The past couple of decades have witnessed a lot in terms of clinical-development outsourcing. What was mainly initiated as a huge-scale swing towards complete service outsourcing to CROs or Contract Research Organizations has offered a return to further insourcing among the biopharma companies, mainly the bigger ones, and this pendulum continues to swing towards its surprise. Our research indicates that CROs continue their stance towards the adoption of services serving small biotech firms that have emerged as prominent stakeholders in terms of clinical development of the latest therapies that drive growth and innovation.
Drug development, specifically in-house, appears to take longer, and the pandemic created further room for delays and bottlenecks in the research processes. Irrespective of the market decline to 6% in 2020 as an outcome of COVID-19, the global market size of the clinical trials is projected to touch around $8.3 billion by 2030, and the firms should acclimate to the latest space. Experts have shared their strategies for creating cost-effective and robust outsourcing links that have the probability to propel clinical studies.
To remain more flexible and respond to the rapidly evolving market, one should adapt to the augmented knowledge of global growth and evolving technologies, along with the growing instability across the global economy. Outsourcing clinical trials to CROs would streamline this shift, notably placing the pharma companies on a robust foothold in the post-pandemic work.
As our report will highlight, pharmaceutical companies are progressively shifting their focus towards outsourcing to manage the intricacies by using the skills and resources of Contract Research Organizations (CROs). The dependency on external partners epitomizes the key importance of strong and best outsourcing relationships toward successful clinical trials.
How CROs Can Raise Their Game Today
Operating clinical studies reportedly proves expensive and demands sponsorship, vendors, CROs, and sites to team up to ensure successful trials. This was discussed at the 13th Annual Clinical Trials in Oncology East Coast 2024 conference, which will be held from 9 to 10 July in Burlington, Massachusetts, by three panelists about the key drivers behind the successful outsourcing strategies.
Although the post-pandemic inflation led to making certain adjustments in the complete costs for the trials, the final determinants of the budget are generally the processes, protocols, product challenges, and the much-needed human hours for conducting a study. The founder and CEO of ARENSIA Exploratory Medicine, Claudia Hesselmann, stated this. But, as the factors include the variables to determine the cost, it is more inclined towards inefficiency and bureaucracy, leading to elevated costs, as explained by her.
Hesselmann further emphasized a human touch that involves the knowledge of the site and the primary investigators, who can determine whether the proposed vendors are the best fit for the study. She explained that this human collaboration assists the sponsors in understanding the participants’ motivation to enroll in the clinical studies.
As stated by the Executive Director of Data Management, Karyopharm Therapeutics, Kevin Stephenson, a study proves functionally effective, leading to cost-saving whenever it gets planned appropriately, including flawless feasibility processes. It is an efficient patient visibility strategy leading to the required site relationships. It indicates the categorizing between the needs and wants along with determining the type of processes that remain at the core of best data collection and decision-making.
David Sherris, PhD, Board of Director, SiVEC Biotechnologies, also added that as an early firm, one has to be very clear on what to focus on, what one can afford, and whether one can pay. However, an already established reliability between the sponsor and CRO remains equally important.
Stephenson further added that the collaboration between the sponsors and vendors should form a functional relationship. Although several vendors appear the same on paper, direct communication with the potential partner who can render better sponsor insights into what the vendor would bring into this connection out of the applied aptitudes they stated in the paper is what he further elaborated on.
A GlobalData-owned brand published in Clinical Trials Arena that the success behind the clinical trials relies mainly on robust outsourcing relationships.
The Growing Role of Outsourcing in Clinical Trials
Since the past decades, the entire sector of clinical trials has witnessed a dramatic shift. As the trials are turning more complex and global, the primary role of outsourcing has witnessed rapid growth. As reported by Grand View Research, the global market size for CRO was valued at $38.4 billion in 2020, and it is projected to rise at a CAGR or compound annual growth rate of 11.6% from 2021 to 2028. This growth in the numbers is due to numerous factors, such as:
- Cost Efficiency: Outsourcing is the other advantage because it enables a firm to obtain services that cannot be efficiently provided by a company while at the same time incurring additional expenses for acquiring the technical know-how of providing such services.
