Saturday, January 24, 2026

AI supports progress, relationships drive success

Trial acceleration has been a topic of conversation for the pharmaceutical sector for years and as technology advances, it is becoming even more of a reality. The time that artificial intelligence (AI) can save sponsors and sites makes it easier than ever to reduce trial timelines; however, the technology will only work well if foundations are strong.

AI is being used to help with site selection, data management and more in the early stages of protocol planning, but cannot replace the basics that should be in place to ensure trials run smoothly. This means that issues need to be addressed which impact parties in the very early stages, and this may not be something that technology alone can resolve.

Issues such as communication channels, training, delayed start-up and contract negotiations cause study delays before a site even enrols its first patient, so resolving these pain points is needed to accelerate this process and reduce time to first-patient-dosed.

While Jimmy Bechtel, chief site success officer for the Society for Clinical Research Sites (SCRS), believes that AI can support in many areas – including recruitment and retention, budgets and contracts and protocol complexity – he cautions that delays will persist if relationship issues between sites and sponsors or contract research organisations (CROs) remain unsolved.

Bechtel, who is speaking at the 2026 Summit for Clinical Operations Executives (SCOPE) conference taking place in Orlando, Florida, from 2-5 February, believes that first and foremost, sponsors and CROs should be more collaborative and communicative with sites to resolve pain points that will continue to slow down trials if not properly addressed.

Jimmy Bechtel, chief site success officer for the Society for Clinical Research Sites (SCRS)
Jimmy Bechtel, chief site success officer for the Society for Clinical Research Sites (SCRS)

“Sites and sponsors or CROs need effective relationship management practices, open and transparent communication and knowing the appropriate channels to identify who to contact about things,” says Bechtel. “Obviously, that’s a two-way street and the sites have their part to play in that as well. When we do that, we see effective and efficient clinical trial execution.”

This can be as simple as ensuring there is someone available in the same or a similar time zone, so sites are not forced to wait a full day for a response, says Anusha Shetty, senior director of strategy at Veeva Systems.

Areas of delay include start-up and training, which Bechtel says can be a huge area of inefficiency for sites.

Training specifically is a problem, with sites frequently being asked to conduct training multiple times, even though it remains valid from a previous study. This adds to timelines as it delays enrolment while site staff repeat tasks. Shetty agrees that sites are often asked to conduct redundant training, which could also include training they do not require as part of their roles in the trial.

Source link

Hot this week

Topics

Related Articles

Popular Categories