Central Indiana Chapter

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Central Indiana Chapter

Chapter created by System 17 years ago

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  • June virtual meeting - technical talk on DSMBs

    Join the Central Indiana Chapter for a virtual lunchtime meeting on June 10, 2026. Our special guest speaker will be Dr. Frank Rockhold who will be speaking on the fundamental aspects of Data Monitoring Committees.
          title:  Data Monitoring Committees in Clinical Trials: Realities and Myths
          speaker: Frank W. Rockhold, Ph.D.
                          Professor of Biostatistics, Duke University School of Medicine
          date:  Wednesday, June 10, 2026
          time:  Noon - 1:00 pm ET
          cost:  FREE
          register:  register on Zoom
    Abstract
    Over the past seven decades, the randomized clinical trial (RCT) has evolved to serve as the benchmark for the evaluation of new pharmaceuticals, medical devices, procedures, and behavioral interventions. Correspondingly, the role of the Independent Data Monitoring Committee (IDMC) as proposed in ICH E9, also known as the Data and Safety Monitoring Board (DSMB), which was outlined in the Declaration of Helsinki and first formally recommended by the Greenberg Report in 1967, has similarly advanced. IDMCs are responsible for reviewing the complete body of evidence—including emerging unblinded safety (risk) and efficacy (benefit) data—and may recommend modifications to the RCT or early termination when there is evidence of harm or compelling changes to benefit-risk. The IDMC also has the responsibility to monitor and ensure trial integrity on behalf of the patients. The utilization of IDMCs continues to rise. Alongside this increased adoption over the last five to six decades, there has been an expansion in the use of independent statistical reporting groups (ISRGs), which supply interim reports for IDMC review. Despite substantial growth, there remains a notable shortage of clinical and statistical scientists with the necessary training and expertise to serve as members of IDMCs or provide ISRG-type support. 
     
    This presentation will outline fundamental aspects of DMC operations, including typical responsibilities, committee composition, meeting structure, operational policies, and current issues—both emerging and controversial—in data monitoring. The objective of this discussion is to enhance understanding of DMC responsibilities and address the ongoing challenges and misunderstandings within the clinical trials community.
     
    Speaker
    Frank Rockhold is Professor of Biostatistics and Bioinformatics at Duke University School of Medical. His 50+ year career includes senior research positions at Lilly, Merck, and GlaxoSmithKline, where he retired as Chief Safety Officer and Senior Vice President of Global Clinical Safety and Pharmacovigilance. Dr. Rockhold is internationally recognized for his expertise in clinical trial design, safety and pharmacovigilance, public data disclosure, and scientific transparency. He has presented at FDA Advisory Committee meetings, Japanese and European regulatory agencies, National Academy of Medicine, and the White House Office of Technology and Science. He is formerly an advisor to the Patient Centered Outcomes Research Institute as part of the Affordable Care Act.
     
    Dr. Rockhold is past President of the Society for Clinical trials, past Chairman of the board for CDISC and is currently Chairman of the Board of the Frontier Research Foundation and an advisor to EMA. He is coauthor of the ICH (International Council for Harmonization) E9 (Biostatistics) and E10 (Control Groups) guidelines and he has more than 250 publications in peer-reviewed scientific journals and more than 350 presentations and seminars at Scientific Symposia. Frank has served on and chaired more than 100 independent data monitoring committees.
     
    Dr. Rockhold holds a BA in Statistics from The University of Connecticut, an ScM in Biostatistics from The Johns Hopkins University, and a PhD in Biostatistics from the Medical College of Virginia at Virginia Commonwealth University. He is an Elected Fellow of the American Statistical Association, the Society for Clinical Trials, and the Royal Statistical Society. He is an Accredited Professional Statistician, PStat®, and a Chartered Statistician, CStat.
  • Chapter meeting - Professional development series

    The Central Indiana Chapter will have an in-person meeting on Thursday, April 09, 2026 at DORIS Research in Indianapolis. Our guest speaker will be Gary Sullivan from Espirer Consulting. As part of our professional development series, Gary will be giving a presentation on leadership development for statisticians and data scientists. The presentation will start at approximately 5:00 and last about 1 hour. But be sure to arrive early and stay afterwards for some light refreshments and networking with other data professionals.
     
