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How can patient preferences be used and communicated in the regulatory evaluation of medicinal products? Findings and recommendations from IMI PREFER and call to action

Objective: Patients have unique insights and are (in-)directly affected by each decision taken throughout the life cycle of medicinal products. Patient preference studies (PPS) assess what matters most to patients, how much, and what trade-offs patients are willing to make. IMI PREFER was a six-year...

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Autores principales: Janssens, Rosanne, Barbier, Liese, Muller, Mireille, Cleemput, Irina, Stoeckert, Isabelle, Whichello, Chiara, Levitan, Bennett, Hammad, Tarek A., Girvalaki, Charis, Ventura, Juan-Jose, Bywall, Karin Schölin, Pinto, Cathy Anne, Schoefs, Elise, Katz, Eva G., Kihlbom, Ulrik, Huys, Isabelle
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10468983/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37663265
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphar.2023.1192770
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author Janssens, Rosanne
Barbier, Liese
Muller, Mireille
Cleemput, Irina
Stoeckert, Isabelle
Whichello, Chiara
Levitan, Bennett
Hammad, Tarek A.
Girvalaki, Charis
Ventura, Juan-Jose
Bywall, Karin Schölin
Pinto, Cathy Anne
Schoefs, Elise
Katz, Eva G.
Kihlbom, Ulrik
Huys, Isabelle
author_facet Janssens, Rosanne
Barbier, Liese
Muller, Mireille
Cleemput, Irina
Stoeckert, Isabelle
Whichello, Chiara
Levitan, Bennett
Hammad, Tarek A.
Girvalaki, Charis
Ventura, Juan-Jose
Bywall, Karin Schölin
Pinto, Cathy Anne
Schoefs, Elise
Katz, Eva G.
Kihlbom, Ulrik
Huys, Isabelle
author_sort Janssens, Rosanne
collection PubMed
description Objective: Patients have unique insights and are (in-)directly affected by each decision taken throughout the life cycle of medicinal products. Patient preference studies (PPS) assess what matters most to patients, how much, and what trade-offs patients are willing to make. IMI PREFER was a six-year European public-private partnership under the Innovative Medicines Initiative that developed recommendations on how to assess and use PPS in medical product decision-making, including in the regulatory evaluation of medicinal products. This paper aims to summarize findings and recommendations from IMI PREFER regarding i) PPS applications in regulatory evaluation, ii) when and how to consult with regulators on PPS, iii) how to reflect PPS in regulatory communication and iv) barriers and open questions for PPS in regulatory decision-making. Methods: PREFER performed six literature reviews, 143 interviews and eight focus group discussions with regulators, patient representatives, industry representatives, Health Technology Assessment bodies, payers, academics, and clincians between October 2016 and May 2022. Results: i) With respect to PPS applications, prior to the conduct of clinical trials of medicinal products, PPS could inform regulators’ understanding of patients’ unmet needs and relevant endpoints during horizon scanning activities and scientific advice. During the evaluation of a marketing authorization application, PPS could inform: a) the assessment of whether a product meets an unmet need, b) whether patient-relevant clinical trial endpoints and outcomes were studied, c) the understanding of patient-relevant effect sizes and acceptable trade-offs, and d) the identification of key (un-)favorable effects and uncertainties. ii) With respect to consulting with regulators on PPS, PPS researchers should ideally have early discussions with regulators (e.g., during scientific advice) on the PPS design and research questions. iii) Regarding external PPS communication, PPS could be reflected in the assessment report and product information (e.g., the European Public Assessment Report and the Summary of Product Characteristics). iv) Barriers relevant to the use of PPS in regulatory evaluation include a lack of PPS use cases and demonstrated impact on regulatory decision-making, and need for (financial) incentives, guidance and quality criteria for implementing PPS results in regulatory decision-making. Open questions concerning regulatory PPS use include: a) should a product independent broad approach to the design of PPS be taken and/or a product-specific one, b) who should optimally be financing, designing, conducting, and coordinating PPS, c) when (within and/or outside clinical trials) to perform PPS, and d) how can PPS use best be operationalized in regulatory decisions. Conclusion: PPS have high potential to inform regulators on key unmet needs, endpoints, benefits, and risks that matter most to patients and their acceptable trade-offs. Regulatory guidelines, templates and checklists, together with incentives are needed to foster structural and transparent PPS submission and evaluation in regulatory decision-making. More PPS case studies should be conducted and submitted for regulatory assessment to enable regulatory discussion and increase regulators’ experience with PPS implementation and communication in regulatory evaluations.
