University of Birmingham joins £50m MRC Centre for clinical trial innovation

MRC CoRE to speed up patient and participant access to new medicines and trials

Surgeons working in the background, with implements in front

Academics at the University of Birmingham will be part of a new Medical Research Council Centre of Research Excellence in Clinical Trial Innovation (MRC CoRE) which aims to accelerate the development of medicines for improved patient care.

The Centre, in partnership with the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR), will receive up to £50 million over 14 years to transform the clinical trial landscape. It plans to shake-up approaches to clinical trial design and delivery by developing pioneering new ways to speed up the process and drive improvements in treatment and recovery.

The University of Birmingham will be one of six leading research intensive Universities to join forces to support MRC CoRE, with Professor Thomas Pinkney from the University of Birmingham bringing his expertise in running complex surgical clinical trials including the ROSSINI-Platform trial, the largest ever UK surgical trial to make future operations safer.

Birmingham brings a huge breadth of clinical trials experience both here in the UK and around the world, including surgical trials, complex cancer trials including with children, and many more besides.

Professor Thomas Pinkney

Professor Pinkney and other academics will support MRC CoRE to move away from the current approach of testing a single intervention in a single disease one at a time. Finding efficient way to test multiple drugs in multiple diseases at the same time would be a game changer both for industry and the academic community.

Professor Thomas Pinkney from the School of Health Sciences at the University of Birmingham said: “This new funding will give a major boost to the latent potential around the UK to design and run clinical trials for new treatments for participants and patients.

“Birmingham brings a huge breadth of clinical trials experience both here in the UK and around the world, including surgical trials, complex cancer trials including with children, and many more besides. In addition, the West Midlands offers a unique opportunity with clinical trials for working with a diverse population and socioeconomic background, and so we are ideally placed to help accelerate the development of medicines for patients.”

Professor Patrick Chinnery, Medical Research Council Executive Chair explained:

“The UK medical research community is very effective at gaining insights about disease biology and developing potential new treatments and interventions, especially in underserved areas such as multiple long-term conditions and rare diseases.

“It is essential to quickly move such interventions forward to the right patients, at the right doses, durations and combinations.”

UK leading the way in innovative trial design

A key area of focus are clinical trials aimed at identifying the minimum ‘intensity’ such as duration, frequency, or dose required for a drug to be effective. For instance, finding the lowest effective dose of a chemotherapy drug could help make cancer treatment gentler for patients by reducing side effects.

The MRC CoRE team will be led by Professor Max Parmar will build on the team’s past work which created the highly innovative ‘multi-arm multi-stage’ platform clinical trials. These designs have revolutionised clinical trials to be more flexible, able to add or remove new drugs for testing over time, depending on results and new breakthroughs.

The leadership group will include researchers from the University College London, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, University of Cambridge, University of Edinburgh, University of Birmingham, and Newcastle University.

Professor Max Parmar, Director of the MRC CoRE in Clinical Trial Innovation, said: “Basic science is rapidly producing more understanding of biology and consequently many new interventions to help us in a range of diseases – both by industry and academic routes. Clinical trials are the way in which we evaluate all these new treatments. However, they are too slow and costly meaning it takes some 20 years to get a new invention from the laboratory into routine clinical practice at a cost of some £2 billion. Our goal with this CoRE is to substantially reduce this time so that patients can benefit much sooner from new treatments and also bring the costs of testing new treatments down.”

Professor Lucy Chappell, Chief Scientific Adviser at the Department of Health and Social Care and Chief Executive Officer of the NIHR, said:

“Success for this Centre will be having efficient adaptive trials becoming part of the mainstream, in the range of approaches to carrying out clinical trials. With increasingly complex interventions being developed for our diverse population, we’re excited for the UK to be taking a leadership role in innovative trial design and look forward to seeing effective and more targeted treatment regimes being evaluated at pace and informed by novel methodology approaches.”

Notes for editors

  • For media enquiries please contact Tim Mayo, Press Office, University of Birmingham, tel: +44 (0)7815 607 157.
  • The University of Birmingham is ranked amongst the world’s top 100 institutions. Its work brings people from across the world to Birmingham, including researchers, educators and more than 40,000 students from over 150 countries.
  • England’s first civic university, the University of Birmingham is proud to be rooted in of one of the most dynamic and diverse cities in the country. A member of the Russell Group and a founding member of the Universitas 21 global network of research universities, the University of Birmingham has been changing the way the world works for more than a century.
  • The University of Birmingham is a founding member of Birmingham Health Partners (BHP), a strategic alliance which transcends organisational boundaries to rapidly translate healthcare research findings into new diagnostics, drugs and devices for patients. Birmingham Health Partners is a strategic alliance between nine organisations who collaborate to bring healthcare innovations through to clinical application:
    • University of Birmingham
    • University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust
    • Birmingham Women’s and Children’s Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
    • Aston University
    • The Royal Orthopaedic Hospital NHS Foundation Trust
    • Sandwell and West Birmingham Hospitals NHS Trust
    • Health Innovation West Midlands
    • Birmingham and Solihull Mental Health NHS Foundation Trust
    • Birmingham Community Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust