Video
Presented on: October 22, 2025, at the MRCT Center Annual Symposium
Long-Term Follow-Up (LTFU) studies are critical for understanding the long-term safety and risk/benefit profile of innovative cell and gene therapies. Study participants, patients, treating clinicians, companies, regulators, payers, and society-at-large all derive different value from LTFU studies. However, these studies present unique challenges due to their unprecedented duration. For sponsors, they are challenging and expensive to design, conduct, and operationalize. For patients, LTFU participation can be burdensome in terms of time, expense, and opportunity costs.
In this recorded panel, which was held during the MRCT Center’s Annual Symposium in October 2025, Dr. Carolyn Chapman describes the aims of the Center’s LTFU Working Group, which was launched in September 2024 and benefited from the perspectives of 25 members from outside the Center. Dr. Chapman also previews the release of the LTFU Toolkit, which was collaboratively developed by the Working Group. The Toolkit offers practical guidance to support best practices for LTFU studies for both investigational and approved gene therapies.
In this session, Dr. Chapman leads a discussion with three distinguished industry leaders on a variety of issues addressed in the LTFU Toolkit. These include integrating decentralized elements to reduce burden, refining endpoint selection, harmonizing data for interoperability across LTFU studies, and minimizing loss to follow-up through participant engagement and clear communication. They also highlight the need for flexibility in LTFU study designs to meet evolving patient needs, and the importance of keeping new and current participants informed about protocol changes and any key findings. Looking ahead, the group calls for ongoing dialogue on data harmonization and sharing, results transparency, and innovative approaches to streamline the collection of long-term safety information.
𝗠𝗼𝗱𝗲𝗿𝗮𝘁𝗼𝗿:
Carolyn Riley Chapman, PhD, MS – Lead Investigator, Brigham and Women’s Hospital; Member of the Faculty, Harvard Medical School
Panelists:
- Pamela Tenaerts, MD, MBA, Chief Medical Officer, Medable
- Daniel Kavanagh, PhD, RAC – Senior Scientific Advisor, Gene Therapy, Vaccines, & Biologics, WCG
- Lara Gehl, Executive Director, Global Trial Management – Bristol Myers Squibb








