This document discusses challenges and potential solutions related to market access for medical devices. Some key challenges include creating and communicating value to stakeholders, varied decision-making criteria across countries, technological evolution outpacing regulation updates, resource constraints in healthcare systems, lack of stakeholder engagement, and lack of evidence on economic value. Potential solutions proposed are focusing on health technology assessment processes, utilizing HTA groups as knowledge resources, reforming regulatory processes, increasing stakeholder involvement, using real-world data to drive device design and adoption, and effectively communicating value to end-users. Future trends may include increased combination products that integrate drugs, devices and/or biologics.
A complete scenario of Medical Device Industry Of USA and India as well as of some major players. The presentation also highlights the Rules and regulations with respect to the devices and also SWOT analysis of emerging markets
USA Medical Device report 2015. In this report you can find the detail information about USA medical device industry with Merger and acquisition , Research & Development, Geographical breakdown for U.S. medical device sector.
The document provides an overview of the EU medical device market environment. It discusses the largest medical device markets being Germany, France, UK, Italy and Spain. It also examines differences between the US and EU markets, noting regulatory approval enables market access in the EU but reimbursement is not guaranteed in the US. Additionally, the document outlines reimbursement processes and factors affecting medical device market growth in the EU such as an aging population and demand for efficiencies.
Health Policy Supporting Innovation in Korean Medical Device Sector (July 11,...Sung Yoon Bae
Presented in the AMCHAM Healthcare Innovation Seminar, held in Seoul, Korea on July 11, 2012.
Title: Toward Better Health Policy Supporting Innovation in Korean Medical Device Sector
Date: July 11, 2012
Speaker, Sung Yoon Bae, Professor of Healthcare Management, Inje University, Busan, Korea
This document provides an introduction to medical devices. It begins with definitions of medical devices as any instrument intended for medical use to diagnose, treat or alleviate disease or injury. Major groups of instruments are identified as surgical, dental/orthopedic, ophthalmology, implants and diagnostic devices. Classification of devices is described based on risk levels related to device type, duration of use, contact and anatomy. Variants and required materials information are outlined. Process validations are introduced as critical to ensuring consistent product quality and performance from batch to batch.
Global regenerative medicines market (technology, application and geography) ...Allied Market Research
Regenerative medicines have the unique ability to repair, replace and regenerate tissues and organs, affected due to some injury, disease or due to natural aging process.
Emerging Trends In Medical Device ManufacturingEWI
To continue a trajectory of steady growth, the global medical device industry must adapt to the dynamic changes disrupting the healthcare landscape. An aging population, a push for more personalized treatment, and the increasing availability of healthcare are some of the factors driving new markets and an expanding consumer base. In addition, regulatory scrutiny and federal initiatives like the medical device excise tax have levied extra pressure on R&D budgets.
India's medical device market is growing rapidly due to factors such as population growth, an aging population, rising chronic diseases, and increasing healthcare infrastructure and insurance penetration. The market was estimated at $3.9 billion in 2015 and is projected to reach $8.16 billion by 2020, driven primarily by growth in diagnostic imaging equipment. The government is taking several initiatives to promote the medical devices sector in India through policies supporting manufacturing, innovation, and quality standards.
A complete scenario of Medical Device Industry Of USA and India as well as of some major players. The presentation also highlights the Rules and regulations with respect to the devices and also SWOT analysis of emerging markets
USA Medical Device report 2015. In this report you can find the detail information about USA medical device industry with Merger and acquisition , Research & Development, Geographical breakdown for U.S. medical device sector.
The document provides an overview of the EU medical device market environment. It discusses the largest medical device markets being Germany, France, UK, Italy and Spain. It also examines differences between the US and EU markets, noting regulatory approval enables market access in the EU but reimbursement is not guaranteed in the US. Additionally, the document outlines reimbursement processes and factors affecting medical device market growth in the EU such as an aging population and demand for efficiencies.
Health Policy Supporting Innovation in Korean Medical Device Sector (July 11,...Sung Yoon Bae
Presented in the AMCHAM Healthcare Innovation Seminar, held in Seoul, Korea on July 11, 2012.
Title: Toward Better Health Policy Supporting Innovation in Korean Medical Device Sector
Date: July 11, 2012
Speaker, Sung Yoon Bae, Professor of Healthcare Management, Inje University, Busan, Korea
This document provides an introduction to medical devices. It begins with definitions of medical devices as any instrument intended for medical use to diagnose, treat or alleviate disease or injury. Major groups of instruments are identified as surgical, dental/orthopedic, ophthalmology, implants and diagnostic devices. Classification of devices is described based on risk levels related to device type, duration of use, contact and anatomy. Variants and required materials information are outlined. Process validations are introduced as critical to ensuring consistent product quality and performance from batch to batch.
Global regenerative medicines market (technology, application and geography) ...Allied Market Research
Regenerative medicines have the unique ability to repair, replace and regenerate tissues and organs, affected due to some injury, disease or due to natural aging process.
Emerging Trends In Medical Device ManufacturingEWI
To continue a trajectory of steady growth, the global medical device industry must adapt to the dynamic changes disrupting the healthcare landscape. An aging population, a push for more personalized treatment, and the increasing availability of healthcare are some of the factors driving new markets and an expanding consumer base. In addition, regulatory scrutiny and federal initiatives like the medical device excise tax have levied extra pressure on R&D budgets.
India's medical device market is growing rapidly due to factors such as population growth, an aging population, rising chronic diseases, and increasing healthcare infrastructure and insurance penetration. The market was estimated at $3.9 billion in 2015 and is projected to reach $8.16 billion by 2020, driven primarily by growth in diagnostic imaging equipment. The government is taking several initiatives to promote the medical devices sector in India through policies supporting manufacturing, innovation, and quality standards.
Medical device industry 2014 - A Healthcare Sector AnalysisVikas Soni
Medical Device Industry and its impact on Healthcare Sector of India for FY2014 along with Current Scenario of Global, US, EU and Indian Medical device market.
Materiovigilance programme of india by akhilesh sachanAkhilesh Sachan
The Materiovigilance Programme of India (MvPI) was launched in 2015 to study incidents related to medical devices and ensure patient safety. It allows dangerous devices to be removed from the market and defects to be addressed. The MvPI collects reports of device malfunctions, defects, or other issues directly from healthcare professionals and the public. It is coordinated by the Indian Pharmacopoeia Commission and Sree Chitra Tirunal Institute of Medical Sciences and Technology, with support from the National Health Systems Resource Centre. The program has established guidelines, forms, and monitoring centers to facilitate medical device safety surveillance in India.
