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2026 DIA Global Annual Meeting: How Structured Protocols Enable Automated Amendments and Real-Time FDA Oversight

2026 DIA Global Annual Meeting: Stacy Hurt of Parexel on Federated AI, the Patient Voice, and Accountability for Patient Needs

ACT Brief: Real-Time Evidence Generation, Protocol Digitization, and Decentralized Trial Flexibility

Marwan Fathallah on the Trends Driving the Conversation at the 2026 DIA Global Annual Meeting

2026 DIA Global Annual Meeting: Why Federated Learning Reduces Friction

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Beyond a compliance checkbox, rigorous UAT planning and execution can ensure eCOA platforms function reliably across real-world trial workflows, from study design through post-launch changes.

In this video interview from the 2026 DIA Global Annual Meeting, Nick Scott of Biogen and Samantha Hadfield of Thermo Fisher Scientific, explain why mixed FSP models are becoming a strategic tool for sponsors seeking greater agility and how geography and portfolio structure shape the decision.

In this video interview from the 2026 DIA Global Annual Meeting, Joan Chambers, independent senior consultant at Tufts CSDD, explains how the flexibility and accessibility of decentralized trial modalities are expanding patient reach—and why fit-for-purpose deployment is key to making them work.

A CFO’s perspective on capital allocation, balancing risk and opportunity, and structuring successful China-based clinical programs.

In this video interview from the 2026 DIA Global Annual Meeting, Angie Maurer, VP of AI-enabled clinical development at Medable, explains the three structural barriers that kept protocol digitization out of reach and why the convergence of LLMs, industry standards, and validated environments has finally changed the equation.

In this video interview from the 2026 DIA Global Annual Meeting, Kevin Bugin, head of global regulatory policy and intelligence at Amgen and executive sponsor of TransCelerate's Embedded Pragmatic Trials initiative, reframes the FDA's continuous review expectations around real-time evidence generation and explains why quality by design—not data cleanup—is what regulators are now demanding.

One Strategy, Two Jurisdictions: Unlocking Efficiency Across EU CTR and UK Regulatory Reform
How sponsors can leverage both the EU Clinical Trials Regulation and UK’s reformed framework to achieve cost efficiencies, faster timelines, and stronger regulatory positioning.

In today's ACT Brief, we examine building infrastructure for real-time clinical and real-world data integration, modernizing participant payments to reduce dropout, and a Phase III confirmatory trial failure for a lung cancer drug.

Outdated payment methods like prepaid cards and checks create administrative burden and retention friction, but modern flexible payment platforms with multiple payout options and global reach can improve participant experience without adding compliance complexity.

In this video interview, Raj Indupuri, CEO and co-founder of eClinical Solutions, explains why organizations that build infrastructure capable of harmonizing clinical and real-world data in real time will be best positioned for the continuous, data-driven regulatory environment now emerging.

In today's ACT Brief, we examine quantified returns on RBQM implementation, why allowing sponsors to control AI governance builds adoption, and how basket trials reshape rare pediatric oncology development.

A Tufts CSDD study quantifies risk-based quality management's net financial value at $13.8 million per Phase III oncology trial, with ROI multiples up to 22.7x driven primarily by cycle time reductions rather than monitoring cost savings.

In this video interview, Raj Indupuri, CEO and co-founder of eClinical Solutions, describes how giving sponsors the ability to inject their own SOPs, protocols, and governance frameworks into AI systems is the key to building the trust needed for real-world adoption.

In today's ACT Brief, we examine moving beyond study-level risk management, why execution architecture is essential before AI can deliver value, and growing FDA/EMA support for rare pediatric disease development.

AI can improve recruitment only when it is embedded in protocol design, EHR-enabled matching, patient engagement, site workflow, and governance. The highest-value near-term use cases are human-in-the-loop decision-support applications with documented context of use, validation, privacy controls, and bias monitoring.






















