Timaeus in early phase studies
"Wow! Timaeus would be terrific in Phase I studies". ...a typical response of many client individuals upon seeing Timaeus for the first time.
Why? Early phase studies have special requirements compared to later phase clinical trials. Early phase trials can vary between studies conducted with healthy subjects inside specialist bedded units, to complex proof-of-concept, including adaptive trial design, studies in patients.
Many pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies need to conduct large numbers of this type of study. To make matters more challenging, study timelines can be highly changeable and difficult to plan, as they are subject to availability of pre-clinical safety data, formulation data, capacity in specialist units and other factors. To make matters worse, many are often on the "critical path" of the compound's development. This creates the need for study eCRFs and databases to be rapidly built and for the system to be flexible enough to cope with changing requirements arising at very short notice. As safety is a primary focus in early phase studies, and as emerging new adaptive trial designs become more necessary, real time access to data is becoming a critical requirement.
Why Timaeus? Below are some of the reasons that make Timaeus the system of choice for early phase studies:
- Complete study databases ready in days, not weeks
- Flexible for easy study updates
- Adaptive trial design ready
- Supports indirect and direct e-source.
- Wireless, portable appliance model ideal for specialist bedded units
- Multiple trials per appliance, remote database downloads, robust synchronisation, real-time or offline flexible options
- Direct data capture from medical devices such as ECG, Vital signs
- Ability to support a multitude of medical devices
- Real time access to data, real time data snapshots without the need for interim database locking
- Millions of dollars of potential cost savings on operational costs alone
However, for the "wow!" factor, you must see it to believe it. Why not arrange a demonstration?