This document discusses the importance of pharmacovigilance, which is the science of monitoring the safety of pharmaceutical products. It defines pharmacovigilance and outlines its key aims such as improving patient safety and promoting rational drug use. The document then covers various topics related to pharmacovigilance including adverse event reporting, signal detection, risk management plans, and the assessment of the risk-benefit profiles of drugs. It emphasizes that pharmacovigilance is an ethical practice aimed at ensuring drugs cause less harm to patients.
This document provides an overview of Japan's healthcare system and medical device market. It summarizes that Japan has universal healthcare coverage for its 127 million citizens, with total healthcare expenditures of $278 billion in 2000. The medical device market in Japan was worth $18 billion in 2000, with the United States having a large trade surplus of $4 billion in medical device exports to Japan. The regulatory system for medical devices is administered by the Ministry of Health and requires government approval and licensing for devices to be sold in Japan.
Clinical Evaluation Report for Medical DevicesI 3 Consulting
As per MEDDEV 2.7/1 Rev.4, Clinical Evaluation is a specialized robust method to collect, appraise and analyze clinical data related to a medical device and to interpret if there is satisfactory clinical information (evidence) to establish conformity with pertinent essential requirements for safety and performance when employing the medical device as per the manufacturer's instructions for use.
The document summarizes guidelines for pharmacovigilance planning from the International Conference on Harmonisation of Technical Requirements for Registration of Pharmaceuticals for Human Use (ICH). It recommends summarizing the important identified and potential risks of a drug in a Safety Specification and developing a Pharmacovigilance Plan to address ongoing safety issues and monitor risks in the post-approval period. The plan should include routine pharmacovigilance practices as well as additional actions to evaluate specific risks, and be revised as new safety information emerges. Pharmacovigilance planning aims to improve risk communication and the benefit-risk assessment of drugs over their lifecycle.
The document provides an overview of clinical trials for medical devices. It discusses definitions of medical devices according to FDA and Indian regulations, and classification of devices into classes based on risk level. The key phases of medical device clinical trials are pilot/feasibility studies and pivotal/confirmatory studies. Other topics covered include premarket notification (510k), investigational device exemption (IDE), premarket approval (PMA), differences between device and drug trials, and the global and Indian medical device markets.
Introduction to Expectedness/Unexpectedness Assessment in Drug Safety & Pharmacovigilance of Pharmaceuticals, Bio-Pharmaceuticals, Medical Devices, Cosmeceuticals and Foods.
Contact:
"Katalyst Healthcares & Life Sciences"
South Plainfield, NJ, USA
info@KatalystHLS.com
Pharmacovigilance and Materiovigilance, Drugs and Cosmetics Actshashi sinha
Due to side effects of Medicines and Medical Devices increasing day by day it is important to monitor the Adverse Events arising out of use of Medicines and Medical Devices. The Pharmacovigilance and Materiovigilance monitors adverse events arising our of usage of Drugs and Medical Devices respectively. This chapter also deals with Drugs and Cosmetics Act 1940 and their important provisions.
Literature monitoring for pv what are we doing at galderma elsevier webinarAnn-Marie Roche
The document discusses literature monitoring for pharmacovigilance. It describes weekly monitoring of individual case safety reports and periodic monitoring through development safety update reports and periodic benefit-risk evaluation reports. Key databases for literature searches are Medline and Embase. While Embase has more extensive drug coverage, searches on Medline via PubMed are more reliable due to the potential for loss of MeSH subheadings when mapping to Emtree and the risk of false negatives and positives when searching Embase alone. Literature searches support signal detection and periodic evaluation of a product's safety profile.
This document provides an overview of pharmacovigilance systems and regulations in the US and EU. It describes regulatory oversight bodies, key regulations governing pharmacovigilance, safety reporting requirements during pre-marketing and post-marketing periods, pediatric legislation differences, and risk management strategies between the regions.
Clinical evaluation is the process of assessing clinical data to verify the safety and performance of a medical device for its intended use. It involves three main stages: 1) identifying existing clinical data from literature and reports, 2) appraising individual data sets for sufficiency, and 3) analyzing the overall strength of evidence and conclusions about safety and performance. If existing data is insufficient, new clinical evaluations must be conducted. A clinical evaluation report is prepared when existing data demonstrates conformity with essential requirements.
The document discusses pharmacovigilance, which is defined as the science of detecting, assessing, understanding, and preventing adverse effects of medicines. It describes the history of pharmacovigilance, including the thalidomide tragedy in the 1960s which led to increased regulation. The document outlines pharmacovigilance in Pakistan, including the establishment of an online reporting system by DRAP in 2018 for healthcare professionals and patients to report adverse drug reactions. It provides key terms related to pharmacovigilance and describes the pharmacovigilance workflow and functions.
Adverse drug reaction, pharmacovigilance, spontaneous ADR monitoring, Good Pharmacovigilance Practices, drug safety, patient safety, an overview of regulatory guidelines, medicine safety, medical regulations.
Safety monitoring and reporting of adverse events of medical devices national...Vivek Nayak
This document outlines safety monitoring and adverse event reporting for medical devices from national and international perspectives. It defines medical devices and their classification system. Approval processes in India are discussed, along with the Materiovigilance Program of India for post-marketing surveillance. Adverse events must be reported within defined timeframes. International regulatory bodies like the FDA and MHRA also have mandatory reporting requirements. The limitations of current monitoring and reporting are noted.
This document discusses various types of aggregate safety reports that are submitted to regulatory agencies, including Periodic Benefit Risk Evaluation Reports (PBRER), Periodic Adverse Drug Experience Reports (PADER), Development Safety Update Reports (DSUR), and Periodic Safety Update Reports (PSUR). It provides details on the purpose, format, and submission requirements for PSURs to agencies in countries like India, Europe, Singapore, Canada, Japan, and Australia. The significance of each report is also summarized.
