Abstract

IntroductionThere is a range of activities that health technology assessment (HTA) doers have started to improve the process of generation of required evidence for new technologies, and the alignment of regulatory and reimbursement processes that retard the access to patients to them. Different organizations call those processes early advice, early dialogue, or scientific advice to those activities.MethodsWe performed a systematic review of the activities named scientific advice (SA), early advice (EA) and early dialogue (ED). Major databases and HTA organizations were explored. The protocol and search strategy were published in PROSPERO. The selection of final articles and documents was done in pairs, and when discrepancies were found a third person resolved with the consensus of the others. A matrix was used to define the commonalities and differences of the described processes.ResultsWe initially retrieved 949 documents, after the analysis of duplications and the full text reading of the selected ones, we finally selected 39 documents and described: the type of technologies, the process, the stakeholders, the duration, the costs, and the impact. Big HTA agencies such as the Canadian Agency for Drugs and Technologies in Health (CADTH) or the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) included EA or SA among their portfolio of activities as well as networks (European Network for HTA (EUnetHTA) or smaller agencies such as HTA Wales or Basque Office for HTA (Osteba) among others. The type of activity, the process, duration, purpose and costs differ among HTA doers.ConclusionsThere is a need to define what we meant when we are talking about SA, ED, and EA. In fact, regulators used the same processes with different purposes. Our systematic review and the lessons learnt from the European-funded SAFENMEDTECH project will propose a detailed framework that can be useful to better understanding the needs of each of the involved parties and how to make the processes involved more efficient.

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