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MPA

Medical Products Agency
Country: Sweden
7 Projects, page 1 of 2
  • Funder: European Commission Project Code: 101136365
    Overall Budget: 6,291,430 EURFunder Contribution: 6,198,300 EUR

    The evaluation of new medicines for rare diseases (RD) including rare paediatric RDs is challenging for several reasons, among which are the small patient sample sizes, heterogeneity of patients and diseases and heterogeneity in disease knowledge. Due to these difficulties, access to effective treatments and the number of treatment options are often limited in RDs. INVENTS aims to provide clinical trial trialists, researchers and regulators with a global framework encompassing methods, workflows and evidence assessment tools to be implemented in orphan and paediatric drug development. Our ambition is to significantly improve the evaluation of evidence and regulatory decision-making through the development and validation of: refined longitudinal model-based diseases trajectories and treatment effect, improved extrapolation models, in silico trials (e.g., virtual patient cohorts), optimised model-based clinical trial designs and evidence synthesis methods. These will be evaluated through simulation studies and tested on extensive data from a range of use cases provided by our industrial partners Roche and Novartis and Real World data (RWD) from RD registry. The INVENTS framework will improve consistency and efficiency of the drug evaluation process for RD by augmenting clinical evidence without compromising its scientific integrity and providing regulators assessment credibility criteria. At the end of this 5 years project, the European industry will be able to exploit novel and improved clinical trial designs, in silico trials and RWD analysis approaches supporting drug development in RD. The European Medicine Agency and European national regulators (including Health Technology Assessment bodies) will be supplied with a general framework allowing better informed decision-making. Most importantly, RD patients will benefit from an increased and faster access to efficacious and safe treatments.

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  • Funder: European Commission Project Code: 201619
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  • Funder: European Commission Project Code: 825881
    Overall Budget: 1,986,000 EURFunder Contribution: 1,986,000 EUR

    Lack of specific relevant know-how in regulatory science delays the development of new treatment strategies or limits the chances that promising innovations will reach patients. STARS aims to improve the direct regulatory impact of results obtained in medical research. Seventeen European countries are represented in the consortium through their national competent authorities, alongside academic and industry representatives, and associations with relevant experience. The work plan includes the development of a Comprehensive Inventory of existing support activities based on a detailed analysis of the currently established programmes. This analysis is also the basis for development of a Common Strategy to strengthen regulatory sciences and two curricula, the Core Curriculum specifying essential knowledge for the professional training of clinical scientists and the Comprehensive Curriculum defining relevant knowledge for specific post-graduate programmes. Three pilot projects aim (i) to transfer an identified best practice example for training programmes to other EEA countries, (ii) to implement a new support activity addressing a gap in regulatory knowledge of significant relevance and (iii) to implement the Comprehensive Curriculum. STARS will deliver consensual recommendations ensuring sustainable support of academic research and will propose additional support mechanisms based on a comprehensive analysis of needs. STARS has the objective and the potential to complement, coordinate and harmonise regulatory efforts among Member States and at European level to support academic health research for the benefit of patients. The aim is to reach academic researchers very early in the planning of relevant grant applications. A further aim is to strengthen regulatory knowledge in general by reaching clinical scientists during professional training and qualification.

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  • Funder: European Commission Project Code: 875299
    Overall Budget: 20,731,000 EURFunder Contribution: 18,994,900 EUR

    This innovation action will give a powerful impulse to implementation of ISO IDMP (ID of Medicinal Products) standards in EU Member States drug databases, supporting safe cross-border ePrescription/eDispensation and effective pharmacovigilance. Once EU-interoperable data on medicines taken by patients become available, further benefits will accrue through better health data for improved clinical decision support, patient empowerment, public health and clinical research. New opportunities will arise for pharma industry, software developers, SMEs providing smart apps and others, thereby fostering their innovation capacity and competitiveness. The many challenges still to be faced on this road will be tackled by a powerful consortium assembling all relevant actors, with critical mass for impact throughout the EU. After 10 years of development, the IDMP suite of standards is ready for implementation. Though some isolated implementation work has started, the time is now ripe for a more concerted effort towards large-scale implementation, contributing to this global interoperability endeavour and delivering benefits to EU citizens. Project ambition centres on conversion of key regulatory and clinical processes to use IDMP. These information value chains must be converted over their full length from data input to data repositories to data usage. Project work spans all three areas, focussing on the most challenging, the implementation of EU and national SPOR (substances, products, organisations, referentials) data bases, including establishing an EU Substance Reference System (EU-SRS). Such information is fundamental to cross-border ePrescription where safe dispensation may require reliable identification of substances in available products. 19 countries are represented, including 26 national Drug and eHealth Agencies. Stakeholders are involved through their associations. Duration is 4 years, budget € 21 m, with requested funding € 19 m.

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  • Funder: European Commission Project Code: 604182
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