Commercial considerations in early drug developmentSunil Ramkali
It is important in the drug development process that marketers and researchers collaborate early to ensure that products being developed are truly innovative and deliver brand value to the different end users in a way that the product and the subsequent brand messaging is relevant, compelling and differentiating compared to the competition. T
In the market place that is heavily cost constraint, innovation is no longer about a unique mode of action or a new formulation, but more about the incremental brand value offered by new pharmaceutical products over existing treatments (standard of care) and how much healthcare systems are prepared to pay for these incremental benefits. My lecture at the Department of Innovation, Lund University, Sweden explored the importance of R&D functions getter closer to external stakeholders to really understand their needs, how they define brand value and the importance of considering this early in the drug development process.
There are several key challenges to commercializing new medical devices:
1) New devices must prove they offer real benefits over existing options. 2) Securing funding from investors is difficult due to the high risks and costs involved. 3) Extensive testing is required, including clinical trials, to obtain regulatory approval, which is also an expensive process. 4) There is often a disconnect between academic researchers developing new technologies and the business communities needed to commercialize them. Initiatives like IDEA Labs aim to help bridge this gap.
Medical device industry 2014 - A Healthcare Sector AnalysisVikas Soni
Medical Device Industry and its impact on Healthcare Sector of India for FY2014 along with Current Scenario of Global, US, EU and Indian Medical device market.
Materiovigilance programme of india by akhilesh sachanAkhilesh Sachan
The Materiovigilance Programme of India (MvPI) was launched in 2015 to study incidents related to medical devices and ensure patient safety. It allows dangerous devices to be removed from the market and defects to be addressed. The MvPI collects reports of device malfunctions, defects, or other issues directly from healthcare professionals and the public. It is coordinated by the Indian Pharmacopoeia Commission and Sree Chitra Tirunal Institute of Medical Sciences and Technology, with support from the National Health Systems Resource Centre. The program has established guidelines, forms, and monitoring centers to facilitate medical device safety surveillance in India.
This document discusses the importance of pharmacovigilance, which is the science of monitoring the safety of pharmaceutical products. It defines pharmacovigilance and outlines its key aims such as improving patient safety and promoting rational drug use. The document then covers various topics related to pharmacovigilance including adverse event reporting, signal detection, risk management plans, and the assessment of the risk-benefit profiles of drugs. It emphasizes that pharmacovigilance is an ethical practice aimed at ensuring drugs cause less harm to patients.
This document provides an overview of Japan's healthcare system and medical device market. It summarizes that Japan has universal healthcare coverage for its 127 million citizens, with total healthcare expenditures of $278 billion in 2000. The medical device market in Japan was worth $18 billion in 2000, with the United States having a large trade surplus of $4 billion in medical device exports to Japan. The regulatory system for medical devices is administered by the Ministry of Health and requires government approval and licensing for devices to be sold in Japan.
Clinical Evaluation Report for Medical DevicesI 3 Consulting
As per MEDDEV 2.7/1 Rev.4, Clinical Evaluation is a specialized robust method to collect, appraise and analyze clinical data related to a medical device and to interpret if there is satisfactory clinical information (evidence) to establish conformity with pertinent essential requirements for safety and performance when employing the medical device as per the manufacturer's instructions for use.
The document summarizes guidelines for pharmacovigilance planning from the International Conference on Harmonisation of Technical Requirements for Registration of Pharmaceuticals for Human Use (ICH). It recommends summarizing the important identified and potential risks of a drug in a Safety Specification and developing a Pharmacovigilance Plan to address ongoing safety issues and monitor risks in the post-approval period. The plan should include routine pharmacovigilance practices as well as additional actions to evaluate specific risks, and be revised as new safety information emerges. Pharmacovigilance planning aims to improve risk communication and the benefit-risk assessment of drugs over their lifecycle.
The document provides an overview of clinical trials for medical devices. It discusses definitions of medical devices according to FDA and Indian regulations, and classification of devices into classes based on risk level. The key phases of medical device clinical trials are pilot/feasibility studies and pivotal/confirmatory studies. Other topics covered include premarket notification (510k), investigational device exemption (IDE), premarket approval (PMA), differences between device and drug trials, and the global and Indian medical device markets.
Introduction to Expectedness/Unexpectedness Assessment in Drug Safety & Pharmacovigilance of Pharmaceuticals, Bio-Pharmaceuticals, Medical Devices, Cosmeceuticals and Foods.
Contact:
"Katalyst Healthcares & Life Sciences"
South Plainfield, NJ, USA
info@KatalystHLS.com
Pharmacovigilance and Materiovigilance, Drugs and Cosmetics Actshashi sinha
Due to side effects of Medicines and Medical Devices increasing day by day it is important to monitor the Adverse Events arising out of use of Medicines and Medical Devices. The Pharmacovigilance and Materiovigilance monitors adverse events arising our of usage of Drugs and Medical Devices respectively. This chapter also deals with Drugs and Cosmetics Act 1940 and their important provisions.
Literature monitoring for pv what are we doing at galderma elsevier webinarAnn-Marie Roche
The document discusses literature monitoring for pharmacovigilance. It describes weekly monitoring of individual case safety reports and periodic monitoring through development safety update reports and periodic benefit-risk evaluation reports. Key databases for literature searches are Medline and Embase. While Embase has more extensive drug coverage, searches on Medline via PubMed are more reliable due to the potential for loss of MeSH subheadings when mapping to Emtree and the risk of false negatives and positives when searching Embase alone. Literature searches support signal detection and periodic evaluation of a product's safety profile.
This document provides an overview of pharmacovigilance systems and regulations in the US and EU. It describes regulatory oversight bodies, key regulations governing pharmacovigilance, safety reporting requirements during pre-marketing and post-marketing periods, pediatric legislation differences, and risk management strategies between the regions.
Clinical evaluation is the process of assessing clinical data to verify the safety and performance of a medical device for its intended use. It involves three main stages: 1) identifying existing clinical data from literature and reports, 2) appraising individual data sets for sufficiency, and 3) analyzing the overall strength of evidence and conclusions about safety and performance. If existing data is insufficient, new clinical evaluations must be conducted. A clinical evaluation report is prepared when existing data demonstrates conformity with essential requirements.
The document discusses pharmacovigilance, which is defined as the science of detecting, assessing, understanding, and preventing adverse effects of medicines. It describes the history of pharmacovigilance, including the thalidomide tragedy in the 1960s which led to increased regulation. The document outlines pharmacovigilance in Pakistan, including the establishment of an online reporting system by DRAP in 2018 for healthcare professionals and patients to report adverse drug reactions. It provides key terms related to pharmacovigilance and describes the pharmacovigilance workflow and functions.