        speaker:  Gary Sullivan, PhD
        title:  Leadership Development for Every Statistician
        date:  Thursday, April 09, 2026
                   4:30 - 6:30 pm ET
        place:  Doris Research
                     536 E Market St
                     Indianapolis, IN
        cost:  FREE
        register: register on Zeffy 
     
    Gary is the co-developer and primary instructor for The Effective Statistician Leadership Program - a leadership training program aimed at pharmaceutical professionals. In 2018, Gary founded Espirer Leadership Consulting LLC after a 28-year career at Eli Lilly & Co. His company provides leadership training, coaching, and advising to statisticians and quantitative scientists. His clientele include over a dozen pharmaceutical companies and clinical research organizations and he has taught to over a 1,000 professionals. His programs focus on how to improve one's communication, presentations, strategic thinking, and business acumen. Gary earned his PhD from Iowa State University. During his time at Lilly, he held various technical and administrative roles retiring in 2017 as the Senior Director of Non-Clinical Statistics.
     
    Abstract
    Most leaders become leaders by studying, getting the right coaching and mentoring, developing and applying the proper skills, and continuously learning and growing through that process. In this talk, Gary will present how to get started on your journey to leadership and the needed skills and behaviors for you to grow as a leader. Specifically, Gary will focus on three primary questions:
          What is leadership?
          What skills do leaders have?
          How do you develop and apply these skills?
    Leadership development is a journey that takes many years and it may seem overwhelming at first. Gary will discuss some easy ways to get started quickly and to make progress fast.

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  • June virtual meeting - technical talk on DSMBs

    Join the Central Indiana Chapter for a virtual lunchtime meeting on June 10, 2026. Our special guest speaker will be Dr. Frank Rockhold who will be speaking on the fundamental aspects of Data Monitoring Committees.
          title:  Data Monitoring Committees in Clinical Trials: Realities and Myths
          speaker: Frank W. Rockhold, Ph.D.
                          Professor of Biostatistics, Duke University School of Medicine
          date:  Wednesday, June 10, 2026
          time:  Noon - 1:00 pm ET
          cost:  FREE
          register:  register on Zoom
    Abstract
    Over the past seven decades, the randomized clinical trial (RCT) has evolved to serve as the benchmark for the evaluation of new pharmaceuticals, medical devices, procedures, and behavioral interventions. Correspondingly, the role of the Independent Data Monitoring Committee (IDMC) as proposed in ICH E9, also known as the Data and Safety Monitoring Board (DSMB), which was outlined in the Declaration of Helsinki and first formally recommended by the Greenberg Report in 1967, has similarly advanced. IDMCs are responsible for reviewing the complete body of evidence—including emerging unblinded safety (risk) and efficacy (benefit) data—and may recommend modifications to the RCT or early termination when there is evidence of harm or compelling changes to benefit-risk. The IDMC also has the responsibility to monitor and ensure trial integrity on behalf of the patients. The utilization of IDMCs continues to rise. Alongside this increased adoption over the last five to six decades, there has been an expansion in the use of independent statistical reporting groups (ISRGs), which supply interim reports for IDMC review. Despite substantial growth, there remains a notable shortage of clinical and statistical scientists with the necessary training and expertise to serve as members of IDMCs or provide ISRG-type support. 
     
    This presentation will outline fundamental aspects of DMC operations, including typical responsibilities, committee composition, meeting structure, operational policies, and current issues—both emerging and controversial—in data monitoring. The objective of this discussion is to enhance understanding of DMC responsibilities and address the ongoing challenges and misunderstandings within the clinical trials community.
     
    Speaker
    Frank Rockhold is Professor of Biostatistics and Bioinformatics at Duke University School of Medical. His 50+ year career includes senior research positions at Lilly, Merck, and GlaxoSmithKline, where he retired as Chief Safety Officer and Senior Vice President of Global Clinical Safety and Pharmacovigilance. Dr. Rockhold is internationally recognized for his expertise in clinical trial design, safety and pharmacovigilance, public data disclosure, and scientific transparency. He has presented at FDA Advisory Committee meetings, Japanese and European regulatory agencies, National Academy of Medicine, and the White House Office of Technology and Science. He is formerly an advisor to the Patient Centered Outcomes Research Institute as part of the Affordable Care Act.
     
