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OP170 Regulatory And Health Technology Assessment Considerations In Alzheimer's Disease

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 January 2019

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Abstract

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Introduction:

There has been a move towards the development of disease-modifying agents in Alzheimer's disease (AD) and it is likely that early disease-modifying treatments will initially be offered to people who have positive AD markers and mild cognitive impairment (MCI). Consequently, disease-modifying drugs will have distinctive features as compared to currently licensed symptomatic treatments, which makes the implications of these new agents for regulatory and health technology assessment (HTA) processes unclear.

Methods:

The ROADMAP (Real-world Outcomes across the AD spectrum for better care: Multi-modal data Access Platform) project provides the foundation for a European data platform for real-world evidence in AD, and established an expert advisory group (EXAG) consisting of regulatory and HTA experts. This presentation will summarize the key lessons from the first year of ROADMAP's EXAG and identifies the next steps that are required to prepare Europe's healthcare systems for a disease-modifying drug.

Results:

The EXAG identified a need for: (i) establishing the rationale for the selection of priority outcomes in pre-clinical AD and MCI; (ii) establishing accepted outcomes for defining prevention of AD or delayed AD onset; (iii) exploring modern technology that could assist in testing cognition that could easily be used in clinical practice; and (iv) establishing caregiver-relevant outcomes (e.g. quality of life, loss of income, carer time) that are important to capture; and found that not all evidence to support modelling assumptions can be generated through RCTs, making the case for using real-world evidence.

Conclusions:

Many of the challenges that the EXAG identified can be solved by generating better real-world data in AD. There is a clear need to agree on the outcomes that will facilitate and inform regulatory and HTA decision-making. Once the gaps in the availability of outcomes in AD will be closed, we will be one step closer towards being ready for a disease-modifying drug.

Type
Oral Presentations
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2018