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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 April 2025
Objectives/Goals: Early identification and profiling of planned studies is a critical administrative challenge in providing timely support for clinical trials. Here we describe the collaborative design and development of a clinical trial tracking dashboard to enhance support and quality improvement for investigator-initiated clinical trials at our institution. Methods/Study Population: Trial-CARE organized a workgroup with key stakeholders from WashU business units that manage grants, information technology, bioinformatics, data repository stewardship, and clinical trial support. The workgroup strategized next steps in a “proof-of-concept” effort to determine whether NIH investigator-initiated clinical trial metrics would be accessible via the WashU Data Warehouse. The WashU Data Warehouse is a data repository that pulls in pre-award and post-award data from sources such as the WashU Research-Grant Management System (RMS) and the NIH Reporter Tool. The proof-of-concept findings lead to implementing a plan for Phase 1 of the design, development, and piloting of a visual dashboard to track and offer targeted and timely support to NIH investigator-initiated clinical trials at WashU. Results/Anticipated Results: WashU currently has 217 grants submitted and 114 grants awarded for NIH clinical trials. In the proof of concept, we confirmed and successfully matched over 100 awarded NIH investigator-initiated clinical trials at WashU across RMS and the NIH Reporter Tool. We determined Phase I of the dashboard would track clinical trial data from these two sources via the WashU Data Warehouse. The pilot of Phase I of the dashboard will begin in February 2025. We also identified mission critical data elements not accessible via the WashU Data Warehouse (e.g., enrollment diversity, IND, and IDE). The plan to procure this data will require continued stakeholder support in Phase II of the dashboard to (1) expand data capture in RMS and (2) ingest additional data into the WashU Data Warehouse from RMS or new systems (e.g., ClinicalTrials.gov). Discussion/Significance of Impact: Early access to robust data about NIH investigator-initiated clinical trials via our newly created Phase I dashboard will better position our centralized service cores to support trial success, compliance, and quality improvement across the lifecycle of these clinical trials. In Phase II, we plan to expand the data available in the dashboard.