
Metrics & Benchmarks
Latest News

Study Quantifies Financial Return of Risk-Based Quality Management in Oncology Trials

Making Communications Resonate: Wherever People Are, In Their Own Words

ACT Brief: CRO Partnership in Program Recruitment, Psychedelic Trial Design Guidance, and Breast Cancer Pathway Inhibitor

FDA Finalizes Guidance on Clinical Trial Design for Psychedelic Drug Development

What Success Looks Like for CROs Building Infrastructure Around Program-Level Recruitment

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In today's ACT Brief, we examine how organizational silos block programmatic recruitment strategies, why regulatory collaboration on selective safety data enables scalability, and FDA approval of an at-home Alzheimer's therapy option.

In this Q&A, Rob DiCicco, vice president of portfolio management at TransCelerate Biopharma, discusses the collaborative work underway with FDA and CTTI to explore selective safety data collection as a model for de-risking trial design, reducing site and patient burden, and scaling pragmatic trial approaches across the industry.

In this video interview, Gaynor Anders, chief delivery officer at Trialbee, identifies organizational silos, siloed budgets, and a study-centric mindset as the biggest barriers to shifting from study-by-study to programmatic recruitment—and explains what it actually takes to map a program that sponsors might not see at first.

In today's ACT Brief, we examine how sponsors can shift to portfolio-level recruitment strategies, why real-time burden sampling captures operational friction before it becomes risk, and FDA approval of a platinum-free bladder cancer combination.

Experience sampling captures real-time signals of site burden and operational friction at the moment they occur, providing earlier and more actionable insight than retrospective assessments and revealing workarounds before they compound into protocol deviations.

In this video interview, Gaynor Anders, chief delivery officer at Trialbee, outlines the organizational, budgetary, and technological changes sponsors need to make to move from study-by-study recruitment to a portfolio-level approach that keeps patients engaged across a therapeutic area.

In today's ACT Brief, we examine the FDA's paused real-time complete response letter release policy, why programmatic patient engagement is replacing protocol-centric recruitment, and medical affairs' emerging role in bringing patient perspectives into clinical development.

The agency's complete response letter transparency initiative has been on hold since April following a pharma industry legal challenge, even as the FDA moves to codify the practice through formal rulemaking.

In this video interview, Gaynor Anders, chief delivery officer at Trialbee, explains why the industry's protocol-centric recruitment model has persisted so long and what a shift toward programmatic, relationship-driven patient engagement actually looks like in practice.

The evolving role of medical affairs in connecting patients, physicians, and evidence generation.

In today's ACT Brief, we examine how FDA's single pivotal trial shift raises recruitment and retention stakes, why FSP should be viewed as a configurable continuum rather than binary choice, and a new pegfilgrastim biosimilar completing a major G-CSF portfolio.

As clinical development grows increasingly complex and talent markets remain constrained, sponsors must evolve beyond binary outsourcing decisions to embrace a configurable functional service provider continuum that enhances operational optionality without requiring wholesale restructuring.

In this video interview, Gaynor Anders, chief delivery officer at Trialbee, explains how the FDA's shift toward single pivotal trials is raising the stakes for sponsors on recruitment quality, feasibility precision, diversity, and retention—and why sponsors now say they get one shot to get it right.

In today's ACT Brief, we examine AI-enabled systems medicine connecting fragmented clinical data, how behavioral readiness and trust drive enrollment more than eligibility criteria, and scaling concentrated AI strategy across a global pharmaceutical enterprise.

Eligibility criteria alone rarely predict enrollment, which depends more on trust, hope, and fear, requiring relationship-based community engagement paired with behavioral readiness assessments rather than transactional outreach.






















