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Submission declined on 5 November 2023 by Stuartyeates (talk). This draft's references do not show that the subject qualifies for a Wikipedia article. In summary, the draft needs multiple published sources that are:
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Strategic Clinical Innovation Organization (SCIO) is an early development procedure that overcomes silos and eliminates the "one at a time" method.[1][2] It uses computational methods to investigate epigenetics, genetics, and bioinformatics.[3] It was developed by Boston Biotech Clinical Research (BBCR).[2][4]
Boston Biotech Clinical Research was founded by Candida Fratazzi.[5][6] To reduce costs and speed up development, the company works with biotech, pharmaceutical, and medical device companies to create clinical protocols, programs, and efficient trials.[3]
The SCIO concept is predicated on three pillars: clinical investigation, trial design and analysis of data gathered during phases I and II, and compliance with regulatory mandates and the use of surrogate biomarkers. The aim of the SCIO method is to stratify the patient population in order to increase the proportion of patients who respond favorably to a given medication, raising it from about 20 percent to 80 percent.[3]
Using the SCIO method, non-clinical molecular proteomics can be integrated into clinical research. This improves the regulatory strategy of accumulating efficacy and safety evidence from the first human trials onwards, which in turn reduces the risk of late-stage clinical trials and better positions the product for the market.[3]