DIA: Driving Insights to Action
Science:Life Sciences
After her stage four metastatic cancer diagnosis in 2011, writer Mary Elizabeth Williams was selected to participate in one of the world’s first immunotherapy clinical trials. Twelve weeks later, she showed a complete response. Williams will explore the clinical trial process in her DIA 2020 Keynote Address. “If we are creating protocols for patients who, like me, are otherwise perfectly healthy and have no comorbidities, you're not in any way serving the people who are the most vulnerable,” she explains. “Look at who is most directly impacted by this virus: It's people who have pre-existing conditions and yet people with pre-existing conditions are routinely shut out of the clinical trial process.”
Complexity Continues to Challenge Clinical Costs
Maximizing Regulatory Resources Across Latin America
Data Intersections Connecting Drug Development with Clinical Care
Sharing Cloud-Based Data as They Emerge: Accumulus Synergy Part 2
Sharing Cloud-Based Data as They Emerge: Accumulus Synergy Part 1
Advanced Tests and Therapies Making Daily Care Anything But Routine
Innovation Without Access Will Never Meet Patient Needs
Three Good Reasons to Use Artificial Intelligence in Pharmacovigilance
EU Regulatory Strategies Shaping and Shaped by Pandemic Response
Telehealth Emerging in Japan’s Clinical Research and Care
Aligned Review Timelines Key to Co-Developing Companion Diagnostics
Early Access Programs Complicating Comparative Data Analyses
New PAHO Report: Strength in Regulatory Reference and Reliance
eLabeling More than Moving from Paper to Digital
RIM Whitepaper V2 and RIM Reference Model: Advancing Regulatory Science
Australia: Growing Clinical Trials Even in Pandemic’s Wake
Remote Tools Keep Japan's Research Moving
DIA Promoting Community, Pushing Back Misinformation
Japan Healthcare 2035: Focus on Basic Science & Economics
DARWIN EU: Evolution in Europe’s Use of Big Data
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