Duke Clinical Research Institute
Anne Wolfley has over 24 years of work experience in the field of statistics and programming. Anne is currently serving as a Principal Statistical Programmer/Analyst at the Duke Clinical Research Institute since October 2022. Prior to this, they worked as a Senior Manager, Statistics at Takeda from June 2022 to October 2022. Anne has also had prior experience at the Duke Clinical Research Institute, where they held the positions of Principal Statistical Programmer/Analyst from September 2018 to June 2022, and Statistical Programmer from October 2011 to June 2022. Anne started their career as a Programmer Analyst at GlaxoSmithKline in April 2005 and worked there until October 2011. Before joining GlaxoSmithKline, Anne worked as an Associate Clinical Data Specialist at Quintiles from January 1998 to April 2005.
Anne Wolfley attended the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill from 1999 to 2001, where they obtained a BA degree in Psychology. Anne'seducation history after that is unknown.
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Duke Clinical Research Institute
As part of the Duke University School of Medicine, the Duke Clinical Research Institute (DCRI) is known globally for conducting groundbreaking multinational trials, managing major national patient registries, and performing landmark research. As an academic clinical research organization, we combine the faculty expertise of practicing physicians with the full-service operational capabilities of a major CRO. We design and implement innovative clinical trials that advance the understanding of health and disease and inform efforts to improve the quality of care. Our experience stretches from phase I to phase IV and beyond, encompassing post-approval analyses and health economics. The breadth of our work in numerous therapeutic areas is matched by the depth of our knowledge, which we disseminate through high-impact publications and global meetings. Since 1996, DCRI's faculty and staff have disseminated over 17,500 peer-reviewed publications and have been cited in over 760,500 scientific articles.