Journal of Clinical and Translational Science (Jan 2023)

Leveraging retooled clinical research infrastructure for Clinical Research Management System implementation at a large Academic Medical Center

  • Catherine G. Mullen,
  • Jessica Y. Houlihan,
  • Marissa Stroo,
  • Christine E. Deeter,
  • Stephanie A. Freel,
  • Angela M. Padget,
  • Denise C. Snyder

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1017/cts.2023.550
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7

Abstract

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Quality clinical research is essential for health care progress and is the mission of academic health centers. Yet ensuring quality depends on an institution’s ability to measure, control, and respond to metrics of trial performance. Uninformed clinical research provides little benefit to health care, drains institutional resources, and may waste participants' time and commitment. Opportunities for ensuring high-quality research are multifactorial, including training, evaluation, and retention of research workforces; operational efficiencies; and standardizing policies and procedures. Duke University School of Medicine has committed to improving the quality and informativeness of our clinical research enterprise through investments in infrastructure with significant focus on optimizing research management system integration as a foundational element for quality management. To address prior technology limitations, Duke has optimized Advarra’s OnCore for this purpose by seamlessly integrating with the IRB system, electronic health record, and general ledger. Our goal was to create a standardized clinical research experience to manage research from inception to closeout. Key drivers of implementation include transparency of research process data and generating metrics aligned with institutional goals. Since implementation, Duke has leveraged OnCore data to measure, track, and report metrics resulting in improvements in clinical research conduct and quality.

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