- Expertise and Innovation: CROs also come with extensive skills and new approaches that improve the approaches towards trials.
- Scalability and Flexibility: Outsourcing also offers the advantage of the flexibility to increase or decrease the capability depending on the trials that it has to handle, thus reducing resource waste.
CROs: Fundamental Changes for Long-Term Biotech Support
CROs should emphasize supporting the biotech segment, potentially boosting their reputation as the best clinical partners with innovative teams of scientific leadership. They can also envisage a couple of fundamental changes.
Highlighting the Role as an Integrator of Leading Capabilities
CROs can also attain their capabilities towards the core innovation areas under clinical development. They should focus on expanding their abilities towards specialized skills with the growing essence across clinical development like hybrid trials or decentralization. The development abilities in such areas can aid the CROs to bolster their value as both the general integrators and contractors of the strategic collaboration and market-leading point solutions to the biotech firms.
For instance, the acquisition of PRA Health Sciences in ICON’s 2021 enabled it to develop its offerings across hybrid and decentralized trials. The acquisition of Illingworth at Syneos in 2020 enabled them to transition into mobile and home nursing. These added capabilities lead to collaborations with bigger CROs, making it more encaptivating, while they can remove the requirement to contract with multiple solutions providers.
Positioning as the Preferred End-to-End Partner for Biotech
CROs offer greater flexibility and result-oriented contract arrangements. Those who are formally linking their success to the clinical programs oversee them for embracing a mentality of ownership and enhancing their perception as the key partner. Since numerous CROs are initiating to align their incentives with the clines, they would do the same at a larger scale by taking bold steps and placing skin in the game that rules instead of any special agreement. This proves an effective way of convincing the clients of the commitment to success by the CROs.
Removing Incentives to Favor Large Pharma Over Small Biotech
It is noted that the CROs even garnered their attention towards the dedicated biotech segmentations under meaningful ability with company-wide incentives favoring major pipelines that continue to influence the trade-offs. Specifically within the allocation of key resources between the biotech firms and established pharma clients. CROs would identify and promote better value to establish long-term connections with the pharma companies, enabling the value to get engrained as a main belief that is shared through the CRAs, CRO program managers, and the account executives.
Emphasizing Reliability and Credibility with Superior Service
Through the provision of the above services, CROs can improve the attention accorded biotech firms CEOs and other senior executives. Supporting biotech leaders with a premier service – from RFPs to program design to program roll-out – underscores that the CRO wants to be a participant in more than a one-time business transaction with the biotech company while respecting the fundamental concept of good science. It is also important for CROs to remember that leadership and management of projects, from executive directors and chief medical officers to non-executive directors and investors, value clinical programs, which are the most valuable asset of the biotech company they are running and want to have a good picture of the delivered work.
The Appeal of Emerging Markets
In general, the experience of specialists in this field suggests that the effectiveness of clinical trials is directly affected by the stability of outsourcing arrangements. It is essential to foster and sustain a good working relationship with the CROs, and this involves effective communication and collaboration to achieve the trial’s objectives. Moreover, the contribution of technology cannot be dismissed in these relationships, helping in communication, data handling, and even trial monitoring.
The outcomes of the survey we conducted offer a series of takeaways and mainly the massive diversity of functions and activities towards outsourcing on a global basis. The continued usage of several sources involving both insourcing and outsourcing for personnel capacity and the evolving use of varied relationship frameworks. The growing capacity calls for a combination based on intricate global functional environments that are pressing the sponsors to derive greater levels of efficiency and performance toward outsourcing relationships. The eminence of the operational service provider, along with the functional alliance of relationships, holds a real value in delivering reduced operational costs, minimized cycle times, and greater operational flexibilities.