A core focus of the activities has been to ensure the network develops to its full potential. Crucial to this has been the development of a sense of belonging to the network which has been achieved by formal team building activities, in-depth discussion sessions around commonalities and synergies between the individual researchers’ projects and regular communication between participants.
Scientific achievements
The early stage researchers (ESRs) have undertaken substantial research work and the research undertaken has led to novel methods for pre-clinical studies as well as early clinical trials and the findings been published in high impact methods journals more applied journals. Contributions to dose-finding (incorporation of preclinical data, dose-schedule trials, combination studies,...) precision medicine (biomarker identification, visualisation of subgroup analysis, …) and topics such as estimation after an adaptive trials and biosimilar development, have been made.
As of 31. April, 11 ESRs have successfully completed their respective PhD studies while the remaining ESRs are on track to obtain their PhD in the first half of 2019.
Training activities
A full training programme for the early stage researchers in the fundamentals of drug development with a focus on quantitative skills and training on transferable skills has been implemented and expanded on the basis of the expressed needs of the researchers. The training comprised of a combination of network-wide training and individual training activities. Four, week-long network-wide summer schools have been organised alongside of two shorter spring meetings and a three day Think-tank meeting. The objectives of these meetings were to train the researchers in methods for drug development, provide transferable skills training, foster networking/collaborations and share their research progress.
Dissemination
• 33 peer-reviewed papers accepted or published as per 28th February 2019 and numerous further publications are currently submitted or in preparation for publication.
• Results were presented by ESRs at numerous international conferences (> 150 talks and posters).
• Short YouTube videos to promote the main results
• Social Media including Twitter (with over 500 entries and >200 followers to the Ideas Account) and LinkedIn
• Participation an popular science events (such as EU researcher´s night or University for children)
• Joint workshops with Learned Socities and partner institutions and dedicated Ideas Sessions at Statistical Conferences
• A final IDEAS dissemination workshop with around 70 participants took place.
• The IDEAS website
http://www.ideas-itn.eu/(odnośnik otworzy się w nowym oknie) is maintained and frequently updated.
Outreach
IDEAS has undertaken over 200 outreach activities reaching an estimated 66,000 people with activities ranging from participation in community days, writing a blog-series, non-technical summaries and articles in popular science magazines.