In silico assessment of biomedical products: The conundrum of rare but not so rare events in two case studies

Author:

Viceconti Marco1,Cobelli Claudio2,Haddad Tarek3,Himes Adam3,Kovatchev Boris4,Palmer Mark3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Mechanical Engineering, INSIGNEO Institute for in silico Medicine, The University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK

2. Department of Information Engineering, University of Padova, Padova, Italy

3. Medtronic Inc., Minneapolis, MN, USA

4. Center for Diabetes Technology, The University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA, USA

Abstract

In silico clinical trials, defined as “The use of individualized computer simulation in the development or regulatory evaluation of a medicinal product, medical device, or medical intervention,” have been proposed as a possible strategy to reduce the regulatory costs of innovation and the time to market for biomedical products. We review some of the the literature on this topic, focusing in particular on those applications where the current practice is recognized as inadequate, as for example, the detection of unexpected severe adverse events too rare to be detected in a clinical trial, but still likely enough to be of concern. We then describe with more details two case studies, two successful applications of in silico clinical trial approaches, one relative to the University of Virginia/Padova simulator that the Food and Drug Administration has accepted as possible replacement for animal testing in the preclinical assessment of artificial pancreas technologies, and the second, an investigation of the probability of cardiac lead fracture, where a Bayesian network was used to combine in vivo and in silico observations, suggesting a whole new strategy of in silico-augmented clinical trials, to be used to increase the numerosity where recruitment is impossible, or to explore patients’ phenotypes that are unlikely to appear in the trial cohort, but are still frequent enough to be of concern.

Funder

Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council

NC3R

Directorate-General for Information Society and Media

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Mechanical Engineering,General Medicine

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