SATURN: assessing the feasibility of utilising existing registries for real-world evidence data collection to meet patients, regulatory, health technology assessment and payer requirements

被引:1
|
作者
Sangiorgi, L. [1 ]
Boarini, M. [1 ]
Mordenti, M. [1 ]
Wang, V. [2 ]
Westerheim, I. [3 ]
Skarberg, R. T. [3 ,4 ]
Cavaller-Bellaubi, M. [5 ]
Clancy, James [6 ]
Pinedo-Villanueva, R. [7 ]
Lente, E. J. V. [8 ]
Marchetti, M. [9 ]
机构
[1] IRCCS Ist Ortoped Rizzoli, Dept Rare Skeletal Disorders, Bologna, Italy
[2] UBC Late Stage Ltd, London, England
[3] OIFE Osteogenesis Imperfecta Federat Europe, Mechelen, Belgium
[4] European Reference Network Rare Bone Dis, Coordinating Ctr, Bologna, Italy
[5] EURORDIS Rare Dis Europe, Patient Engagement & Therapeut Dev, Paris, France
[6] Mereo Biopharm Grp Plc, London, England
[7] Univ Oxford, Nuffield Dept Orthopaed, Rheumatol & Musculoskeletal Sci, Oxford, England
[8] Med Evaluat Comm, Brussels, Belgium
[9] Italian Med Agcy, European Member State Coordinat Grp Hlth Technol A, Milan, Italy
关键词
Feasibility assessment; Existing registries; REQueST; Gap analysis; Compliance check;
D O I
10.1186/s13023-024-03341-4
中图分类号
Q3 [遗传学];
学科分类号
071007 ; 090102 ;
摘要
BackgroundSATURN (Systematic Accumulation of Treatment practices and Utilisation, Real world evidence, and Natural history data) for the rare condition osteogenesis imperfecta (OI) has the objective to create a common core dataset by utilising existing, well-established data sources to meet the needs of the various stakeholders (physicians, registry/dataset owners, patients and patient associations, OI community leaders, European [EU] policymakers, regulators, health technology assessments [HTA]s, and healthcare systems including payers). This paper describes the steps taken to assess the feasibility of one existing OI registry (i.e., the Registry of OI [ROI]) as a candidate for SATURN. The same methodology will be applied to other existing OI registries in the future and this same concept could be utilised for other rare disease registries.MethodsThe approach to assessing the feasibility of the ROI registry consisted of three steps: (1) an assessment of the registry characteristics using the Registry Evaluation and Quality Standards Tool (REQueST); (2) a gap analysis comparing SATURN required Core Variables to those being captured in the registry's Case Report Form (CRF); and (3) a compliance check on the data exchange process following the Title 21 of Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) Part 11/EudraLex Annex 11 Compliance Checklist. The first registry that SATURN has assessed is the ROI database at the Istituto Ortopedico Rizzoli (IOR) in Italy.ResultsThe results from the ROI REQueST have demonstrated satisfactory complete responses in terms of methodology, essential standards, interpretability, and interoperability-readiness for data linkage, data sources, and ethics to meet the needs of data customers. However, the ROI data is from a tertiary referral centre which may limit the ability to understand the full patient journey. The gap analysis has revealed that an exact or logical match between SATURN requested variables and the ROI current variables exists for the following items: patient characteristics, treatment of OI (medical and surgical) and treatment of pain (with the exception of frequency of treatment and reasons for discontinuation), fracture history and bone density. However, data on safety was missing. The compliance check has implied that the ROI implemented appropriate controls for the web-based platform (i.e., Genotype-phenotype Data Integration Platform [GeDI]) that is involved in processing the electronic patient data, and GeDI is a validated/compliant application that follows relevant 21 CFR Part 11/EudraLex Annex 11 regulations.ConclusionsThis robust feasibility process highlights potential limitations and opportunities to develop and to refine the collaboration with the ROI as the SATURN programme moves forward. It also ensures that the existing datasets in the rare condition OI are being maximised to respond to the needs of patients, data customers and decision-makers. This feasibility process has allowed SATURN to build a compliant methodology that aligns with the requirements from the European Medicines Agency (EMA) and HTAs. More data variables will continue to be developed and refined along the way with more registries participating in SATURN. As a result, SATURN will become a meaningful and truly collaborative core dataset, which will also contribute to advancing understanding of OI diagnosis, treatment, and care.
