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By Asad KhanThere's a particular kind of energy at the World Vaccine Congress that's hard to describe unless you've been in it. Hundreds of scientists, executives, policymakers, pharma leaders, CRO teams, and site networks, all in one convention centre, all sitting with the same fundamental tension. We know how to make vaccines that save lives. So why does getting them to patients still take so long?I spent three days in Washington this week as part of the Medable team. Washington in late March meant that the cherry blossoms were just past their peak but still stunning, and catching them along the Tidal Basin between sessions was one of those small, unexpected gifts that a busy conference week doesn't always make room for.For the conference, I came in with a clear intention. I wanted to reconnect with partners I respect, listen more than I talk, and have honest conversations about where this industry is and where it needs to go. What I didn't fully anticipate was how much the week would reinforce something I already believed but needed reminding of.The urgency is real. And it's shared.The mood in the roomThe congress opened with a keynote from senior US government leadership on federal strategy for public health and pandemic preparedness. The fact that the speaker lineup was still being confirmed close to the event said something in itself. The policy ground under the vaccine industry is shifting, and nobody in that opening session pretended otherwise.Nicole Lurie from CEPI was direct about it during the pandemic preparedness plenary. "We have a long way to go to rebuild trust, not just in the US but globally." That landed with weight in the room. Because the trust deficit isn't just about public perception of vaccines. It runs deeper, into data sharing, into international cooperation, into whether countries will report surveillance information when there are real social and economic consequences for doing so. No platform fixes that. It's a human problem before it's a technology problem.What I kept noticing alongside all of that was a stubborn determination to keep going. Scientists presenting new data, site networks sharing what's working, regulatory specialists wrestling with AI governance frameworks in real time. Nobody was waiting for the policy environment to sort itself out. That resilience is one of the things I find most compelling about this community.The AI conversation nobody's fully figured out yetThomas Waite, Deputy Chief Medical Officer at the UK Department of Health, said something that hasn't left me. "Maintaining public trust when deploying AI surveillance agents is challenging." He also raised the point that if you're training AI on datasets where certain populations are over or underrepresented, you risk making existing inequalities worse. It's not just about what AI can do. It's about how you do it and who it serves.In almost every conversation I had at the congress, excitement about AI's potential existed right alongside genuine uncertainty about whether it can be trusted and governed responsibly. I think both of those things are true at the same time. The potential is real. So is the responsibility. The companies that'll matter in five years are the ones holding both of those thoughts without letting one crowd out the other.The question the whole congress was really askingCristina Cassetti from CEPI and WHO framed something that stuck with me. "How do we weave all responsibilities into one unit? When there's an outbreak, it's always chaotic." The argument from the main stage was that you can't build rapid response infrastructure in the middle of a crisis. It has to already exist.That felt directly relevant to everything I think about in my day job. The systems, processes, and partnerships that let trials move at the speed the science demands have to be in place before the pressure arrives. You can't retrofit speed into something built that is slow.COVID proved that when urgency is real and barriers are genuinely removed, trials can move at a pace nobody thought possible. The question I came to Medable to work on is why that should require a global emergency to unlock. Every unnecessary delay in trial startup or enrollment or conduct is a delay in patient access to therapies that could genuinely change or save lives. That's not a commercial point. It's a human one.What we shared over dinnerOn Tuesday evening Medable hosted an intimate dinner at Ocean Prime for a group of vaccine development leaders. There were small tables, honest exchanges, no polished presentation competing with the actual conversation.Our guests came from right across the clinical trial ecosystem, pharma, biotech, site networks, and CROs. Chief executives, chief medical officers, regulatory leaders, portfolio directors, and clinical operations specialists. People who design trials and people who run them at scale and people who are responsible for the vaccines themselves. The whole ecosystem around one table.I shared Medable's 1:1:1 vision, one day to start a study, one day to open enrollment, one year to complete study conduct. Not as a pitch. As an honest articulation of what we're genuinely building toward and why it matters.What surprised me was how it landed. The response wasn't just polite interest. It was recognition. Immediate and consistent, regardless of where people sat in the ecosystem. Every person in that room had felt that friction from their own angle.My colleague Toai then gave a live demonstration of some of the technology behind that vision. Watching the room engage with it, the questions people asked, the connections they drew to their own programmes, reminded me why showing something real matters so much more than describing it. One result I shared made that concrete in a way no slide ever could. A recent vaccine megatrial we supported delivered 100% cohort enrollment within five days, at a scale where weeks or months would've been completely normal. That study became a blueprint, that blueprint became a programme, and three additional vaccine trials launched immediately after. Nobody needed me to explain what that meant. They'd all lived the alternative.The conversation that mattered mostHowever, the most memorable part of the evening came up naturally around the table and it's stayed with me more than anything else from the week.The people in that room care deeply about what they do. They're genuinely invested in vaccine development, they live the science,and they want to get safe and effective vaccines to the people who need them. That passion was unmistakable.Yet, almost every person there described being held back by the same things. Manual processes. Paper. Operational friction that really shouldn't exist in 2026. Systems designed around how trials used to run rather than how they need to run now.What came through just as strongly was a real fatigue with vendors. Not with technology. With a particular kind of vendor relationship where someone sells you a solution without ever truly understanding your problem, where the pitch is confident but the partnership is thin. Where you end up feeling like a number rather than a partner.That hit me hard, because I think it's the most honest thing the industry is trying to communicate to technology companies right now. Better tools aren't enough on their own. Real partnership combined with the right technology is what'll actually shift the status quo. You can't have one without the other. It's also the standard I try to hold myself to, and a conversation like that one is a reminder of why it matters.What I'm taking awayThe policy environment is genuinely uncertain and the congress didn't try to dress that up. The questions around AI governance and trust are real and unresolved. But what I felt most strongly across the whole week was something much simpler. The people in this industry are committed to getting it right. The challenge isn't will or capability. It's the infrastructure and the processes and the weight of how things have always been done.The work is urgent. The community doing it is serious. And what'll move it forward isn't technology on its own. It's technology in the hands of people who've taken the time to genuinely understand the problem they're there to solve.That's why I do this. A week in Washington reminded me not to take it for granted.‍‍
Blog posts

