| Literature DB >> 25935555 |
Laura Gutierrez1, Julien Patris2, Adam Hutchings3, Warren Cowell4.
Abstract
The European Orphan Medicinal Products (OMP) Regulation has successfully encouraged research to develop treatments for rare diseases resulting in the authorisation of new OMPs in Europe. While decisions on OMP designation and marketing authorisation are made at the European Union level, reimbursement decisions are made at the national level. OMP value and affordability are high priority issues for policymakers and decisions regarding their pricing and funding are highly complex. There is currently no European consensus on how OMP value should be assessed and inequalities of access to OMPs have previously been observed. Against this background, policy makers in many countries are considering reforms to improve access to OMPs. This paper proposes ten principles to be considered when undertaking such reforms, from the perspective of an OMP manufacturer. We recommend the continued prioritisation of rare diseases by policymakers, an increased alignment between payer and regulatory frameworks, pricing centred on OMP value, and mechanisms to ensure long-term financial sustainability allowing a continuous and virtuous development of OMPs. Our recommendations support the development of more consistent frameworks and encourage collaboration between all stakeholders, including research-based industry, payers, clinicians, and patients.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25935555 PMCID: PMC4433088 DOI: 10.1186/s13023-015-0269-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orphanet J Rare Dis ISSN: 1750-1172 Impact factor: 4.123
Overview of principles
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| 1: National pricing and reimbursement processes should acknowledge the EMA’s assessment of therapeutic benefit |
| 2: National Authorities should incorporate rare disease expertise within their local assessment processes | |
| 3: OMP assessment should consider all relevant elements of value | |
| 4: Value assessment methods for OMPs should incorporate multiple criteria | |
| 5: Value mechanisms should be flexible to accommodate evidential uncertainty at time of OMP approval | |
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| 6: Adequate funding should be provided to ensure optimal patient access to OMPs and to incentivise research |
| 7: OMP reimbursement decisions should be determined by benchmarking value and price against treatments with similar characteristics | |
| 8: If used, ICER thresholds should be modulated to reflect the specificities of rare diseases and OMPs | |
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| 9: National authorities should develop adaptive and efficient processes to optimise use of real world data collected before and after value assessment |
| 10: Rational and evidence-based funding mechanisms should be developed to guarantee long-term sustainability |