引用
收藏
页数:17
相关论文
共 19 条
  • [1] Real-world evidence: perspectives on challenges, value, and alignment of regulatory and national health technology assessment data collection requirements
    Sievers, Hannah
    Joos, Angelika
    Hiligsmann, Mickael
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF TECHNOLOGY ASSESSMENT IN HEALTH CARE, 2021, 37 (01)
  • [2] Real-world evidence to support health technology assessment and payer decision making: is it now or never?
    Murphy, Linda A.
    Akehurst, Ron
    Cunningham, David
    de Pouvourville, Gerard
    Sola-Morales, Oriol
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF TECHNOLOGY ASSESSMENT IN HEALTH CARE, 2025, 41 (01)
  • [3] Real-world evidence and nonrandomized data in health technology assessment: use existing methods to address unmeasured confounding?
    Sammon, Cormac J.
    Leahy, Thomas P.
    Gsteiger, Sandro
    Ramagopalan, Sreeram
    JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE EFFECTIVENESS RESEARCH, 2020, 9 (14) : 969 - 972
  • [4] Can we use existing guidance to support the development of robust real-world evidence for health technology assessment/payer decision-making?
    Capkun, Gorana
    Corry, Sorcha
    Dowling, Oonagh
    Kolaei, Fatemeh Asad Zadeh Vosta
    Takyar, Shweta
    Furtado, Claudia
    Jonsson, Pall
    Kleinermans, Diane
    Lambert, Laurie
    Schiel, Anja
    Facey, Karen
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF TECHNOLOGY ASSESSMENT IN HEALTH CARE, 2022, 38 (01)
  • [5] REAL-WORLD EVIDENCE RECOMMENDATIONS FOR GENE THERAPIES: REGULATORY VERSUS HEALTH TECHNOLOGY ASSESSMENT
    Allen, G.
    Summers, D. M.
    Evans, J.
    VALUE IN HEALTH, 2020, 23 : S21 - S21
  • [6] Integration of real-world evidence from different data sources in health technology assessment
    Graili, Pooyeh
    Guertin, Jason R.
    Chan, Kelvin K. W.
    Tadrous, Mina
    JOURNAL OF PHARMACY AND PHARMACEUTICAL SCIENCES, 2023, 26 : 11460
  • [7] DEMONSTRATING THE APPLICATION OF REAL-WORLD EVIDENCE FOR HEALTH TECHNOLOGY ASSESSMENT USING A FEDERATED DATA NETWORK
    Claire, R.
    Elvidge, J.
    Read, C.
    Debray, T.
    Newby, D.
    Burn, E.
    Dawoud, D.
    VALUE IN HEALTH, 2022, 25 (12) : S478 - S478
  • [8] Transferability of real-world data across borders for regulatory and health technology assessment decision-making
    Jaksa, Ashley
    Arena, Patrick J.
    Chan, Kelvin K. W.
    Ben-Joseph, Rami H.
    Jonsson, Pall
    Campbell, Ulka B.
    FRONTIERS IN MEDICINE, 2022, 9
  • [9] Real-world data and evidence in health technology assessment: When are they complementary, substitutes, or the only sources of data compared to clinical trials?
    de Pouvourville, Gerard
    Armoiry, Xavier
    Lavorel, Aurelie
    Bilbault, Pascal
    Maugendre, Philippe
    Bensimon, Lionel
    Beziz, Dan
    Blin, Patrick
    Borget, Isabelle
    Bouee, Stephane
    Collignon, Cecile
    Dervaux, Benoit
    Durand-Zaleski, Isabelle
    Julien, Marc
    de Leotoing, Lucie
    Majed, Laureen
    Martelli, Nicolas
    Sejourne, Thomas
    Viprey, Marie
    THERAPIE, 2023, 78 (01): : 81 - 94
  • [10] Development of a Canadian Guidance for reporting real-world evidence for regulatory and health-technology assessment (HTA) decision-making
    Tadrous, Mina
    Aves, Theresa
    Fahim, Christine
    Riad, Jessica
    Mittmann, Nicole
    Prieto-Alhambra, Daniel
    Rivera, Donna R.
    Chan, Kelvin
    Lix, Lisa M.
    Kent, Seamus
    Dawoud, Dalia
    Guertin, Jason Robert
    Mcdonald, James Ted
    Round, Jeff
    Klarenbach, Scott
    Stanojevic, Sanja
    Vera, Mary A. De
    Strumpf, Erin
    Platt, Robert W.
    Husein, Farah
    Lambert, Laurie
    Hayes, Kaleen N.
    JOURNAL OF CLINICAL EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2024, 176