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Moving somatic gene editing to the clinic: routes to market access and reimbursement in Europe
by
Weinreich, Stephanie S
, Klein, David
, Rigter Tessel
, Cornel, Martina C
in
Gene therapy
/ Genome editing
/ Patients
/ Precision medicine
/ Reimbursement
/ Safety
2021
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Do you wish to request the book?
Moving somatic gene editing to the clinic: routes to market access and reimbursement in Europe
by
Weinreich, Stephanie S
, Klein, David
, Rigter Tessel
, Cornel, Martina C
in
Gene therapy
/ Genome editing
/ Patients
/ Precision medicine
/ Reimbursement
/ Safety
2021
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Moving somatic gene editing to the clinic: routes to market access and reimbursement in Europe
Journal Article
Moving somatic gene editing to the clinic: routes to market access and reimbursement in Europe
2021
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Overview
Somatic gene editing (SGE) holds great promise for making genetic therapy possible for many monogenic conditions very soon. Is our current system of European market authorization and reimbursement ready for the expected tsunami of gene therapies? At a recent workshop of the Netherlands ZonMw consortium on ethical, legal, and social implications of personalized medicine, we discussed the current possibilities for bringing new gene therapies to the clinic. In Europe, it is not yet clear whether the route via the European medicines agency as an advanced therapy medicinal product is the most appropriate for evaluation of highly personalized SGE applications, although this may optimally guarantee safety and effectiveness. Compassionate use may ensure faster access than the centralized procedure but does not stimulate the commercial development of products. Prescription to named patients may only provide adequate access for single patients. Temporary authorization of use may allow access to medication half a year before formal market authorization has been granted, but may also have large budget impacts. Magistral compounding under a hospital exemption may be an attractive solution for rare, tailor-made applications at an acceptable price. To approve local experimental use of a therapy on a case-by-case basis may be fast, but does not guarantee optimal safety, effectiveness, and broad implementation. We argue that alternative routes should be considered for products developed for a market of large groups of patients versus unique personalized treatments. A balance between scientific evidence for safety and effectiveness, affordability, and fast access may demand a range of alternative solutions.
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Subject
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