| Literature DB >> 35652987 |
Elaine Julian1, Fabrizio Gianfrate2, Oriol Sola-Morales3, Peter Mol4, Jean-François Bergmann5, Tomas Salmonson6, Ansgar Hebborn7, Mathilde Grande8, Jörg Ruof9,10.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: We conducted a multi-stakeholder survey to determine key areas where a joint European health technology assessment (HTA) could provide 'additional benefit' compared to the status quo of many parallel independent national and subnational assessments.Entities:
Keywords: Access; Clinical trial design; Comparators; EU HTA; Endpoints; Europe’s Beating Cancer Plan; Patient-relevance; Real world evidence
Year: 2022 PMID: 35652987 PMCID: PMC9161501 DOI: 10.1186/s13561-022-00379-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Econ Rev ISSN: 2191-1991
Fig. 1Questionnaire distribution and responses received
Fig. 2Most relevant value drivers for positive health technology assessments in oncology medicines today (Mean per stakeholder group)
Fig. 3Evolving challenges for development of comparative evidence in oncology medicines (Mean per stakeholder group). The questions that was asked in the questionnaire: ‘A key challenge for future oncology medicines is deriving comparative evidence..’
Evolving evidence challenges for a European health technology assessment in oncology as derived from the qualitative comments provided in the questionnaire
| Management of Uncertainty | Comparator Choice | Endpoint Selection | Process Challenges |
|---|---|---|---|
Heterogeneity of value drivers across Europe; comments received within the questionnaire
| Area of Heterogeneity | Examples |
|---|---|
| Different evidence requirements for European regulatory vs applicable national HTA procedures | |
| Different treatment algorithms and national guideline recommendations | |
| Different methodological standards for national HTAs | |
| Different national HTA and reimbursement processes |
Fig. 4Responses to question: ‘Have you been involved with any Europe’s Beating Cancer Plan Initiatives?’. Industry response not shown: Responses suggested that HTA divisions within the industry are not involved in the EBCP but oncology and health policy devisions are involved (personal communication)
Fig. 5Mean relevance of Europe’s Beating Cancer Plan with regards to each stakeholder group’s activities (scale 1 [low relevance] to 5 [high relevance])
Fig. 6Language derived from the preamble of the EU HTA Regulation regarding the four challenge areas that need to be addressed in order for the EU HTA Regulation to provide an ‘additional benefit’ compared to the status quo of many parallel independent national and subnational assessments