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SCOPE Summit 2026: ESG Shifts From Reporting Exercise to Vendor Readiness Test in Clinical Operations

SCOPE Summit 2026: Where AI Is Making the Most Immediate Impact Across R&D

Regulatory Uncertainty Emerges Across the Drug Development Lifecycle

Meeting Halfway: Co-Developing Frameworks for Seamless FSO to FSP Transitions

De-Risking Development: Prioritizing Robustness in Trial Design

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Charlie Paterson, partner at PA Consulting, outlines how limited FDA guidance on innovative designs, decentralized models, and digital endpoints is forcing clinical operations teams to recalibrate expectations and minimize regulatory risk.

New findings from a Phase II study indicate that antenatal treatment with the FcRn blocker nipocalimab resulted in low fetal drug exposure and transient reductions in infant IgG levels at birth, without evidence of impaired immune recovery or vaccine response through nearly two years of follow-up.

Charlie Paterson, partner at PA Consulting, discusses how fewer new guidance updates are pushing sponsors to rely on historical precedents and non-US standards when making trial design and operational decisions.

ACT Brief: FDA Capacity Strains Timelines, Sponsors Rethink Site Support, and Regulators Align on AI
In today’s ACT Brief, we examine how reduced FDA capacity is extending regulatory timelines, why sponsors are rethinking operating models to reduce site burden in 2026, and how the FDA and EMA are aligning around guiding principles for artificial intelligence in drug development.

As trials expand into new geographies and decentralized models mature, sponsors are confronting a core operational challenge in 2026: how to scale global execution while reducing system complexity and day-to-day burden on research sites.

The FDA and EMA have aligned on ten guiding principles for the responsible use of artificial intelligence across the drug development lifecycle, establishing a shared framework to support innovation, regulatory consistency, and patient safety.

Charlie Paterson, partner at PA Consulting, explains how reduced FDA capacity and staff turnover have led to longer regulatory timelines, increased preparation for agency interactions, and delayed feedback during early trial planning.

In today’s ACT Brief, we look at how real-world evidence is reshaping trial design rather than replacing trials, what Worldwide Clinical Trials’ acquisition of Catalyst Clinical Research signals for oncology-focused CRO models, and new data showing feasibility and enrollment challenges remain stubborn across global trials.

Worldwide Clinical Trials’ acquisition of Catalyst Clinical Research strengthens oncology expertise and functional service provider capabilities, expanding global trial delivery and flexible resourcing models across early and late phase development.

See how real-world evidence is enabling smaller, smarter, and more efficient trial designs through hybrid models, external comparators, and continuous patient monitoring—while preserving the role of traditional clinical trials.

In today’s ACT Brief, we examine why ESG efforts in clinical development are shifting into vendor oversight, what data and governance barriers still limit broader use of de-identified RWE in submissions, and new Phase II obesity data from Roche as its program moves toward Phase III.

As ESG expectations rise across clinical development, sponsors are finding that sustainability efforts gain traction only when embedded into existing vendor oversight and quality management processes rather than treated as a standalone reporting exercise.

Assess the data quality, linkage, transparency, and auditability challenges that sponsors must overcome to make de-identified real-world evidence fit for regulatory submissions.

In today’s ACT Brief, we explore why decentralized trial innovations struggle to scale without better change management, where real-world evidence most realistically complements traditional trials, and how efficiency, AI, and platformization are expected to reshape clinical operations in 2026.

A look at how efficiency, access, platformization, AI, non-traditional players, and regulatory recovery are expected to reshape clinical operations in 2026.






