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spelling pubmed-104689832023-09-01 How can patient preferences be used and communicated in the regulatory evaluation of medicinal products? Findings and recommendations from IMI PREFER and call to action Janssens, Rosanne Barbier, Liese Muller, Mireille Cleemput, Irina Stoeckert, Isabelle Whichello, Chiara Levitan, Bennett Hammad, Tarek A. Girvalaki, Charis Ventura, Juan-Jose Bywall, Karin Schölin Pinto, Cathy Anne Schoefs, Elise Katz, Eva G. Kihlbom, Ulrik Huys, Isabelle Front Pharmacol Pharmacology Objective: Patients have unique insights and are (in-)directly affected by each decision taken throughout the life cycle of medicinal products. Patient preference studies (PPS) assess what matters most to patients, how much, and what trade-offs patients are willing to make. IMI PREFER was a six-year European public-private partnership under the Innovative Medicines Initiative that developed recommendations on how to assess and use PPS in medical product decision-making, including in the regulatory evaluation of medicinal products. This paper aims to summarize findings and recommendations from IMI PREFER regarding i) PPS applications in regulatory evaluation, ii) when and how to consult with regulators on PPS, iii) how to reflect PPS in regulatory communication and iv) barriers and open questions for PPS in regulatory decision-making. Methods: PREFER performed six literature reviews, 143 interviews and eight focus group discussions with regulators, patient representatives, industry representatives, Health Technology Assessment bodies, payers, academics, and clincians between October 2016 and May 2022. Results: i) With respect to PPS applications, prior to the conduct of clinical trials of medicinal products, PPS could inform regulators’ understanding of patients’ unmet needs and relevant endpoints during horizon scanning activities and scientific advice. During the evaluation of a marketing authorization application, PPS could inform: a) the assessment of whether a product meets an unmet need, b) whether patient-relevant clinical trial endpoints and outcomes were studied, c) the understanding of patient-relevant effect sizes and acceptable trade-offs, and d) the identification of key (un-)favorable effects and uncertainties. ii) With respect to consulting with regulators on PPS, PPS researchers should ideally have early discussions with regulators (e.g., during scientific advice) on the PPS design and research questions. iii) Regarding external PPS communication, PPS could be reflected in the assessment report and product information (e.g., the European Public Assessment Report and the Summary of Product Characteristics). iv) Barriers relevant to the use of PPS in regulatory evaluation include a lack of PPS use cases and demonstrated impact on regulatory decision-making, and need for (financial) incentives, guidance and quality criteria for implementing PPS results in regulatory decision-making. Open questions concerning regulatory PPS use include: a) should a product independent broad approach to the design of PPS be taken and/or a product-specific one, b) who should optimally be financing, designing, conducting, and coordinating PPS, c) when (within and/or outside clinical trials) to perform PPS, and d) how can PPS use best be operationalized in regulatory decisions. Conclusion: PPS have high potential to inform regulators on key unmet needs, endpoints, benefits, and risks that matter most to patients and their acceptable trade-offs. Regulatory guidelines, templates and checklists, together with incentives are needed to foster structural and transparent PPS submission and evaluation in regulatory decision-making. More PPS case studies should be conducted and submitted for regulatory assessment to enable regulatory discussion and increase regulators’ experience with PPS implementation and communication in regulatory evaluations. Frontiers Media S.A. 2023-08-16 /pmc/articles/PMC10468983/ /pubmed/37663265 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphar.2023.1192770 Text en Copyright © 2023 Janssens, Barbier, Muller, Cleemput, Stoeckert, Whichello, Levitan, Hammad, Girvalaki, Ventura, Bywall, Pinto, Schoefs, Katz, Kihlbom and Huys. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Pharmacology
Janssens, Rosanne
Barbier, Liese
Muller, Mireille
Cleemput, Irina
Stoeckert, Isabelle
Whichello, Chiara
Levitan, Bennett
Hammad, Tarek A.
Girvalaki, Charis
Ventura, Juan-Jose
Bywall, Karin Schölin
Pinto, Cathy Anne
Schoefs, Elise
Katz, Eva G.
Kihlbom, Ulrik
Huys, Isabelle
How can patient preferences be used and communicated in the regulatory evaluation of medicinal products? Findings and recommendations from IMI PREFER and call to action
title How can patient preferences be used and communicated in the regulatory evaluation of medicinal products? Findings and recommendations from IMI PREFER and call to action
title_full How can patient preferences be used and communicated in the regulatory evaluation of medicinal products? Findings and recommendations from IMI PREFER and call to action
title_fullStr How can patient preferences be used and communicated in the regulatory evaluation of medicinal products? Findings and recommendations from IMI PREFER and call to action
title_full_unstemmed How can patient preferences be used and communicated in the regulatory evaluation of medicinal products? Findings and recommendations from IMI PREFER and call to action
title_short How can patient preferences be used and communicated in the regulatory evaluation of medicinal products? Findings and recommendations from IMI PREFER and call to action
title_sort how can patient preferences be used and communicated in the regulatory evaluation of medicinal products? findings and recommendations from imi prefer and call to action
topic Pharmacology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10468983/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37663265
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphar.2023.1192770
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