Skip to content

Is it time to start rethinking mobile clinical trial apps?

Applications used in clinical trials can be extremely useful in recruitment, patient engagement, and more. However, it’s possible that the technology could use a makeover to reach its full potential.

To learn more, Outsourcing-Pharma connected with Clay Williams, vice president of mobile applications with Greenphire, a company that offers various financial management services for clinical trial patients.

OSP: Could you please talk about the evolution of apps and their use in clinical trials?

CW: One of the first technologies used by trial participants was an electronic diary (eDiary) which is used to collect electronic patient-reported outcomes (ePRO) data. These were the status quo until a few years ago.

In 2015, Apple released ResearchKit, an open-source framework for building research apps on the iPhone that offered several participant-friendly advances. A year later, ResearchStack was released, an open-source framework that offered similar capabilities on Android devices. These frameworks greatly raised awareness of the potential of mobile devices in clinical research, including the use of mobile to support virtual, decentralized, and hybrid studies.

Next, the COVID-19 pandemic significantly increased the financial and operational imperative for sponsors to invest in participant-focused apps. Such apps offer a huge benefit to both sites and participants but need to be approached properly and have a purposeful design.

OSP: What areas of clinical trials have apps tended to be more useful/appropriate?

.