| Literature DB >> 30498586 |
Melissa Latigo Mugambi1, Trevor Peter1, Samuel F Martins2, Cristina Giachetti3,4.
Abstract
Diagnostics developers often face challenges introducing in-vitro diagnostic (IVD) products to low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) because of difficulty in accessing robust market data, navigating policy and regulatory requirements and implementing and supporting products in healthcare systems with limited infrastructure. Best practices recommend the use of a phase-gate model with defined activities and milestones by phase to successfully move a product from concept to commercialisation. While activities for commercialisation of products in high-income countries (HICs) are well understood, the activities required for introduction of IVDs in LMICs are not. In this paper, we identify the key activities needed for IVD product development and implementation and map them to the various phases of the model, paying particular attention to those activities that might be conducted differently in LMICs.Entities:
Keywords: implementation; in-vitro diagnostics; low-and middle-income countries; phase-gate model; product development
Year: 2018 PMID: 30498586 PMCID: PMC6254739 DOI: 10.1136/bmjgh-2018-000914
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Glob Health ISSN: 2059-7908
IVD product development and implementation activities by phase
| Phase 0 | Phase 1 | Phase 2 | Phase 3 | Phase 4 | |
| Concept and research | Product feasibility, definition and planning | Design, development and transfer to manufacturing | Validation, regulatory approvals and first launch | Post-launch surveillance and stable operations | |
| Main questions to be answered |
What is the healthcare need? Is there an opportunity to address the need? Is there a business case for investment? |
Is it feasible to develop a product that meets the key requirements? How much will it cost to launch the product? How long will it take? Can the risks to development be mitigated? Is there still a business case for investment? |
Does the final product design meet all requirements? Can the product be manufactured and sold? Is there still a business case for investment? |
Does the final product meet clinical performance requirements and requirements of the intended user? Is there demand for the product? Are we ready to launch? |
Is the product meeting safety, quality and performance requirements? Do we need to make changes to the product or to its method of delivery? Are we making enough money to be profitable? |
| Marketing and sales activities |
Identify healthcare need(s) Identify and understand key country stakeholders Conduct market research Work with R&D to create product concept(s) Build business case Prepare financial model |
Finalise user requirements document Develop marketing and sales plan Develop global access plan Update business case and financial model |
Update marketing and sales plan Update global access plan Update business case and financial model |
Execute marketing and sales plan Finalise global access plan Execute first product launch in-country |
Ongoing customer support, training and quality monitoring Continue expanding the market and product sales |
| Research and development, manufacturing, regulatory and legal activities |
Select technologies that support product concept Establish proof of concept |
Develop TPP and define critical product requirements Show technical feasibility against key product requirements and specifications Prepare development plans (R&D, clinical, regulatory, manufacturing, quality, etc.) Conduct initial risk assessment Review/address IP |
Complete product optimisation, including prototype evaluations and lock the design Perform verification studies Prepare manufacturing and quality control procedures Update development plans Risk management and analysis Review/address IP |
Conduct clinical validation studies and prepare submissions for regulatory approval Obtain regulatory approvals |
Scale-up manufacturing Optimise distribution and supply chain Complete regulatory approvals and registrations in other countries |
| Policy and advocacy activities |
Initiate communication with policy makers, procurers and funders |
Develop policy-maker, procurer and funder engagement plans |
Update and execute engagement plans Align product offering with policy, procurement and funding guidelines |
Execute engagement plans Align product offering with policy, procurement and funding guidelines Support inclusion of diagnostic product in WHO recommendation and country guidelines |
Continue to support inclusion of diagnostic product in country guidelines |
IP, intellectual property; IVD, in-vitro diagnostics; TPP, target product profile.
Key stakeholders involved in introducing diagnostic products to low-resource settings
| Stakeholder category | Key role | Examples |
| Regulators | Evaluate the quality, safety and efficacy of products and approve them | National regulatory authorities, WHO DxPQ* |
| Policy makers | Develop policies and guidelines to guide how products are used | Ministries of health, WHO |
| Funders | Fund programme activities | Ministries of finance, global funders, for example, the Global Fund, PEPFAR/USAID†, UNITAID‡, World Bank, DFID§ and other bilateral funders |
| Procurers | Negotiate contracts and purchase products for use in-country | National procurement authorities, global funders (eg, the Global Fund), UN agencies |
| Suppliers | Develop, manufacture and distribute products and support the end user on ongoing bases | Diagnostics developers, manufacturers |
| Implementers | Work with developer and/or distributor to implement new diagnostic tools as part of disease programme activities | Ministries of health, local government health programme, implementing partners (eg, local and international NGOs) |
| End users | Use the product on ongoing bases and provide feedback for continuous improvements and insights into the design of future products | Healthcare providers (clinicians, clinical officers, nurses, laboratorians, community health workers), patients |
| Technical experts | Provide insights into the problem, evaluate interventions, support creation of policy | Academic researchers, local and international NGOs, WHO |
| Advocacy groups | Advocate for improved diagnostic, treatment and preventive efforts to effectively address the disease burden in low-resource settings | TAG, ASLM |
*WHO Prequalification of In-Vitro Diagnostics Programme.
†President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief/United States Agency for International Development.
‡Global health organisation under WHO that largely funds interventions to address HIV/AIDS, hepatitis, tuberculosis, malaria and reproductive, maternal, newborn and child health.
§Department for International Development.
ASLM, African Society for Laboratory Medicine; NGOs, non-governmental organisations; TAG, Treatment Action Group.
Elements required for product launch
| Item | Description |
| Policy, guidelines and product registration | Officially decide to adopt the diagnostic intervention and develop practice guidelines to inform the implementation process; legally approve products that meet the required quality, safety and efficacy standards. |
| Site selection and health facility infrastructure | Select clinical sites per product rollout strategy to optimally integrate the new product into workflows; update health facilities to meet product installation and operational requirements. |
| Financing, procurement and supply and distribution logistics | Identify secure sources of funding to cover procurement, implementation and maintenance costs; define forecasting and ordering processes and identify suppliers; identify, coordinate and monitor key players in the supply and distribution process. |
| Quality management system | Establish laboratory or health facility quality management system relevant to the diagnostic test that covers personnel training and supervision, record keeping, equipment service and maintenance plan and corrective-action and preventive-action procedures. |
| Monitoring, reporting and evaluation | Define key performance indicators to monitor the implementation process; modify patient and other administrative registers to accommodate new reporting requirements and metrics; support streamlined collection, storage, auditing and communication of data. |