With modernized reports in JMP Clinical 8, clinical data scientists can collaborate, publish and share their work with others through JMP Live using a web browser. Pharmaceutical companies’ scientists are now also able to share JMP, JMP Pro and JMP Clinical data and reports with a single technology, JMP Live. Check out JMP Live in action with Dr. John Cromer’s blog post on how to Create live reports in JMP Clinical 8, as well as his earlier post, How to make JMP Live reports more interactive.
Another new feature in JMP Clinical is the periodic safety report, which enhances its already rich adverse event reporting. Interactive development safety update reports (DSUR) and periodic safety update reports (PSUR) for drug safety scientists are typically submitted semi-annually or annually, depending on the regulatory agency and the stage of the trials. Lead developer Rebecca Lyzinski’s blog post, DSUR/PSUR report in JMP Clinical: Assess safety in ongoing clinical trials, provides more details on these reports and regulatory guidances.
To support medical doctors looking for safety signals in adverse events data by running Standardized Medical Queries, JMP Clinical 8 streamlines the visualization of risk differences, as well as organizing tables by narrow terms, broad terms and system organ class. By doing so, JMP Clinical 8 complements views aimed toward statisticians and biometrics users, as seen in the screenshot below. To understand more of the details, please check out Rebecca Lyzinski’s blog post on this new Medical Query Risk Report.
Another priority in JMP Clinical 8 is improving the standardization of reporting with study data and metadata management. This standardization in all of JMP Clinical’s reports, specifically with regard to color and layout, results in a simpler and friendlier user interface. In just one example, color can be universally specified in all graphs and tables for the treatment received; the order in which the treatments are listed can also be specified for easy comparison. Dr. John Cromer’s post, JMP Clinical 8: Controlling how graphs and tables look with Study Metadata (Color and Value order m..., demonstrates how to add these options with just a few clicks.
Finally, JMP Clinical Application Programmers Interface (API) allows users to integrate their own reports into JMP Clinical more easily. For users who need to automate adding studies – as well as those who want to develop their own reports that integrate filters and selections with patient profiles, subject filters and derived variables – this API works with all reports in the dashboard simultaneously.
Follow our JMP Clinical Resources page for more blog posts and videos on the latest releases.
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