    Dr. Rockhold is past President of the Society for Clinical trials, past Chairman of the board for CDISC and is currently Chairman of the Board of the Frontier Research Foundation and an advisor to EMA. He is coauthor of the ICH (International Council for Harmonization) E9 (Biostatistics) and E10 (Control Groups) guidelines and he has more than 250 publications in peer-reviewed scientific journals and more than 350 presentations and seminars at Scientific Symposia. Frank has served on and chaired more than 100 independent data monitoring committees.
     
    Dr. Rockhold holds a BA in Statistics from The University of Connecticut, an ScM in Biostatistics from The Johns Hopkins University, and a PhD in Biostatistics from the Medical College of Virginia at Virginia Commonwealth University. He is an Elected Fellow of the American Statistical Association, the Society for Clinical Trials, and the Royal Statistical Society. He is an Accredited Professional Statistician, PStat®, and a Chartered Statistician, CStat.
  • Chapter meeting - Professional development series

    The Central Indiana Chapter will have an in-person meeting on Thursday, April 09, 2026 at DORIS Research in Indianapolis. Our guest speaker will be Gary Sullivan from Espirer Consulting. As part of our professional development series, Gary will be giving a presentation on leadership development for statisticians and data scientists. The presentation will start at approximately 5:00 and last about 1 hour. But be sure to arrive early and stay afterwards for some light refreshments and networking with other data professionals.
     
        speaker:  Gary Sullivan, PhD
        title:  Leadership Development for Every Statistician
        date:  Thursday, April 09, 2026
                   4:30 - 6:30 pm ET
        place:  Doris Research
                     536 E Market St
                     Indianapolis, IN
        cost:  FREE
        register: register on Zeffy 
     
    Gary is the co-developer and primary instructor for The Effective Statistician Leadership Program - a leadership training program aimed at pharmaceutical professionals. In 2018, Gary founded Espirer Leadership Consulting LLC after a 28-year career at Eli Lilly & Co. His company provides leadership training, coaching, and advising to statisticians and quantitative scientists. His clientele include over a dozen pharmaceutical companies and clinical research organizations and he has taught to over a 1,000 professionals. His programs focus on how to improve one's communication, presentations, strategic thinking, and business acumen. Gary earned his PhD from Iowa State University. During his time at Lilly, he held various technical and administrative roles retiring in 2017 as the Senior Director of Non-Clinical Statistics.
     
    Abstract
    Most leaders become leaders by studying, getting the right coaching and mentoring, developing and applying the proper skills, and continuously learning and growing through that process. In this talk, Gary will present how to get started on your journey to leadership and the needed skills and behaviors for you to grow as a leader. Specifically, Gary will focus on three primary questions:
          What is leadership?
          What skills do leaders have?
          How do you develop and apply these skills?
    Leadership development is a journey that takes many years and it may seem overwhelming at first. Gary will discuss some easy ways to get started quickly and to make progress fast.
  • Lunchtime virtual technical talk

    Join the Central Indiana Chapter for a virtual lunchtime presentation by Dr. Yong Zang of the IU Department of Biostatistics. This is a free event, but registration via Zoom is required.
     
         Title:  Bayesian Information Borrowing Prior for Longitudinal Data with Informative Dropout
         Speaker:  Dr. Yong Zang
                          Associate Professor
                          IU Department of Biostatistics
         Date:  Tuesday, February 10, 2026, Noon - 1:00 ET
         Register:  register on Zoom
    Abstract
    Borrowing information from historical controls can improve the efficiency of randomized controlled trials (RCTs), but its application to longitudinal outcomes with informative dropout remains limited. We propose two Bayesian mixture priors for longitudinal data information borrowing: the mixture prior for longitudinal data borrowing (MLB) and its self-adapting extension (SLB). Both approaches use a shared-parameter model to handle the informative dropout and apply a mixture prior framework to incorporate historical control data while accounting for possible prior-data conflict. Simulation studies show that the proposed priors yield desirable operating characteristics enabling efficient and rigorous information borrowing. In particular, the SLB prior demonstrates the best overall performance. 
     