Adverse drug reaction, pharmacovigilance, spontaneous ADR monitoring, Good Pharmacovigilance Practices, drug safety, patient safety, an overview of regulatory guidelines, medicine safety, medical regulations.
Safety monitoring and reporting of adverse events of medical devices national...Vivek Nayak
This document outlines safety monitoring and adverse event reporting for medical devices from national and international perspectives. It defines medical devices and their classification system. Approval processes in India are discussed, along with the Materiovigilance Program of India for post-marketing surveillance. Adverse events must be reported within defined timeframes. International regulatory bodies like the FDA and MHRA also have mandatory reporting requirements. The limitations of current monitoring and reporting are noted.
This document discusses various types of aggregate safety reports that are submitted to regulatory agencies, including Periodic Benefit Risk Evaluation Reports (PBRER), Periodic Adverse Drug Experience Reports (PADER), Development Safety Update Reports (DSUR), and Periodic Safety Update Reports (PSUR). It provides details on the purpose, format, and submission requirements for PSURs to agencies in countries like India, Europe, Singapore, Canada, Japan, and Australia. The significance of each report is also summarized.
Commercial considerations in early drug developmentSunil Ramkali
It is important in the drug development process that marketers and researchers collaborate early to ensure that products being developed are truly innovative and deliver brand value to the different end users in a way that the product and the subsequent brand messaging is relevant, compelling and differentiating compared to the competition. T
In the market place that is heavily cost constraint, innovation is no longer about a unique mode of action or a new formulation, but more about the incremental brand value offered by new pharmaceutical products over existing treatments (standard of care) and how much healthcare systems are prepared to pay for these incremental benefits. My lecture at the Department of Innovation, Lund University, Sweden explored the importance of R&D functions getter closer to external stakeholders to really understand their needs, how they define brand value and the importance of considering this early in the drug development process.
There are several key challenges to commercializing new medical devices:
1) New devices must prove they offer real benefits over existing options. 2) Securing funding from investors is difficult due to the high risks and costs involved. 3) Extensive testing is required, including clinical trials, to obtain regulatory approval, which is also an expensive process. 4) There is often a disconnect between academic researchers developing new technologies and the business communities needed to commercialize them. Initiatives like IDEA Labs aim to help bridge this gap.
Different Stages of Medical Device Development and Drug Development: PepgraDi...PEPGRA Healthcare
The difference between medical device product development and pharmaceuticals that are supposed to be launched are based on industry composition where above 80% small and medium-sized companies require medical devices and large multinational organizations seek new medicines. Pepgra gives you the different stages of Medical Device Development and Drug Development, some are:
1. Lead discovery optimization
2. Pre-clinical Research
3.. Clinical Research
4. Post- Market safety monitoring
Continue Reading: https://bit.ly/3ryCQC4
Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cYz_BOArGhA
If you need any further information, then please contact via
Email us: sales.cro@pepgra.com
Whatsapp: +91 9884350006
Extended Real-World Data: The Life Science Industry’s Number One AssetHealth Catalyst
The life science industry has historically relied on sanitized clinical trials and commoditized data sources (largely claims) to inform its drug development process—an under-substantiated approach that didn’t reflect how a new drug would affect broader patient populations. In an effort to gain more accurate insight into the patient experience and bring drugs to market more efficiently and safely, the industry is now expanding into extended real-world data (RWD).
To access the needed breadth and depth of patient-centric data, life science companies must partner with a healthcare transformation company that has three key qualities:
A broad and deep data asset.
Extensive provider partnerships.
An outcomes-improvement engine to support the next generation of drug development.
White Paper - Internet Marketing Strategies For The Medical Device Industryjerryme5
This is a White Paper that I wrote, while employed at Exemplum, that talks about various marketing strategies that medical device companies can use to leverage the Internet to market their products more effectivelty.
This document summarizes 10 health innovations and trends to watch in 2010, including: 1) "Hello Health" franchised primary care practices with online tools and direct payments, 2) use of surgical checklists to improve safety, 3) mobile health applications like HealthMap for disease surveillance, 4) direct-to-consumer genetic testing providing personalized health information, 5) "reverse innovations" developed first for emerging markets, 6) services generating personalized care plans from health data, 7) point-of-care diagnostic technologies, 8) the University of Toronto's crowdsourcing of health system ideas, 9) the growth of mobile health applications, and 10) patient data sharing communities like PatientsLikeMe. These innovations aim to improve health
The document discusses the evolving pharmaceutical industry model and whether it is "fit for purpose or broken". It summarizes that while R&D costs per new drug are rising and productivity seems to be falling, the industry model is not truly broken but rather changing in response to challenges. Key changes include R&D shifting to diseases important to payers, industry consolidation, and adaptive pathways being developed between industry, payers, and regulators for patient access and evidence collection. While affordability issues arise from both a potentially broken model and successful adaptation, both high returns on R&D and reasonable drug prices must be addressed to sustain innovation.
Medical devices equipped for the futureBrand Acumen
The document discusses disruptive changes underway in the medical devices industry that will transform it over the next 5 years. It identifies 5 major disruptors: 1) a power shift to payers and providers who are focusing more on cost and value-based evidence, 2) heightened regulatory scrutiny that is increasing compliance costs, 3) unclear sources of innovation as R&D spending yields diminishing returns, 4) new healthcare delivery models that are shifting care settings out of hospitals, and 5) a need to serve lower socioeconomic classes in developing markets. The disruptors threaten $34 billion in industry profits by 2020 but taking appropriate measures could help maintain revenue growth and offset margin declines, preserving significant value for medical device companies.
Historically, the medical device industry has been highly attractive and relatively stable. As a consequence, established players have been able to compete successfully across the device spectrum, applying common business models and processes without much need for differentiation.
The future, however, is very different as disruptive change is underway. Companies will need to look at new segments and offer end-to-end solutions to secure additional revenue and maintain their profit margins.
