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Cytel is a multinational statistical software developer and contract research organization, headquartered in Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA. Cytel provides clinical trial design, implementation services, and statistical products primarily for the biotech and pharmaceutical development markets.[1][2]

Cytel
Company typePrivate
IndustryClinical trial services
Statistical software
Biotechnology
Founded1987
HeadquartersCambridge, Massachusetts, United States
Key people
Jovan Willford (CEO)
ProductsSoftware and Solutions
RevenueUndisclosed
Websitewww.cytel.com

Cytel specializes in adaptive trials – a type of randomized clinical trial that allows modifications of ongoing trials while aiming to preserve the statistical validity and integrity of the study.[3] Based on either frequentist or Bayesian statistics, adaptive trial designs are now widely accepted by government regulatory agencies including the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA), European Medicines Agency (EMA), and Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) in early and later stage clinical studies.[4]

As of January 2024, Cytel asserts that its software products and services are utilized by the top 30 large biopharmaceutical companies. With a presence spanning North America, Europe, and Asia, the company has a workforce exceeding 1,900 resources.

Background

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Company founders Cyrus Mehta, Ph.D. and Nitin Patel, Ph.D. are amongst the pioneering statisticians credited for developing the underlying statistical methods behind so-called “flexible” designs: group sequential and adaptive trials.[5]

Cytel statisticians have collectively published over 140 papers in peer-reviewed statistical and medical journals.[6]

Cytel Consulting

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Cytel's Consulting arm focuses on optimizing the approach for biopharma clinical research development objectives. Functional elements their Strategic Consulting team claims to provide include:

  • Adaptive Trial Design and Implementation
  • Collaborative Research Projects
  • Program and Portfolio Optimization
  • Regulatory Interactions
  • Multiplicity
  • Missing Data
  • DMC Membership
  • Independent Statistical Committee
  • Advanced real-world analytics
  • Health Economics and Outcomes Research

Clinical Research Services

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Cytel's Clinical Research Services arm focuses on improving the probability of success for biopharma clinical research development efforts. Functional elements their Clinical Research Services team claim to provide include:

Software products

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East Horizon In 2021, Cytel released Solara, the industry's first-to-market clinical trial strategy platform for simulation-guided clinical study design and selection. In 2024, Cytel expanded the capabilities of Solara by incorporating statistical tests from its Windows-based product East and added the ability to extend its native tests by pulling in custom R functions, and rebranded the product East Horizon.

East East clinical trial statistical software supports the design, simulation and monitoring of adaptive, group sequential and fixed sample size trials. As of 2024, East 6.5 is in use at over 140 pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies, research centers and regulatory agencies including the FDA's Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research and Center for Devices and Radiological Health divisions.[7]

First introduced by the Cytel Software Corporation in 1995 as “East DOS”, the name is derived from the benefit of “early stopping” a trial due to futility: a failure of the tested treatment to demonstrate significant improvement over an existing treatment and/or placebo.[8]

Enforesys Introduced by Cytel in 2015, Enforesys is a feasibility study decision-making tool for predicting recruitment milestones. Enforsys utilizes historical study site-level data and simulation models to calculate a numerical probability of success for study enrollment strategies.

Compass Compass is used by biostatisticians and clinicians to plan and design earlier stage adaptive clinical trials (traditionally known as phase 1 human tolerance and phase 2 dose-selection studies).

Compass was the first commercially-offered adaptive trial composition software with both frequentist and Bayesian methods. Other key capabilities include R code integration, trial simulation compute engines, plus various tables, charts and graphs to visualize and communicate trial design attributes.

StatXact Statistical software based on the exact branch of statistics used for small-sample categorical and nonparametric data problem-solving. Utilized by statisticians and researchers in all fields of study, the StatXact software now has 150 different non-parametric statistical tests and procedures.

Initially offered in 1989 as StatXact DOS, StatXact 12 was released in 2021. The StatXact PROCs variant integrates with the popular SAS statistical software.

LogXact A logistic regression predictive modeling software package suited particularly to cases involving small samples and / or missing data. Logistic regression is used extensively in the medical and social sciences as well as marketing applications to predict subject behavior.

First made available in 1996 under the name LogXact Turbo, LogXact was introduced in 2007 and is currently in its eleventh release. The LogXact PROCs variant integrates with the popular SAS statistical software.

ACES Cytel's web-based Access Controlled Execution System. ACES simplifies compliance with the related FDA guidance and EMA guidelines by a secure means of communicating a clinical trial's interim analysis results and recommendations between the Data Monitoring Committee (DMC/DSMB), Independent Statistical Center and clinical team members. The validated system automatically creates an audit trial, allowing regulators to readily determine "who saw what and when".

SiZ In 2012, SiZ as a stand-alone product was deprecated, and its feature set was consolidated into the company's East product.

OK GO OK GO is the first commercially available software to support the implementation of a quantitative go/no-go decision-making framework in clinical trials.

Locations

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United States

  • Cambridge, Massachusetts (HQ)
  • Seattle, WA (Axio Research)

Canada

  • Toronto, ON
  • Vancouver, BC

Europe

  • Geneva, CH
  • Paris, FR
  • Barcelona, ES
  • Basel, CH
  • London, UK
  • Rotterdam, NL

Asia

  • Shanghai, CN
  • Singapore, SG

India

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "DIA - Error 404: Page not found". www.diahome.org. {{cite web}}: Cite uses generic title (help)
  2. ^ "The Changing Role of the SAS Programmer" (PDF). www.phusewiki.org. February 23, 2013. Retrieved 2019-06-05.
  3. ^ Cytel - Pharmacompare - Your Source for Preclinical, Clinical and Pharmaceutical Products and Services
  4. ^ "Community". BioAlps.
  5. ^ "CROs/Service Providers Archives - Page 5 of 198".
  6. ^ Irving Dark Named Vice President of Cytel Clinical Research Services - re> CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Jan. 16 /PRNewswire/
  7. ^ "Cytel Announces Compass®". FierceBiotech.
  8. ^ "ClinPage: Cytel, ClinPhone Partnership". www.clinpage.com.
  9. ^ "ClipLab". www.cliplab.co.in.