Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Completed
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT05237271 |
Other study ID # |
Pro00058735 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Completed |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
March 15, 2022 |
Est. completion date |
August 15, 2022 |
Study information
Verified date |
August 2022 |
Source |
Qure Healthcare, LLC |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
QURE will use its CPV technology in a randomized controlled trial to measure how SomaLogic's
diagnostic test (the Cardiovascular Disease in Type 2 Diabetes) changes clinical practice and
improves patient outcomes.
Description:
SomaLogic has developed a pioneering technology, the SomaScan® Platform, the first and only
platform, that simultaneously measures 7,000 proteins. The company's technology is based on
proprietary aptamers, called SOMAmers®, which can measure these unique proteins with high
sensitivity and specificity across a large dynamic range. Using over 60,000 samples,
artificial intelligence and machine learning powered bioinformatics algorithms have created
12 SomaSignal™ tests. The Cardiovascular Disease in Type 2 Diabetes (CVD-T2D) Test result
produces risk score for developing cardiovascular events such as heart attacks, strokes,
heart failure, or cardiovascular death within 4 years, with median time to event of 1.7 years
across the different risk categories. SomaSignal™ testing has the potential to effectively
risk-stratify patients, determine disease prognosis, and elucidate disease drivers for
clinicians. Analytic and clinical validity findings, using this patented technology, have
already been published by the company or collaborators in scientific and clinical
manuscripts.
SomaLogic is looking to understand if the test, when used by practitioners, helps clinicians
determine cardiovascular risk status and achieve better care for patients with diabetes. To
achieve this goal, SomaLogic is looking for an established, innovative approach to gather
high-quality prospective clinical utility data in as short a time as possible. Determining
the clinical utility of the SomaSignal tests will be essential to increase access to the test
and is required to gain coverage and reimbursement.
Accordingly, this study will collect high-quality randomized controlled data from a
nationally representative sample of practicing primary care physicians and cardiologists. To
first determine how these physicians currently manage cardiovascular risk factors in patients
with Type 2 Diabetes (T2DM) and then to determine if introducing the test results of the
CVD-T2D test will change their clinical decision making. Data from this study will better
illuminate which use case is best served by SomaSignal testing (and thus the greatest
clinical utility) and what physician characteristics (e.g., age, practice setting, training)
are associated with these practice changes.
This study uses simulated patient cases, called Clinical Performance and Value vignettes
(CPVs), a proven methodology that is widely used to rapidly measure physician care decisions.
CPVs are a unique and scalable tool that standardizes practice measurement by having all
providers care for the same (virtual) patients. With all providers caring for the same
patients, the CPVs generate unbiased data that yields powerful insights into clinical
decision making and how these decisions change with the introduction of a new product or
solution. Data from the CPVs demonstrates the presence or absence of the clinical utility of
a diagnostic test. The results, positive or negative, are published in peer-reviewed
literature and if they are positive, favorably impact coverage and reimbursement decisions.
The primary goal will be to determine whether informing clinicians of the CVD-T2D test
results leads to changes in prescriptions and/or medical management of virtual participants
with T2D in concordance with CVD in Type 2 Diabetes results compared with virtual
participants whose physicians are not informed of the test results.