IMPACT OF APPLYING INTERNATIONAL QUALITY STANDARDS ON MEDICAL EQUIPMENT IN SA...ijcax
This document summarizes a study on the impact of applying international quality standards on medical equipment in Saudi Arabia. A questionnaire was distributed to 300 healthcare professionals in public and private hospitals to collect data. The results showed that around 80% of respondents strongly agreed that international standards like ISO have significantly improved safety, testing and calibration of medical devices, use of consistent terminology, and compatibility/interoperability. Adopting global quality standards appears to have reduced risks associated with medical equipment and enhanced patient safety in Saudi Arabia according to the healthcare workers surveyed.
Unique Device Identification and GS1: Defining Elements in the Future of Glob...Loftware
This white paper, as the title suggests, is about new national and international mandates for a global standard to be used
in the Unique Device Identification (UDI) of medical devices and other healthcare products. It examines the global trading
opportunities, on an enormous scale, that can be captured by early adopters or forfeited by default by those who wait,
dismiss the idea, or discount the powerful market and competitive forces that UDI developments are driving. Also offered
is a starting blueprint for regulatory compliance professionals, packaging engineers, C-suite executives and manufacturing experts who agree the time to start meeting the UDI opportunity has clearly arrived.
Here are the ways to describe What is Medical Technology and how it works? ; 1. What does it entail? 2. The following is a description of what constitutes a medical device according to the World Health Organization:
Evolution of the healthcare industry in India and the potential impact of the...Harshit Jain
2014 looks to be a positive but challenging year for the Indian health care sector; one in which many historic business models and operating processes will no longer suffice amid rising demand, continued cost pressures, lack of or inadequate care facilities, and rapidly evolving market conditions. India, likely will be dominated by the “Modi-care” –Health assurance for all.
This article discusses using techniques from Health Technology Assessment (HTA) to demonstrate significant benefit for Orphan Medicinal Products (OMPs) in the EU. Significant benefit must be shown at orphan designation and marketing authorization. HTA techniques like cost-utility analysis using Quality-Adjusted Life Years (QALYs) could help compare OMPs to existing treatments. However, QALY analyses for OMPs often find very high incremental cost-effectiveness ratios due to small benefits and high drug costs. The article recommends seeking protocol assistance to ensure appropriate clinical development and establish significant benefit for OMP applications.
Demonstrating Significant Benefit for an OMPMauro Placchi
This article discusses how significant benefit for Orphan Medicinal Products (OMPs) is assessed in the EU and how Health Technology Assessment (HTA) techniques may support demonstrating significant benefit. Significant benefit must be shown at orphan designation and marketing authorization. HTA techniques like cost-utility analysis can estimate cost-effectiveness but may not fully address the unclear definitions of significant benefit in the EU. While HTA preparation should start early, submitting economic data for marketing authorization is inappropriate since pricing is determined separately in each country.
United States life sciences companies face numerous challenges in 2015 related to market changes, consolidation, pricing pressures, and health reform. Six key issues are highlighted: 1) Market reconfiguration and consolidation due to factors like expiring patents are driving the need for companies to reassess strategies and explore M&A opportunities. 2) Pricing pressures exist from government efforts to control costs and from health plans increasing efforts to reduce pharmaceutical costs. 3) Health reform is shifting the market to value-based care, requiring companies to demonstrate drugs' and devices' true value and economic impact compared to alternatives.
Accenture Transformative Power of Healthcare Technology M&A in Life Science 2015Arda Ural, MSc, MBA, PhD
Explosive advances in healthcare technology are enabling new opportunities for technology mergers and acquisitions (M&A) that focus on improving patient outcomes. Digital technologies allow for enhanced patient services and care. Pharmaceutical companies are increasingly engaging in M&A deals and partnerships with medical device and technology companies to develop new business models and position themselves for future growth. Healthcare is undergoing a fundamental shift that is forcing new collaborations across industries to leverage technology for managing health.
Similar to Market access medical devices-white paper (20)
2. I N T R O D U C T I O N
According to the World Health Organization (WHO)
definition, a medical device is “an article, instrument,
apparatus, or machine that is used in the prevention,
diagnosis, or treatment of illness or disease, or
for detecting, measuring, restoring, correcting, or
modifying the structure or function of the body for
some health purpose.”1
Medical devices range from
simple tongue depressors to complex programmable
pacemakers and computed tomography scanners.
Table 1. US & EU device classifications2
Classification Type of Device
Class I
·· Generally regarded as low-risk
·· Self-certify to general safety
standards
Class II (US),
and Class IIa
and IIb (EU)
·· Generally regarded as
medium-risk
·· General standards, special
controls, quality systems
Class III
·· Generally regarded as high-risk
·· Require pre-market review,
including bench testing, animal
studies, and clinical trials
providing proof of safety and
effectiveness
Devices play an important role in modern health
care. Although cutting-edge medical devices are
often seen as significant cost drivers for hospitals
operating within limited budgets, these devices may
offer considerable long-term cost savings, improve
patient outcomes, and create more efficient and
effective health practices.3
They can promote less
invasive procedures, reduce patient recovery time,
shorten the length of hospital stays, and enhance
health system sustainability.
The last decade has seen unprecedented growth in
innovative and improved technologies, which has
led to the development of state-of-the-art medical
devices and catalyzed growth and advancement
in the health care industry. The world market for
medical devices reached $381 billion in 2015.4
The traditional value chain for the medical device
industry, which historically has been driven by
innovation and research and development (RD),
is undergoing a paradigm shift. Medical device
companies have been focusing more on creating
value for payers, practitioners, providers, and
patients not only by providing innovative, quality
products but also by considering cost efficiency.5
It is
a question of determining the value of and economic
justification for a given device and not simply how
much payers are willing to pay for it.
Figure 1. Customized value messages
PAYERS demand data that can
provide evidence that a device is
“worth paying for.” This is especially
important in device categories
for which there are numerous
competing options and where costs
need to be controlled.
EMPLOYERS use outcomes data
to plan initiatives in the workplace
for employees to achieve
optimal efficiency, increased
work productivity, and reduced
absenteeism and presenteeism.
PROVIDERS are able to evaluate
competing options more critically
with outcomes data, favoring
those that demonstrate the best
balance among key considerations
of safety, efficacy, and cost.
MANUFACTURERS use outcomes
data to identify key challenges
to achieving successful market
access and formulate value-based
evidence plans in addressing these
challenges.
POLICY MAKERS use outcomes
data to support the regulatory
approval process for equitable
distribution of health care. PRO*
data ensures that the clinical
benefits delivered by a device are
demonstrable and meaningful to
patients in real-world settings.
