By Malia Lewin, MedCity News | May 24, 2019

Life sciences companies overwhelmed with large volumes of information and data available – both in terms of therapies and patient-reported outcomes – must establish a more efficient, bi-directional communication model with care teams to succeed.

The speed of scientific breakthroughs in precision medicine is leading to groundbreaking treatments, particularly in oncology and rare diseases. More than 85 percent of the oncology market is now focused on targeted therapies and the number of new oncology therapeutics in development in the U.S. alone has risen by 34 percent since 2015.  Oncology is an important beachhead for precision medicine due to efforts to understand how unique each patient is and how much the same disease can vary from patient to patient or over time within the same patient.

Innovation in this area has created an explosion of scientific information. In addition to data from clinical studies, real-world patient information is also growing rapidly in both volume and importance. For example, the responses of patient sub-populations, patient adherence data, preferences with treatment regimens, and other observations are vital for the larger understanding of precision medicine adoption, use, and optimization for better outcomes.

Life sciences companies are overwhelmed with the volume of information and data available as they aim to keep oncologists up to date on new therapies, while also bring patient-reported information back to their organizations to inform ongoing scientific progress. Organizations that establish a more efficient, bi-directional communication model with care teams will be better positioned to succeed today.

Medical Science Liaisons (MSLs), who serve as the bridge between top doctors and companies, must communicate detailed information in ways that best fit experts’ needs. MSLs are important in helping experts balance learning with patient care as the average physician must read about 29 hours per day just to keep up to date with new medical research, according to the Journal for European Society of Medical Oncology.

“Back in the 1980s, medical data and evidence was doubling every seven years but by 2020, it will  double every 73 days,” said Andrew W. Pippas, MD, medical director for John B Amos Cancer Center in Columbus, Goergia. Dr. Pippas is also the oncology principal investigator at IACT Health and received Vitals’ Patients’ Choice award 2012, 2013, and 2014.

Dr. Pippas continued, “It’s difficult to keep pace, yet we recognize how important it is to stay current with the latest therapeutic innovations. Rather than more information, we need relevant information delivered more conveniently. Companies that leverage new digital technologies to share information via mobile device, for instance, become more valuable partners.”