From the Congress floor to the dinner table: A Week in Washington that reminded me why this work matters

There's a particular kind of energy at the World Vaccine Congress that's hard to describe unless you've been in it. Hundreds of scientists, executives, policymakers, pharma leaders, CRO teams, and site networks, all in one convention centre, all sitting with the same fundamental tension. We know how to make vaccines that save lives. So why does getting them to patients still take so long?

I spent three days in Washington this week as part of the Medable team. Washington in late March meant that the cherry blossoms were just past their peak but still stunning, and catching them along the Tidal Basin between sessions was one of those small, unexpected gifts that a busy conference week doesn't always make room for.

For the conference, I came in with a clear intention. I wanted to reconnect with partners I respect, listen more than I talk, and have honest conversations about where this industry is and where it needs to go. What I didn't fully anticipate was how much the week would reinforce something I already believed but needed reminding of.

The urgency is real. And it's shared.

Blog posts

eCOA standards and KPIs to include in your next RFI

eCOA
6 min

According to Gartner, a request for information, or a request for proposal, is defined as “both the process and documentation used in soliciting bids for potential business or IT solutions required by an enterprise or government agency. The RFI document typically outlines a statement of requirements (SOR) to be met by prospective respondents wishing to make a bid to deliver the required solutions. It might cover products and/or services to meet the given requirements.”

Yet, for anyone entering into a long-term business agreement, a well-written RFI can do so much more than just assess and collect vendor capabilities. 

For the last decade, Medable has been transforming the capabilities of organizations across clinical research using the latest in new technologies. In this time, we’ve learned the best RFIs are able to define what success looks like, create alignment on measurable outcomes, and establish accountability on roles and responsibilities well before a contract is ever signed. When done correctly, it becomes a decision-making framework that offers clear vision to both organizations.

Recently, Medable received two RFIs around eCOA from top pharmaceutical organizations. They stood out to us because they were structured around performance, not promises, a distinction that makes all the difference.

Blog posts

Paper COAs in 2026? It’s not “cheaper,” it’s riskier

eCOA
6 min

eCOA’s time has come. The market is currently estimated to be worth $2.3 billion, with projections showing it reaching nearly $5 billion by 2030. Despite this, paper still plays a prominent role for some clinical trials today.  

At first glance, paper may seem simple and familiar, even economical. However, in today’s regulatory and operational environment, paper COAs are not a risk averse choice when held to the standards of what sponsors, CROs, and regulators are looking for trial data to prove.  