PATIENTS, as educated consumers,
are becoming increasingly invested
in getting more value out of their
health care delivery system.
PAYERS
EMPLOYERS
PROVIDERS
MANUFACTURERS
POLICY MAKERS
PATIENTS
*
PRO: Patient-reported outcomes
Market access for medical devices
3. Feature Devices Pharmaceuticals
Concept to
commercialization
Average 3–5 years. Average 8–10 years.
Development milestones
Product development in medical
devices is focused on milestones
such as prototype development,
design validation, and manufacturing
scale-up.
Drug development is focused
on health care milestones
such as clinical indications and
reimbursement.
Nature of product
Medical devices are typically based
on mechanical, electrical, information
technology, and systems engineering,
and stem from ideas typically
generated in a clinician’s practice.
Pharmaceuticals are based on
chemistry, biotechnology, and
genetics, originating in an RD
laboratory.
Patent coverage
Multiple fields of art contribute to the
development of a medical device as
compared to a pharmaceutical drug.
Medical device patents are typically
directed to the structure, function,
and methods of using the device.
As a result, many more patents are
used to cover a medical device than a
pharmaceutical.
Since there are a finite number of
molecules that may be used to elicit
a desired biological response and
clinical outcome, a single patent
covering the class of molecules
that comprise the pharmaceutical
product is sufficient.
Patent types
The ultimate effectiveness and
benefit of a medical device is
dependent in part on the skill of
the clinician using or implanting the
device.
In this regard, medical device patents
may cover method of implant,
installation, surgical navigation,
placement, adjustment, calibration,
and adaptation to particular patients.
Specifically, medical device patents
may also have method claims such as
method of manufacturing, implanting,
operating and initiating.
Most pharmaceutical products are
either ingested or introduced into
the body directly and therefore
constitute therapies themselves.
Accordingly, with very few
exceptions, pharmaceutical
patents do not have method claims
regarding delivery mechanisms.
Further, pharmaceutical product
patents are usually directed to
the structure of the molecules
themselves or methods of
manufacturing or purifying that
compound.
D I F F E R E N C E S B E T W E E N
M E D I C A L D E V I C E S A N D
P H A R M A C E U T I C A L S
Health care products and services represent an
ever-increasing share of global output. This has
caused governments and payers to examine critically
the value they receive from products and services
purchased.5
While pharmaceutical companies have
been under scrutiny for well over a decade, this is
a more recent phenomenon in the medical device
industry, which represents a smaller share of health
care spend and has far fewer blockbuster products
compared to pharmaceuticals.6
Some key differences
between medical devices and pharmaceutical drugs
are highlighted in the table below.
Table 2. Key differences between medical devices and pharmaceuticals7-10
Challenges and Potential Solutions
4. Feature Devices Pharmaceuticals
Alternate designs
“Design-arounds” are common for
medical devices.
The prevalence of alternate medical
device designs typically precludes an
exclusive position in the marketplace.
Pharmaceutical products generally
do not lend themselves to “design-
around” efforts and do not require
several patents covering variations
or alternate designs.
Once a key pharmaceutical patent
has expired, it will be possible
for other manufacturers to make
“generic” versions of the same
pharmaceutical.
Improvements and
product life cycle
As new technologies continue
to develop, each field of art may
implement these new technologies,
which make frequent iterative
improvements possible.
As a result, medical devices have a
short commercial life cycle, typically
18–24 months.
Each new component or
improvement (with the new
technology implemented in the
product) may be individually
patentable.
Pharmaceuticals typically have a
long commercial life cycle
(10 to 20+ years), during which they
do not undergo significant changes.
Number of patents
A single medical device may be
covered by hundreds of patents.
A single drug can have a maximum
of 2 patents.
M A R K E T A C C E S S F O R M E D I C A L
D E V I C E S
Market access assists the right patients to get timely
and easy access to a medical device at an affordable
price. Availability, accessibility, affordability, adoption
(by health care professionals and patients), and
willingness to pay (reimbursement) should be
achieved while ensuring equity and quality at each
level. Quality is defined here as compliance with
international, regional, and national standards.5
Equitable access refers to the imperative to ensure
access according to needs.5
In the medical device arena, where new technologies
and products are developed at a rapid pace and gain
regulatory clearance relatively quickly compared to
pharmaceuticals, it is crucial that proper forethought
is given to a strategy that addresses the real
concerns of relevant stakeholders on the path to
getting products and services adopted.6
It requires
a combined regulatory, reimbursement, and market
access strategy and early engagement with payers
and regulators throughout the product development
phase.
C H A L L E N G E S T O S U C C E S S F U L
M A R K E T A C C E S S
Industry forces (e.g., patent expirations and achieving
return on investment in high-growth therapy areas)
and politico-economic forces (e.g., payers rewarding
only true innovation and continuous health care
reform) pressure the medical device industry in
unprecedented ways.11
Multiple challenges and inefficiencies in health
care systems and uncertainty for manufacturers
lead to unnecessary delays in access to innovative
technologies, slow adoption of new and effective
Market access for medical devices
5. technologies, and inequalities in guaranteeing that
patients receive the most effective and efficient
treatment.7
Figure 2. Challenges to successful market access
Creation of value: Principal concerns of
market access during the development and
commercialization processes are creation,
substantiation, and communication of value to
stakeholders via health technology assessment
(HTA), health economics and outcomes research,
pricing and reimbursement, clinical trials, and patient
registries, both in the pre- and post-launch periods.
Varied decision-making criteria: Some
reimbursement decisions are based on cost-utility
analysis by estimating the cost of interventions
vis-à-vis the obtained health benefit (e.g., quality-
adjusted life-year). Some countries, such as France
and Germany, account for clinical added value,
followed by “value for money” pricing debates.
The lack of clear definition of “value” prompts
reimbursement and funding decision makers
to prioritize cost-based pricing over value-based
pricing.12
Technological evolution: Technological research
exceeds the pace at which regulations are updated.
New products that fulfill unmet needs are being
developed, and existing products are regularly
optimized and improved.5
Resources: Payer systems and governments have
been expressing increased concern over the rising
cost of health care and the financial sustainability
of health care systems and call for more effective
and strategic public spending on health. However,
this has raised concerns that even in strong,
comprehensive health systems, austerity measures
and cuts in public spending may endanger people’s
access to health care and medicines. The economic
crisis might be used as an excuse for drastic rationing
and reductions in resources for health.5
Occasionally,
calls for effectiveness may be misinterpreted to
mean budget cuts.
