Abstract

Today policy makers face the challenge to devise a policy framework that improves orphan medicinal product (OMP) development by creating incentives to deliver treatments where there are none and to authorize innovative and transformative treatments where treatments already exist. The European Expert Group on Orphan Drug Incentives (hereafter, OD Expert Group) came together in 2020 to develop policy proposals to facilitate EU policy makers to meet this challenge. The group brings together representatives of the broad rare disease community, including researchers, academia, patient representatives, members of the investor community, rare disease companies and trade associations. The group’s work builds on the recognition that only an ambitious policy agenda developed in a multi-stakeholder setting can bring about the quantum leap needed to address unmet needs of rare disease patients today. Along the OMP development path, the OD Expert Group has identified four main needs that a policy revision should address: 1) Need to improve the R&D ecosystem for basic research and company take-up of development. 2) Need to improve the system of financial incentives and rewards. 3) Need to improve the flexibility, predictability and speed of the regulatory pathway. 4) Need to improve the coherence and predictability of demand and pricing for OMPs. This article presents the results of the OD Expert Group work as a set of guiding principles that the revision of the policy framework should follow and a set of 14 policy proposals that address the main needs of OMP development in Europe today.

Highlights

  • Rare diseases are diseases with a low prevalence

  • This article presents the results of the orphan drug (OD) Expert Group work as a set of guiding principles that the revision of the policy framework should follow and a set of 14 policy proposals that address the main needs of orphan medicinal products (OMPs) development in Europe today

  • The 14 policy proposals are a further step towards achieving the goal that European Union 2000 (EU) policy makers set for themselves 20 years ago: achieve the same quality of treatment for rare disease patients as other patients within the European Union

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Summary

Introduction

Rare diseases are diseases with a low prevalence. In the European Union 2000 (EU), a disease is considered rare when it affects less than 5 per 10,000 people (European Commission 2020a, 5).While the number of persons suffering from an individual rare disease is small, overall, rare diseases affect many Europeans. The EU OMP Regulation, introduced in 2000, aimed at ensuring higher availability of OMPs through a specific set of incentives (European Commission 1999, European Commission 2000): a 10-year market exclusivity period for designated OMPs, protocol assistance from the European Medicines Agency (EMA), fee reductions during the approval process, and EU-funded research for OMP development aimed at increasing research in rare diseases.

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