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Empowering drug development: Leveraging insights from imaging technologies to enable the advancement of digital heath technologies

Journal

CTS-CLINICAL AND TRANSLATIONAL SCIENCE
Volume 16, Issue 3, Pages 383-397

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/cts.13461

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The FDA recognizes the importance of improving drug development efficiency and considers translational biomarkers to be a top priority. The use of imaging biomarkers has been associated with increased rates of drug approvals. Standardization and data sharing are key to the successful deployment of imaging biomarkers and can also accelerate the adoption of digital health technologies (DHTs) in developing novel treatments. Pre-competitive consortia and data standardization will advance the regulatory maturity of DHTs in clinical trials.
The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has publicly recognized the importance of improving drug development efficiency, deeming translational biomarkers a top priority. The use of imaging biomarkers has been associated with increased rates of drug approvals. An appropriate level of validation provides a pragmatic way to choose and implement these biomarkers. Standardizing imaging modality selection, data acquisition protocols, and image analysis (in ways that are agnostic to equipment and algorithms) have been key to imaging biomarker deployment. The best known examples come from studies done via precompetitive collaboration efforts, which enable input from multiple stakeholders and data sharing. Digital health technologies (DHTs) provide an opportunity to measure meaningful aspects of patient health, including patient function, for extended periods of time outside of the hospital walls, with objective, sensor-based measures. We identified the areas where learnings from the imaging biomarker field can accelerate the adoption and widespread use of DHTs to develop novel treatments. As with imaging, technical validation parameters and performance acceptance thresholds need to be established. Approaches amenable to multiple hardware options and data processing algorithms can be enabled by sharing DHT data and by cross-validating algorithms. Data standardization and creation of shared databases will be vital. Pre-competitive consortia (public-private partnerships and professional societies that bring together all stakeholders, including patient organizations, industry, academic experts, and regulators) will advance the regulatory maturity of DHTs in clinical trials.

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