Navigating Biotech’s First-in-Human Trial in Rare Disease With Jurate Lasiene cover art

Navigating Biotech’s First-in-Human Trial in Rare Disease With Jurate Lasiene

Navigating Biotech’s First-in-Human Trial in Rare Disease With Jurate Lasiene

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Learn how small biotech’s can streamline clinical trial outsourcing, optimize CRO selection, and establish truly patient-centered operations for rare disease studies—while maintaining high data quality and speed.

Guest
  1. Jurate Lasiene, VP Clinical Operations, North Sea Therapeutics
  2. LinkedIn: Jurate Lasiene

Episode Overview

This episode of The COG Review: Building Better Clinical Studies is recorded live at COG Europe in Amsterdam. Jurate Lasiene, VP Clinical Operations at North Sea Therapeutics, shares firsthand insights from managing a first-in-human, early-phase rare disease trial with a small, agile biotech team. The session explores critical decision points and real-world solutions in clinical trial outsourcing, CRO selection, and effective sponsor–vendor collaboration.

Key topics include designing adaptive, patient-first protocols for challenging rare disease populations, the shift from traditional full outsourcing models to targeted FSP (Functional Service Provider) or hybrid approaches, and optimizing budget, speed, and quality by retaining operational control in-house where it matters most. Jurate Lasiene offers a practical breakdown of site and partner selection, early regulatory and KOL engagement, and hands-on clinical operations best practices.

This episode equips clinical research professionals in biotech, pharma, and CROs with actionable frameworks for clinical study optimization—especially useful for those navigating complex trials with lean teams and limited resources. Listeners gain concrete guidance on the sponsor-side leadership choices and process refinements that reduce common failure points and accelerate study timelines.

Key Moments

00:01:40 – The unique operational challenges of rare disease trials: small, dispersed patient populations and high rates of trial discontinuation

00:03:41 – Why small biotech’s are driving the majority of clinical trial starts and how their outsourcing strategies have evolved

00:04:31 – Clinical trial protocol design: avoiding rigid endpoints and restrictive eligibility to improve enrollment and retention

00:05:16 – The necessity of integrating patient and caregiver input early for truly patient-centered clinical trials

00:06:45 – How to select clinical trial sites: speed, fit, and operational capacity versus academic prestige

00:08:31 – Practical cost-savings from targeted FSP models: 30% budget reduction by outsourcing only specialty capabilities

00:10:23 – Engaging KOLs and patient advocacy groups at the protocol development stage for better outcomes

00:11:41 – Keeping oversight in-house with dedicated monitors/PMs: advantages for quality and site engagement

00:13:27 – Building a “meshwork” of specialist partners to keep small teams agile, responsive, and in control

00:16:46 – Simulating the patient journey to optimize protocol, logistics, and site operations for clinical study optimization

Top 3 Takeaways
  1. Early and deep integration of clinical operations into trial and protocol design is essential for avoiding downstream roadblocks—making this a core clinical operations best practice.
  2. Targeted outsourcing and deliberate CRO selection (favoring fit and flexibility over scale alone) enables small teams to maintain control, ensure sponsor oversight, and optimize budgets.
  3. Mapping the exact patient (and caregiver) journey—through direct simulation and advocacy group...
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