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An Inclusive Civil Society Dialogue for Successful Implementation of the EU HTA Regulation: Call to Action to Ensure Appropriate Involvement of Stakeholders and Collaborators.

Authors :
Desmet T
Julian E
Van Dyck W
Huys I
Simoens S
Giuliani R
Toumi M
Dierks C
Dierks J
Cardone A
Houÿez F
Pavlovic M
Berntgen M
Mol P
Schiel A
Goettsch W
Gianfrate F
Capri S
Ryan J
Ducournau P
Solà-Morales O
Ruof J
Source :
Journal of market access & health policy [J Mark Access Health Policy] 2024 Mar 14; Vol. 12 (1), pp. 21-34. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Mar 14 (Print Publication: 2024).
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Objectives: Stakeholder involvement has long been considered a success factor for a joint European health technology assessment (HTA) process, and its relevance is now anchored in the EU HTA Regulation's (EU HTAR) legislative wording. Therefore, we aimed to explore the roles, challenges, and most important activities to increase the level of involvement per stakeholder group.<br />Methods: At the 2022 Fall Convention of the European Access Academy (EAA), working groups addressed the involvement of patients, clinicians, regulators, health technology developers (HTD), and national HTA bodies and payers within the EU HTA process. Each working group revisited the pre-convention survey results, determined key role characteristics for each stakeholder, and agreed on the most important activities to fulfill the role profile. Finally, the activities suggested per group were prioritized by plenary group.<br />Results: The prioritized actions for patients included training and capacity building, the establishment of a patient involvement committee, and the establishment of a patient unit at the EC secretariat. For clinicians, it included alignment on evidence assessment from a clinical vs. HTA point of view, capacity building, and standardization of processes. The most important actions for regulators are to develop joint regulatory-HTA guidance documents, align processes and interfaces under the regulation, and share discussions on post-licensing evidence generation. HTDs prioritized scientific advice capacity and the review of the scoping process, and further development of the scope of the assessment report fact checks. The top three actions for national HTA bodies and payers included clarification on the early HTD dialogue process, political support and commitment, and clarification on financial support.<br />Conclusions: Addressing the activities identified as the most important for stakeholders/collaborators in the EU HTA process (e.g., in the implementation of the EU HTA Stakeholder Network and of the guidance documents developed by the EUnetHTA 21 consortium) will be key to starting an " inclusive civil society dialogue ", as suggested by the European Commission's Pharmaceutical Strategy.<br />Competing Interests: Conflicts of InterestT.D.: no CoI; W.V.D.: no CoI; S.S.: no CoI; I.H.: no CoI; R.G.: no CoI; M.T.: no CoI; C.D.: as a strategic and legal consultant, regularly receives honoraria for consulting from numerous health technology developers; J.D.: as a strategic and legal consultant, regularly receives honoraria for consulting from numerous health technology developers; A.C.: no CoI; F.H.: no CoI; M.P.: no CoI; M.B.: no CoI; P.M.: no CoI; A.S.: no CoI; W.G.: no CoI; F.G.: no CoI; S.C.: no CoI; J.R. (James Ryan): employed by AstraZeneca; P.D.: employed by Abbvie; O.S.-M.: no CoI.<br /> (© 2024 by the authors.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2001-6689
Volume :
12
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of market access & health policy
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
38544972
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/jmahp12010004