Component

• 16 Safety data domains developed

• Consolidated document posted for public review in May 2008

• Received over 1800 comments from 46 companies, institutions and agencies.

• All 3 ICH regions were represented in the public comment process

– US– Europe– Japan

• CDASH V1.0 published 2008

• Streamlines data collection at investigative sites - addresses Critical Path Opportunity #45

• Continuation of ACRO’s Initiative

• Started October 2006• Supported by a collaborative

group of 17 organizations• Core team of 16 members

manages.. – 11 working groups– Comprised of between 8-40

volunteers

• ~190 working group volunteers

CDASH Project Snapshot

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CDASH Domains

• Common Identifier Variables• Common Timing Variables• Adverse Events (AE)• Concomitant Medications

(CM)• Comments (CO)• Drug Accountability (DA)• Demographics (DM)• Disposition (DS)• Protocol Deviations (DV)

• ECG (EG)• Exposure (EX) • Inclusion Exclusion (IE)• LAB Test Results (LB)• Medical History (MH)• Physical Exam (PE)• Vital Signs (VS)• Subject Characteristics (SC)• Substance Use (SU)

(N=16)

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CDASH Development Steps• Review CDASH v 1.0 all domains

• Co- develop of SDTM domains– First time that this has been done– Device properties– Device disposition– Device accountability– Device malfunctions

• Focused on CRF Content, not CRF Layout

CDASH Development Steps• Collected CRF samples – frequency

analysis

• Evaluated commonalities/differences between CRF samples

• Documented data points included/excluded with justifications

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CDASH Development Steps• Agree on basic device CRF collection

fields 

• Assign Core Designation (Highly recommended, etc.)

• Map to draft SDTM domains

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CDASH Development Steps• Define required terminology – forward to

Terminology team.

• Develop CRF question definitions and completion instructions for clinical sites and sponsors

• Incorporate new device domains into CDASH V 1.1

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CDASH Program Plan 2009-2010

ICVs Q409CDASH-ODMCDASH V 1.1

CDASHUG 1.0

ICVs Q409CDASH-ODMCDASH V 1.1

CDASHUG 1.0

CDISC CONSENSUS PROCESSQ210

Q409

ReleasedQ2 10

CDASH-ODMCDASH V 1.1CDASHUG 1.0

ReleasedQ2 10

CDASH-ODMCDASH V 1.1CDASHUG 1.0

SAS and CDISC• Clinical Standards Toolkit which will:

– Validate the CDISC SDTM standard (both WebSDM and Janus rules)

– Produce the CRT-DDS (define.xml) documentation files

– http://www.sas.com/news/preleases/062308/SASforClinicalDI.html

– Available with BASE/SAS

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SAS and CDISC• The Clinical Standards Toolkit is a set of

macros which can be updated as standards change.

• This last point is of benefit to devices.– When a new SDTM standard becomes

available for devices then the Clinical Standards Toolkit should work for devices.

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SUMMARY• Devices are important!

• Work is currently being done:– Review the 16 CDASH domains– Develop new domains

• New team members are welcome!

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Contacts• Carey Smoak

– Team Leader

– Roche Molecular Systems, Inc.

– E-mail: [email protected]