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Plovidiv and Matera: 2019 European Capitals of Culture

Euractiv.com - Tue, 01/08/2019 - 07:54
European Capitals of Culture have been chosen for the past 33 years. Typically, two cities share this title for the period of a year and in 2019 they will be in Bulgaria and Italy. EURACTIV Germany reports
Categories: European Union

Austria in starting blocks for European elections campaign

Euractiv.com - Tue, 01/08/2019 - 07:52
The European elections campaign began just one day after the end of the Austrian Presidency of the Council of the European Union, with a special guest. EURACTIV Germany reports.
Categories: European Union

Poland to increase number of lobbyists in Brussels

Euractiv.com - Tue, 01/08/2019 - 07:48
Warsaw announced to create a lobbying centre for Polish entrepreneurs in Brussels to help them exert a greater influence on EU legislation. EURACTIV Poland reports.
Categories: European Union

Pressure mounts on DR Congo over election outcome

Euractiv.com - Tue, 01/08/2019 - 07:36
Public and diplomatic pressure mounted Monday (8 January) on the Democratic Republic of Congo to announce the outcome of 30 December elections to replace long-term leader Joseph Kabila.
Categories: European Union

Greece gives investors another week for coal plant bids

Euractiv.com - Tue, 01/08/2019 - 07:25
Greece has given investors another week to 15 January to submit binding bids for three coal-fired power plants and a licence to build another one, a senior energy ministry official told Reuters on Monday (7 January).
Categories: European Union

Indicative programme - General Affairs Council of 8 January 2019

European Council - Tue, 01/08/2019 - 04:55
Main agenda items, approximate timing, public sessions and press opportunities.
Categories: European Union

Investment firms: Council agrees position on new regulatory and supervision framework

European Council - Tue, 01/08/2019 - 04:55
EU ambassadors agreed the Council's position on a new prudential and supervision framework for investment firms.
Categories: European Union

A novel approach for better delivery of precision medicines in Europe

Written by Gianluca Quaglio,

Research gap between drug development and real world healthcare delivery © Pot Regnier/STOA Introduction

The STOA workshop entitled ‘Innovative solution for research in healthcare’, chaired by Paul Rübig (EPP, AT), first STOA Vice-Chair, is an opportunity to discuss the implementation of an ‘innovation-centred’ system, exploring a truly ‘patient-centred’ paradigm with systematically coordinated applied clinical research carried out in conjunction with drug development. The workshop will be held on 10 January 2019, 9:30-12:30, at the European Parliament in Brussels (Altiero Spinelli building, room 5E2).

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#HealthSTOA

In 2015, the Council of the EU, while accepting that there is no common definition of the term precision (personalised) medicine, noted at the same time that this is generally understood to refer to a medical model, which uses the characterisation of individuals’ phenotypes and genotypes for tailoring the right therapeutic strategy for the right person at the right time, and/or for determining the predisposition to disease, and/or for delivering a targeted prevention strategy.

As the number of authorised drugs that target specific proteins implicated in the disease phenotype increases on the market, and as next-generation sequencing and other technologies bring comprehensive genome-wide analyses to affordable levels, precision medicine begins to play a much wider role in routine practice.

However, once a drug enters the market following regulatory approval, each EU Member State determines its real-world use based on its own criteria: pricing, reimbursement and clinical indications. Such an innovation-centred clinical research landscape might neglect patient-relevant issues in a real-world setting. There is a demand for reform of the current system to create a truly ‘patient-centred’ paradigm, with systematically coordinated treatment optimisation in conjunction with the drug development process.

Two disconnected stages: from drug development to real-world application

In Europe, most of the clinical research dedicated to therapeutic innovations in drugs aims primarily at regulatory approval. In this first stage, scientific issues on the efficacy of a new drug are addressed in selected patient populations and lead up to European Medicine Agency (EMA) approval.

Once a drug enters the market, the second stage begins, where research addresses clinically relevant questions to tailor the therapeutic indications to ‘real-life’ clinical practice. Due to this discontinuity between the first and the second stage, research during the second stage results – for various reasons – in suboptimal uptake of findings into practice or clinical guidelines.

Administration of improper treatment may generate unnecessary toxicity for patients, but also affects national healthcare budgets and adds cost to already highly priced treatments. Therefore, following the drug development phase, independent investigations are needed on the optimal use of medicines (known as ‘treatment optimisation’).

Regulatory approval

The regulatory approval of new treatments does not address clinical issues relevant to patients in real-world settings, such as: (i) how to combine new treatments with the existing therapeutic options; most patients may need some form of combination therapy, which is determined individually, based on a number of clinical and biomarker predictors; (ii) how to evaluate the clinical outcomes when new treatments are administered in off-label indications; (iii) how to determine the optimal scheme/treatment duration and at which benefit/risk ratio; (iv) what the long-term issues related to the treatment are. When addressed, the above-mentioned issues are studied mostly following EMA’s approval and rely on the goodwill and agendas of independent research groups.

