EMA on the Development of Novel Therapies

News
Article

The European Medicines Agency weighs in on the role of regulators in determining added benefits of novel therapies.

The European Medicines Agency (EMA) announced on April 11, 2019 that agency officials have published an article analyzing the role of regulatory agencies in assessing the benefit of a novel treatment and how this is affected by the drug pricing debate.

According to EMA, regulators provide specific reasoning on the added benefit of a medicine compared with other treatments at the time of its approval. This reasoning can help health technology assessment bodies, payers, clinicians, and patients to understand what makes a new medicine a ‘better’ treatment and not just a ‘new’ treatment.

The article, which was published in Nature Reviews Drug Discovery, takes a look at different proposals regarding the role of regulators in the development of new therapies. One such proposal suggests that only new medicines that have demonstrated an added benefit should be authorized by regulators. Another proposal suggests that there should be a mandatory comparison of new therapies with other available treatments. The authors, however, say that limiting the flexibility of regulators may “not produce good results for patients and healthcare systems” and that evidence by design is the best approach. EMA stressed in a press release that mutual understanding between decision-makers on clinical trial designs is best to view “the entire spectrum of available methodologies.”

The article was written by EMA’s Senior Medical Officer, Hans-Georg Eichler; Harald Enzmann, Chair of EMA’s human medicines committee (CHMP) and Head of European and International Affairs at the Federal Institute for Drugs and Medical Devices (BfArM); and EMA's Executive Director, Guido Rasi.

Source: EMA

 

Recent Videos
Ian Lafferty from Upperton discusses the trends and challenges facing sterile manufacturing and how partnering with CDMOs can help innovators progress to the market.
Miguel Forte from ISCT and Kiji Therapeutics talks about the potential impact of a changing European political landscape.
Miguel Forte from ISCT and Kiji Therapeutics provides his insights into the changing political landscape in the US as well as legislative and regulatory adjustments
Miguel Forte from ISCT and Kiji Therapeutics chats about expectations for 2025 and the future technology agenda for industry.
Sheryl Johnson from Orbia Fluor & Energy Materials chats about gender diversity, how women are helping to advance innovation, sustainability challenges, and progress in the field of inhaled drugs.
Mike Baird from Schlafender Hase gives his predictions for how AI and ML may find use in the industry moving forwards and provides some predictions about M&A and the changing US government administration.
Mike Baird from Schlafender Haser discusses industry trends from 2024 and those expected to have an impact in 2025 from the perspective of a software developer.
Preeya Beczek from Beczek.COM gives her thoughts on the areas to watch with the new US administration and how Europe might be finalizing preparations for previous legislative changes