White papers, Case studies & reports

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An older user consents to a clinical trial using eConsent
White Papers, Case Studies, Reports

ICON and Medable drive 85% eConsent adoption in U.S. menopause study

How do you drive adoption in a complex women’s health study? See how ICON and Medable reached 85% eConsent uptake across 1,200+ participants with a smarter, site-first approach.

White Papers, Case Studies, Reports

Medable oncology solutions

Discover how Medable’s AI-powered oncology platform simplifies complex cancer trials by integrating eCOA, ePRO, and eConsent solutions—reducing trial time, improving patient retention, and enhancing data quality for faster, more efficient research.

White Papers, Case Studies, Reports

Driving a high-adherence LTFU trial without an EDC

Learn how Medable is powering a decade-long, global long-term follow-up (LTFU) obesity study, achieving an impressive 97% patient retention rate without using a traditional EDC system all while delivering a compliant, scalable, and cost-efficient solution.

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Webinar cover image for Harnessing AI for more efficient clinical trials
Webinars

Harnessing AI for more efficient clinical trials

AI
6 min

Explore how AI is transforming clinical trials, from accelerating data analysis to predicting trial outcomes.

cell and gene therapy day
Webinars

If patients withdraw, critical data Is lost: Rethinking long-term follow-up in C&GT Trials

This session explores a digital-first approach to long-term follow-up designed to sustain participant engagement, reduce attrition, and maintain scientific and regulatory rigor for cell and gene therapies.

Webinars

Real-world oncology: The eCOA for restored control and quality science

eCOA
6 min

Medable showcases the end-to-end eCOA workflow from both the patient and site perspective during an active oncology study, highlighting real-time symptom reporting, episodic event capture, and a preview of the PI Summary Agent.

Scientific Research

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Research

Assessing the financial value of decentralized clinical trials

Deployment of remote and virtual clinical trial methods and technologies, referred to collectively as decentralized clinical trials (DCTs), represents a profound shift in clinical trial practice. To our knowledge, a comprehensive assessment of the financial net benefits of DCTs has not been conducted

Research

Development of a mobile health app (TOGETHERCare) to reduce cancer care partner burden: Product design study

eCOA
6 min

Research looking at mobile apps and how they may provide a meaningful access point for all stakeholders for symptom management.

Guides

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Guides

eCOA vs ePRO: Understanding the differences in clinical trials

Digital data capture has become essential to modern clinical research. Sponsors and research organizations increasingly rely on electronic outcome assessment tools to collect high quality patient data, reduce manual errors, and improve regulatory compliance.

Two terms appear frequently in this space: eCOA (electronic Clinical Outcome Assessment) and ePRO (electronic Patient Reported Outcome).

These terms are closely related. However, they are not interchangeable.

How to avoid common missteps when deploying eCOAs in clinical trials
Guides

Common missteps when deploying eCOAs in clinical trials

eCOA
6 min

Sometimes when teams deploy eCOA (electronic Clinical Outcome Assessment) in clinical trials, challenges can arise with operational planning, protocol design decisions, or workflow alignment. Below are some of the most common missteps observed across sponsors, CROs, and investigative sites.

1. Treating eCOA as a late-stage add-on

Many teams wait until protocol finalization or even after startup to plan eCOA implementation.

Why this causes problems

  • Instrument licensing or translations may not be ready
  • Build timelines get compressed
  • Protocol schedules may not align with electronic workflows

Best practice
Plan eCOA during protocol design, especially when selecting instruments and defining visit schedules. 

Guides

How to successfully transition from paper COAs to eCOA

eCOA
6 min

Electronic clinical outcome assessment (eCOA) systems have reshaped how patient-reported outcome measures are collected and managed in clinical trials. Clinical operations leaders are under more pressure than ever to ensure that the migration from legacy paper instruments to digital platforms not only improves trial efficiency but also preserves data integrity, supports regulatory acceptance, and enhances participant experience.

The transition from paper to electronic capture represents a paradigm shift toward more efficient, accessible, and reliable data collection. Done well, eCOA strengthens evidence generation while reducing burden for participants and sites alike. Done poorly, it risks measurement bias, loss of comparability, and regulatory challenges.

In this article, clinical operations leaders will find evidence-based best practices for migrating and implementing patient-reported measures as part of eCOA strategies. These recommendations are rooted in published industry guidance and emerging scientific consensus, and they reflect the evolving landscape of digital assessment technologies.

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