Stakeholder engagement: A high level of
engagement from payers, physicians, and industry
has not been seen with medical devices because
of the faster market entry for new products and
the fragmented and often-evolving market access
pathways, which can have a detrimental effect on
commercial success.13
Lack of evidence: Most evidence for the economic
value of medical devices is anecdotal.14
Medical
device industries are in need of consultative
partnerships with health professionals in clinical
practice.
Communication of value: Early adoption of a
product depends largely on a manufacturer’s ability
to increase physicians’ and patients’ uptake and
to generate timely post-marketing real-life data
customized for each stakeholder’s requirement and
expectation.12
W A Y F O R W A R D
Medical device manufacturers should envision a
triple aim of improving patient experience, improving
population health, and reducing the cost of care.3
The role of hospital value analysis committees and
purchase of devices is based on clinical efficacy,
product evaluation, and financial impact should be
clearly understood.5
EVOLUTION OF TECHNOLOGY
RESOURCES
VARIED DECISION-MAKING CRITERIA
VALUE COMMUNICATION
LACK OF EVIDENCE
CREATION OF VALUE
STAKEHOLDER ENGAGEMENT
Challenges and Potential Solutions
6. Figure 3. Crucial steps to better decisions and
outcomes
Successful market access depends on the capacity
of the buyer to understand and properly evaluate,
firstly, the “cost” vs “value” of a medical technology,
especially in the long term and, secondly, the short-
term fiscal challenge and constraints faced by every
institution in the health care system.3
In the light of
increasing budgetary constraints and high out-of-
pocket expenses of patients, HTA becomes one of
the prominent tools obligatory for a transparent,
non-biased basis for decisions on the uptake of a
medical device.13
HTA platforms evaluate the costs,
effectiveness, and broader impact of health care
solutions for those who plan, provide, or receive
care, taking into account clinical, social, humanistic,
economic, legal, and ethical issues.
Device manufacturers understand the growing need
for evidence generation and communication of value,
beyond the traditional approach of stakeholder
relationship management, as critical elements of
successful market access.12
A robust market access strategy has multiple
components that focus on obtaining adequate and
sustainable reimbursement prior to launching a new
technology.
HTA processes: HTA is a decision-making strategy
that compares the effectiveness and cost of a new
technology with competing existing technologies.
The ultimate goal of HTA is to provide policy
recommendations relevant to a new technology’s
potential for safety, efficacy, health innovation, and
return on investment.15
HTA groups can support
medical device innovation in several key capacities
and guide device manufacturers regarding timely
generation of outcomes data.16
HTA groups as resources: HTA groups can also
function as valuable knowledge resource centers
for device manufacturers. Partnership between
regulators and developers may help to expedite
regulatory reform and improve innovative adoption.
The goal of all medical device innovations should be
to reduce the burden on health care system while
providing access to the latest innovations.16
Regulatory processes: Another solution would be
reforming regulatory processes to reduce the time-
to-market for medical devices and supporting RD,
while adhering to high standards of safety and risk
reduction.17
Timely and well-defined pathways as well
as transparency in decision-making will enable better
predictability and consistency of reimbursement
decisions, ensure greater stakeholder involvement,
facilitate improved access to care, reward and
encourage innovation, and create a seamless health
care system.18
These principles will maximize the
effectiveness, value, and overall sustainability of
health care systems, support innovation, guarantee
value for payers, and ensure that patients are able to
receive the health care they need and deserve.
Stakeholder involvement: Research and experience
show that physician partnership and consultation
throughout the design, testing, and validation phases
of new medical device technologies is key to success
for the device manufacturers.18
Physicians assume
an important role in medical device companies by
sharing expert knowledge of health care trends and
the health needs of specific populations, which is
the basis for device development. This encourages
knowledge transfer between industrial, academic,
clinical, and developmental researchers. It is
advisable to build a national strategy to enable links
and partnerships among industrial, government, and
health care system stakeholders to develop a strong
and vibrant medical device industry.19,20
Use real-world
data to drive
device design,
market access,
and adoption
Go beyond
customer
relationship
management
Learn to link medical device data to
patient outcomes more effectively
Market access for medical devices
7. Value communication to end-users: Companies
should communicate their value messages
through open events in a multidisciplinary learning
environment, where all physicians (not only medical
specialists, but also interventional radiologists,
pathologists, and others) can meet and share their
experiences. Collaboration with patient advocacy
and support groups is another crucial component in
raising awareness of the device.21,22
Figure 4. Critical elements of market access
strategy
F U T U R E T R E N D S
As per the FDA definition, “combination products are
therapeutic and diagnostic products that combine
drugs, devices, and/or biological products”23
and can
include combinations of the following types: drug–
device, biologic–device, drug–biologic and drug–
device–biologic. They can be physically or chemically
combined, packaged together as a kit, or separate
cross-labeled products.23
Examples of combination
products include prefilled syringes, antimicrobial-
coated catheters, co-packaged products that are
required to be delivered sequentially for therapeutic
effect, and biologic or synthetic surgical patches that
are pre-packaged into delivery. The drug–device
combination products market will report a market
value worth $115 billion by 2019.24
Regulatory frameworks will continue to be
challenged in the near future by two emerging
types of devices: combination devices that facilitate
drug delivery; and connected devices that record,
store, transmit, and display patient information. The
majority of new medical devices have one or both of
these functions.25,26
The challenge for obtaining approval for these
new-generation devices is managing three distinct,
and sometimes conflicting, regulatory processes:
(a) device regulations; (b) drug/pharmaceutical
regulations; and (c) privacy of information laws. If
market access for these devices is not successful, the
loss to the industry is profound, but the loss of these
innovations to the health care system could be even
more costly.26-28
Health care systems need to encourage the
introduction and development of innovative new
devices that provide relevant benefits to patients,
physicians, payers, providers, and the overall
health care system.29
The need for value-driven
innovation is particularly important because of
an ageing population and the increasing burden
of chronic diseases. Reimbursement of medical
devices and services becomes a core component
of a sustainable, effective, and patient-centered
health care system.30,31
There exists a pressing need
to review and adapt the existing regulatory and
reimbursement systems for efficient and sustainable
health care infrastructures.
