Novartis,
U.S. partner plan remote trials to boost participation
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[March 07, 2018] ZURICH
(Reuters) - Novartis plans up to 10 clinical trials over three years
using a U.S. partner's mobile technology to help free patients from
burdensome hospital trips as the Swiss drugmaker aims to boost study
participation and cut costs.
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Novartis said on Wednesday it would work with Science 37, a
California-based company that provides technology including smart
phone apps to patients, allowing video-based telemedicine visits
rather than always requiring physical travel to clinics.
Novartis Chief Executive Vas Narasimhan, who took over the
Basel-based company on Feb. 1, has outlined plans to deploy more
technology and leverage data to trim costs amid broad industry
concern over sluggish returns on research and development
investment. [http://reut.rs/2Hbi4Bm]
Science 37's "remote trial" technology may also help remedy
limitations on recruiting participants, Novartis said, citing
estimates that only 2 percent of the eligible U.S. population now
joins studies due to access hurdles.
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"Novartis aims to run studies in ways that overcome many of the
barriers patients face when deciding whether or not to enroll in
clinical trials, like long journeys or extensive time spent at
hospitals or trial sites," said Rob Kowalski, Novartis's interim
drug development chief.
Novartis owns 10 percent of Science 37 after participating last
April in a $29 million financing round with others including Sanofi
and Amgen. Further investors in Science 37, founded by Noah Craft
and Belinda Tan in 2014, include Google's GV venture firm.
(Reporting by John Miller; Editing by Michael Shields)
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