| Company type | Private |
|---|---|
| Industry | Life sciences Artificial Intelligence Clinical development technology Software as a service |
| Founded | 1999;New York, NY |
| Founder | Glen de Vries Edward Ikeguchi Tarek Sherif |
| Headquarters | |
Area served | Worldwide |
Key people | Tarek Sherif (CEO,Chairman) Vacant (President) |
| Products | Medidata Rave Medidata Patient Cloud Medidata Acorn AI |
| Revenue | |
Number of employees | 2,800[2] (2018)[3] |
| Parent | Dassault Systèmes |
| Website | medidata |
Medidata Solutions is an Americantechnology company that develops and marketssoftware as a service (SaaS) forclinical trials. Headquartered inNew York City, Medidata has locations inChina,Japan,Singapore,South Korea,the United Kingdom, andthe United States.[4][5] Medidata has been a subsidiary ofDassault Systèmes since 2019.
In 1994,Glen de Vries and Ed Ikeguchi created OceanTek, a startup that developed Web applications for conducting clinical trials and was the precursor to Medidata. In 1999, along with Tarek Sherif,Glen de Vries and Ed Ikeguchi founded Medidata Solutions to provide online systems for designing and running clinical trials.[4][6] In 2004, they completed a $10 million round of financing withInsight Venture Partners,[7] and were later backed by investors including Milestone Venture Partners and Stonehenge Capital Fund.[8] Ikeguchi left the company in 2008.[6] Medidata acquired Fast Track Systems (clinical trial planning software) in 2008.[6][8]
On January 26, 2009, Medidata filed to raise $86 million in aninitial public offering (IPO).[8] It made its IPO on theNasdaq Stock Market on June 25, 2009, with its market capitalization at $313 million.[9] It debuted on the Nasdaq at $18 per share.[10] Medidata acquired Clinical Force (SaaS-based clinical trial management systems) in 2011,[11][12] Patient Profiles (Clinical trial data quality improvement) in 2014,[13] Intelemage (medical image sharing technology) in 2016,[14] Chita (cloud-based content management system)[15] and Mytrus (clinical trial technology) in 2017,[16] and SHYFT Analytics (cloud data analytics) in 2018.[17] In April 2019, Medidata launched Acorn AI, an AI-oriented solution based on its own trained data.[18]
In December 2019, Medidata was acquired by Dassault Systèmes for $5.8 billion.[19][20] Medidata acquired MC10 (digital biomarker technology) in 2020.[21]
Medidata offers a cloud-based platform for clients to build their own clinical trials and perform medical research. On the platform, physicians and scientists can collect and share clinical trial data.[4][9][22] The company helps biopharmaceutical and medical device companies run clinical trials, and streamlines the process for life science firms designing the trials.[4][10] As of 2017, Medidata customers include 18 of the world's top 25 pharmaceutical companies,[23] with clients such asJohnson & Johnson,AstraZeneca,Amgen,Cancer Research UK,GlaxoSmithKline,Novartis andHoffmann-La Roche.[3][24] Clients also include biotechnology companies, government institutions, and contract research organizations.[6]
The company has two primary products. Medidata Rave EDC, its flagship product, introduced in 2001, is a single system forelectronic data capture andclinical data management, allowing client data to be accessible in one place.[24][23][25][26] Medidata Rave Clinical Cloud, introduced in 2013, is a platform used for data capture and management of patient-related data for clinical operations.[7][26][27] In February 2018, Medidata announced plans to launch virtual trials as a part of its platform's clinical trial products, allowing patients to participate remotely in drug development trials.[28]
In September 2014, Medidata discovered that it had been the victim of a fraudulently induced transfer of nearly $4.8 million. The company filed an insurance claim for its loss, which was denied by its insurer, Federal Insurance Co., a subsidiary ofChubb Ltd. The insurer claimed that its policy only covered losses resulting from fraudulent entry or hacking into a computer system and that in this case the transfer was voluntary, while Medidata argued that the thief's actions did come within the policy's definition of covered losses.[29][30] On July 21, 2017, a federal court in New York ruled that Medidata was entitled to coverage from Federal Insurance for the $4.8 million loss.[30][31] Federal Insurance's appeal is pending.[32]
On January 26, 2017, Medidata filed a lawsuit in federal court in New York against five former employees andVeeva Systems Inc., in which it accused Veeva of trade secret theft. The complaint alleges that Veeva induced former Medidata employees to reveal confidential information and trade secrets that belong to Medidata.[33][34] On August 16, 2017, the court denied Veeva's motion to compel arbitration,[35] and on September 20, 2017, Medidata filed its Second Amended Complaint, which names Veeva as the only defendant. The case is ongoing.[36]
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