Reasons for a lack of real-world evidence

There are a number of reasons for such lack of real-world evidence, mentioned briefly here. First, regulatory approval of new treatments requires data on ‘quality, safety and efficacy’ and not on ‘comparability’. This approach is centred on the innovative treatment, as its value is assessed in absolute terms, not relatively to the pre-existing therapeutic armamentarium of medicines, equipment and techniques available. Second, in order to maximise the experimental treatment effect, patients included in clinical trials represent only 2-4% of the overall targeted population, leading to a poor external validity of clinical trials. Finally, there is a lack of evidence that would make it possible to rank the multiple therapeutic options available and define the conditions for optimal care.

Aim of the STOA workshop

This workshop will provide patients, clinicians, payers, Health Technology Assessment (HTA) agencies, regulators, pharmaceutical companies, researchers, policy-makers and the public at large with an opportunity to present their point of view and their innovative suggestions for future drug development in Europe.

The establishment of a new developmental framework through close collaboration between industry, patient representatives, and regulatory, governmental, academic and other stakeholders would hopefully facilitate comparisons of assay performance before regulatory approval, harmonising the approval process. Such a framework could mitigate the somewhat problematic current situation. The issue is ubiquitous in modern biomarker/drug development processes and is not related to particular targets or pathways.

Categories: European Union

A new Horizon for Europe’s Media, Cultural and Creative industries

Euractiv.com - Mon, 01/07/2019 - 16:46
Media and the Cultural and Creative Industries are underrepresented in policies and actions aimed at promoting research and innovation in the EU. Luciano Morganti and Heritiana Ranaivoson present their reflections and recommendations for the future of these sectors.
Categories: European Union

The Brief, powered by Metal Packaging Europe – Just like Blade Runner, it always rains

Euractiv.com - Mon, 01/07/2019 - 16:41
Killer robots, sex robots, huge video ad panels and flying cars. The world may well be closer to looking like the dark melting pot Blade Runner imagined for this 2019, aside from intergalactic battles and constant rain. But this year we won’t be worried about robots going rogue, at least for now, but who will become their almighty master.
Categories: European Union

Former Greek PM teases fresh bailout, Commission says Greece is ‘secured’

Euractiv.com - Mon, 01/07/2019 - 16:14
Greece’s position at the heart of the eurozone and the European Union is "secured", according to the European Commission, following remarks made by a former Greek prime minister who claimed the country will soon seek fresh EU aid.
Categories: European Union

Biogas in Germany: Maintaining momentum

Euractiv.com - Mon, 01/07/2019 - 13:38
With the European Parliament backing a net zero emissions target for 2050, EU member states will need to further develop their biogas markets to continue to reduce emissions from waste, energy, and transport, write Benjamin Budde and David Newman.
Categories: European Union

[Ticker] UK stages lorry rehearsal for no-deal Brexit

Euobserver.com - Mon, 01/07/2019 - 13:35
The UK staged a 'rehearsal' for a no-deal Brexit on Monday, with a disused airfield in Kent commandeered for parking of lorries in the event of supply chains being disrupted. Manston airfield, between the ports of Dover and Ramsgate, is scheduled to become a temporary lorry park for some 6,000 vehicles. However, only some 87 lorries participated, according to the Guardian. Dover alone handles 10,000 trucks a day.
Categories: European Union

[Ticker] Police quiz teenager over German politicians' hacking

Euobserver.com - Mon, 01/07/2019 - 13:34
Police in Germany on Sunday questioned a 19-year old from the south-west of the country over a mass hacking of personal data from politicians, journalists and celebrities. According to state broadcaster ARD, the man claimed the data breach was committed by a contact of his, known only as "Orbit". Details from several hundred victims, including chancellor Angela Merkel, was published on a Twitter account over the holiday period.
Categories: European Union

German MEP: Politicians should trust EFSA, set aside their personal views

Euractiv.com - Mon, 01/07/2019 - 12:34
EU politicians should show trust in the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) and put their personal opinions on food safety assessments on hold, centre-right MEP Peter Jahn told EURACTIV Germany in an interview.
Categories: European Union

Debate: Trade row: US and China want to talk

Eurotopics.net - Mon, 01/07/2019 - 12:14
The US and China are making a fresh attempt to settle their trade dispute. A US delegation will be in Beijing for talks on Monday and Tuesday. Who is hardest hit by the trade war: Beijing, Washington or uninvolved third parties?
Categories: European Union

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