    Speaker
    Dr. Yong Zang is a Showalter Scholar at the IU School of Medicine in the Department of Biostatistics and Health Data Science. Yong earned his PhD in 2011 from University of Hong Kong and has been with the Department of Biostatistics since 2016. His research interests include the theoretical, algorithmic, and software development for adaptive clinical trial design and analysis, methods and testing for statistical genetics, and Bayesian analysis.

  • November Chapter Meeting

    Our next in-person chapter meeting will be on Thursday, November 20, 2025 at DORIS Research in Indianapolis. Our guest speaker will be Andreas Sashegyi. He will be giving a presentation on effective communication for statisticians and data scientists. The presentation will start at approximately 5:00 and last about 1 hour. But be sure to arrive early and stay afterwards for some light refreshments and networking with other data professionals.

        speaker:  Andreas Sashegyi, PhD
                        Associate Vice President, Safety Analytics - Eli Lilly & Co
          date:  Thursday, November 20, 2025
                    4:30 - 6:30 pm ET
          place:  DORIS Research
                      536 E Market St.
                      Indianapolis, IN 46204
          cost:   free
          registration: RSVP on eventbrite
     
    Abstract
    Effective communication is at the very heart of how we achieve results in our work and influence for the better within our organizations. It is a skill that most of us need to hone to one extent or another, which requires deliberate effort. This presentation will focus on communication fundamentals, centered around the proposition that effective communication begins with a focus on the audience (in general, the “other”) and a fundamental embrace of the other’s position. Four styles of communication are discussed (analytical, functional, intuitive, and personal), as are the motivation for awareness of one’s own as well as one’s stakeholders’ preferences, and the need to flexibly switch between styles according to the demands of the communication. Connections to trust building and other building blocks of leadership are also addressed.
     
    About Andreas
    Andreas Sashegyi (PhD in biostatistics, University of Waterloo, 1998) has been with Lilly for 27 years, and has advanced the late-stage clinical and life-cycle development of compounds in numerous therapeutic areas, including endocrine, cardiovascular, critical care, immunology and oncology. He also spent 6 years in Decision Sciences, driving deliverables like the company R&D portfolio scorecard and the semi-annual portfolio review. After holding management roles in clinical design, oncology statistics, and real-world analytics, he took his current assignment as Associate VP and lead of Safety Analytics last year. Apart from his “day job”, Andreas is passionate about career and leadership development.
  • Workshop on Best Practices in AI

    The Central Indiana Chapter will be hosting an ASA traveling short course in September. David Corliss will present on Ethical Issues and Best Practices in Artificial Intelligence. This virtual course will be split into two half-day sessions held over two consecutive Friday afternoons. 

    workshop:  Modern Ethical Issues and Best Practices in Data, Analytics, and AI
    instructor:  David Corliss, PhD
                        Principal Data Scientist, Grafham Analytics
    dates:  Friday afternoon, September 05, 2025 (first half-day session)
                Friday afternoon, September 12, 2025 (second half-day session)
                ===> This full-day course will be split into 2 half-day sessions <===
    cost:  student $25 / Central Indiana member $30 / ASA member $35 / Guest $45
    registration: register here on Zeffy

    This workshop discusses emerging issues for ethical best practices in data, analytics, and AI. The course includes a half day on data issues such as court cases that are shaping data practice standards, learning from standards in other professions, and the impact of the European General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) on ethical practices around the world. The second part of the course presents a half-day on issues in analytics and AI such as model bias mitigation, the rapidly evolving federal landscape, and the ASA’s new guidelines for ethical practices in AI. The workshop teaches a practical understanding of ethical issues in data and analytics, presenting concrete examples of both good and bad practices, enabling course attendees to better understand the changing ethical landscape and address potential questions and issues.

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