| Literature DB >> 28878667 |
Patricia Vella Bonanno1, Michael Ermisch2, Brian Godman1,3,4, Antony P Martin3, Jesper Van Den Bergh5, Liudmila Bezmelnitsyna6, Anna Bucsics7, Francis Arickx8, Alexander Bybau9, Tomasz Bochenek10, Marc van de Casteele8, Eduardo Diogene11, Irene Eriksson12,13, Jurij Fürst14, Mohamed Gad15, Ieva Greičiūtė-Kuprijanov16, Martin van der Graaff17, Jolanta Gulbinovic18,19, Jan Jones20, Roberta Joppi21, Marija Kalaba22, Ott Laius23, Irene Langner24, Ileana Mardare25, Vanda Markovic-Pekovic26,27, Einar Magnusson28, Oyvind Melien29, Dmitry O Meshkov5, Guenka I Petrova30, Gisbert Selke24, Catherine Sermet31, Steven Simoens32, Ad Schuurman17, Ricardo Ramos33, Jorge Rodrigues33, Corinne Zara34, Eva Zebedin-Brandl35, Alan Haycox3.
Abstract
Medicines receiving a conditional marketing authorization through Medicines Adaptive Pathways to Patients (MAPPs) will be a challenge for payers. The "introduction" of MAPPs is already seen by the European Medicines Agency (EMA) as a fait accompli, with payers not consulted or involved. However, once medicines are approved through MAPPs, they will be evaluated for funding by payers through different activities. These include Health Technology Assessment (HTA) with often immature clinical data and high uncertainty, financial considerations, and negotiations through different types of agreements, which can require monitoring post launch. Payers have experience with new medicines approved through conditional approval, and the fact that MAPPs present additional challenges is a concern from their perspective. There may be some activities where payers can collaborate. The final decisions on whether to reimburse a new medicine via MAPPs will have more variation than for medicines licensed via conventional processes. This is due not only to increasing uncertainty associated with medicines authorized through MAPPs but also differences in legal frameworks between member states. Moreover, if the financial and side-effect burden from the period of conditional approval until granting full marketing authorization is shifted to the post-authorization phase, payers may have to bear such burdens. Collection of robust data during routine clinical use is challenging along with high prices for new medicines during data collection. This paper presents the concept of MAPPs and possible challenges. Concerns and potential ways forward are discussed and a number of recommendations are presented from the perspective of payers.Entities:
Keywords: Adaptive Pathways; European Medicines Agency; Health Technology Assessment; marketing authorization; payers
Year: 2017 PMID: 28878667 PMCID: PMC5572364 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2017.00497
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
Figure 1Suggested model to better manage the introduction of new medicines (reproduced with the permission of Frontiers in Pharmacology; Malmstrom et al., 2013).