R E F E R E N C E S
1. http://www.who.int/topics/medical_devices/en/
2. Rebecca S. Drug vs device studies are they so different? 2014.
www.icr-global.org
3. Mark W. Accessing the US medical device market. 2016. http://
www.alacramed.com/news/usmedicaldevicemarketaccess/
4. Kalorama: global medical device market reaches $381
billion. 2016. http://www.prnewswire.com/news/
kalorama+information
5. Sarah C. A must read overview of the medical device industry.
2015. http://marketrealist.com/2015/11/must-read-overview-
medical-device-industry/
6. Scott TH. Mapping the medical device development process.
2010. http://digitalcommons.calpoly.edu/cgi/viewcontent.
cgi?article=1015context=itsp
7. http://www.globalmedicaltechnologyalliance.org/differences-
between-medical-devices-and-drugs.html
HTA GROUPS AS RESOURCES
REGULATORY PROCESSES
STAKEHOLDER INVOLVEMENT
VALUE COMMUNICATION TO END-USERS
HTA PROCESSES
Challenges and Potential Solutions
8. 8. Outlining the key differences between medical device and drug
trials. 2015. http://www.clinicaltrialsarena.com/news/medical-
devices/outlining-the-key-differences-between-medical-
deviceand-drug-trials-to-determine-how-device-trials-can-best-
be-run-effectively-4644599
9. http://www.globalmedicaltechnologyalliance.org/differences-
between-medical-devices-and-drugs.html
10. Paul S. Medical devices vs pharmaceuticals - a brief guide to
the differences. 2016. https://social.hays.com/2016/06/21/
medical-devices-vs-pharmaceuticals-a-brief-guide-to-the-
differences/
11. Heather T. Obamacare is changing market access. 2013. http://
www.mddionline.com/article/obamacare-changing-market-
access
12. Intersystems Corporation. The key challenges facing medical
device manufacturers. 2014
13. Andrew MS. Studies criticize U.S. medical device approval
process. 2014. http://www.reuters.com/article/us-fda-devices-
idUSKCN0HP05Z20140930
14. Mark M. Reimbursement 101: evidence for devices is often
still lacking. 2010. http://www.medicaldevicedaily.com/servlet/
com.accumedia.web.Dispatcher?next=bioWorldHeadlines_
articleforceid=73525
15. Ridhima A. Risk-sharing agreements for medical devices in
emerging markets: opportunities and challenges. 2014. http://
centres.insead.edu/healthcare-management-initiative/thought-
pieces/documents/RiskSharingforMedtech-INSEAD-HMI.pdf
16. Michael M. UK to launch new office for market access. 2015.
http://www.raps.org/SearchRegFocus.aspx?name=Michael%20
Mezher
17. How to transform the product launch process for better
outcomes. 2015. https://zephyrhealth.com/pharma-and-
medical-device-companies-use-real-world-insights-to-
transform-the-product-launch-process/
18. Eucomed six key principles for the efficient and sustainable
funding reimbursement of medical devices. 2014. http://
www.medtecheurope.org/sites/default/files/eucomed_
position_paper_reimbursement_0.pdf
19. Latesha R. Medical devices and HEOR: positioning yourself to
meet payer needs in 2015. 2015. https://www.pm360online.
com/medical-devices-and-heor-positioning-yourself-to-meet-
payer-needs-in-2015/
20. Marketing: medical devices vs pharma. 2012. http://www.
pharmexec.com/marketing-medical-devices-vs-pharma
21. Ken S. Improving patient access though early
collaboration. CDRH 2014-2015 Strategic Priorities.
2015. http://www.fda.gov/AboutFDA/CentersOffices/
OfficeofMedicalProductsandTobacco/CDRH/
CDRHVisionandMission/ucm384132.htm
22. Zachary B. RAPS Switzerland chapter to host 2015 EU medtech
reimbursement roundtable. 2015. http://www.raps.org/
SearchRegFocus.aspx?name=Zachary%20Brousseau
23. Combination Products. http://www.fda.gov/
CombinationProducts/
24. Drug-device combination products market will report a market
value worth US $115 billion by 2019: Transparency Market
Research. 2015. http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/
drug-device-combination-products-market-will-report-a-
market-value-worth-us115-billion-by-2019-transparency-
market-research-520759211.html
25. Bo W; Aaron SK. Promoting therapeutic innovation: what do we
do about drug-device combinations? 2016. https://newsatjama.
jama.com/2016/01/21/jama-forum-promoting-therapeutic-
innovation-what-do-we-do-about-drug-device-combinations/
26. Theresa J. A European perspective and guide to key regulatory
considerations for combination products. 2015. https://embed.
topra.org/sites/default/files/regrapart/1/6118/regulatory_
rapporteur_june_2015_a_european_perspective.pdf
27. Gordon BS. Reimbursement coding systems and innovative
medical devices. 2016. https://www.medtechintelligence.com/
column/reimbursement-coding-systems-innovative-medical-
devices/
28. Reed FB; Jason WN; Warren AK; Amir A. Is patent
“evergreening” restricting access to medicine/device
combination products? 2016. http://journals.plos.org/plosone/
article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0148939
29. Shayesteh F; Lyndsey K. Bridging the regulatory gaps between
combination product makers. 2015. http://www.sfl-services.
com/media/609Y3CQF/121_Bridging_the_regulatory_gaps.pdf
30. Ildar A; Rakshambikai R; Illias A; Phani KT. Market access
advancements and challenges in “drug-companion diagnostic
test” co-development in Europe. 2015. http://www.ncbi.nlm.
nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4493497/
31. Drug-device convergence. 2014. http://www.pmlive.com/
pharma_news/drug-device_convergence_554852
Market access for medical devices
9. NANCY CONNELLY
Business Development, USA
Tel: +1-631-206-4340
nancy.connelly@cactusglobal.com
GARY GROESBECK
Business Development, USA
Tel: +1-267-332-0051 Ext:100
gary.groesbeck@cactusglobal.com
IVAN D’SOUZA
Business Development, Europe/Asia
Tel: +1-267-332-0051 Ext:167
ivan.dsouza@cactusglobal.com
Challenges and Potential Solutions
USA | Japan | India | South Korea | China