AI Access Brief Podcast

NICE Unified Prioritisation and EMA Regulatory Momentum

Season 1 Episode 18

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0:00 | 6:29
Episode 18 — 27 May 2026 NICE transforms guidance selection with unified prioritisation framework and EQ-5D-5L implementation while EMA shows regulatory momentum with eight May approvals. The episode examines operational impacts on evidence strategy and market access planning. Hosted by Marcus and Sara. Outcomes Analytica Podcast — Daily briefings on HEOR, HTA strategy and the evidence access landscape. Full transcript and sources at outcomes-analytica.no/podcast
SPEAKER_00

NICE's prioritization board met for the first time on the 29th of May. Senior NICE members now maintain oversight of the guidance portfolio through a unified approach. This replaces the fragmented prioritization processes we've been navigating across different NICE programs for years.

SPEAKER_01

The operational shift is significant. Previously, we were managing different timelines and criteria across technology appraisals, diagnostics, and interventional procedures. Now there's centralized decision making on what gets prioritized and when.

SPEAKER_00

Simultaneously, they've opened consultation on implementing the EQ5D5L value set through their modular update process. This isn't just methodological refinement, it's about making cost-effectiveness calculations more reflective of what matters to people today. More accurate measurements should theoretically improve resource allocation decisions.

SPEAKER_01

But here's where I push back, Marcus. More accurate measurements don't automatically translate to better decisions if the underlying value judgments remain unchanged. The EQ5D5L might capture health states more precisely, but it's still the same utility-based framework. We're optimizing the measurement while the fundamental approach to valuing health outcomes stays static.

SPEAKER_00

That's fair. The precision improvement might be marginal compared to broader questions about what we're actually measuring. Still, for dossier preparation, this creates immediate practical challenges around which value set to use and how to present sensitivity analyses during the transition period.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. The consultation timeline matters for current submissions. Teams need clarity on implementation dates and whether both value sets will be accepted during transition.

SPEAKER_00

EMA CHMP recommended eight medicines for approval at its May meeting that substantial regulatory momentum, Jescade for idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis and progressive pulmonary fibrosis addresses conditions with limited treatment options that cause severe symptoms and death within years of diagnosis.

SPEAKER_01

The Weg of I extension to include daily oral tablets is strategically more interesting from a market access perspective. The CHMP recommended extending the marketing authorization as an alternative to weekly injections. This marks the first oral GLP1 receptor agonist for weight management.

SPEAKER_00

Which addresses a major market access barrier, injectable GLP1S face adherence challenges, and patient preference issues that HTA bodies factor into their assessments. An oral alternative changes the value proposition, especially around long-term effectiveness assumptions.

SPEAKER_01

It also shifts competitive dynamics. Payers now have leverage between oral and injectable formulations. That creates pricing pressure and opens opportunities for differential reimbursement policies based on patient characteristics or treatment lines.

SPEAKER_00

The broader pattern from EMA shows consistent approval activity. Eight medicines in one CHMP meeting suggests the regulatory pipeline remains robust despite economic pressures on RD investment.

SPEAKER_01

True, but regulatory approval is just the starting point for market access. The real test is whether these approvals translate into meaningful patient access across European markets, especially given ongoing HTA capacity constraints.

SPEAKER_00

The EU Critical Medicines Act reached political agreement. EMA welcomes this and will work closely with the European Commission and member states on implementation. The Act builds on regulatory tools from EMA's extended mandate and complements revised EU pharmaceutical legislation.

SPEAKER_01

Supply chain resilience is becoming a market access factor we didn't traditionally consider. EMA's executive steering group on shortages will conduct supply chain vulnerability assessments to inform policy measures under the new pharmaceutical legislation.

SPEAKER_00

This creates new evidence requirements. Companies may need to demonstrate not just clinical and economic value, but also supply security and manufacturing resilience. That's additional dossier complexity.

SPEAKER_01

It also opens opportunities for companies with robust European manufacturing capabilities to differentiate their value propositions. Supply chain security becomes a competitive advantage in HTA submissions.

SPEAKER_00

The Act reinforces manufacturing capacity requirements. This could influence HTA body assessments, especially for critical medicines where supply interruptions carry significant public health risks.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. We might see HTA bodies incorporating supply chain assessments into their broader value frameworks. That's another dimension for evidence planning.

SPEAKER_00

NICE introduced a collaborative biosimilar task force in 2025 to coordinate activity across the system and optimize biosimilar uptake. They're targeting AF Libricept biosimilars for neovascular age-related macular degeneration as their first focused delivery area.

SPEAKER_01

This is operationally significant because it moves beyond guidance publication to active implementation support. The task force will become a strategic cornerstone of the NICE whole lifecycle approach program and the 10-year health plan.

SPEAKER_00

The life cycle approach matters for originator manufacturers. NICE isn't just assessing products at launch, they're actively managing the transition to biosimilar competition that creates ongoing engagement requirements throughout the product lifecycle.

SPEAKER_01

For biosimilar manufacturers, it provides a structured pathway for uptake support. But it also signals that NICE will be more interventionist in managing competition between originators and biosimilars.

SPEAKER_00

Aflibercept is an interesting test case. It's a high-value, hospital-administered treatment where procurement decisions significantly impact uptake. The task force approach could accelerate adoption compared to standard guidance publication.

SPEAKER_01

It also creates precedent for how NICE might handle future biosimilar transitions. Success with Aflibercept could expand this model to other therapeutic areas.

SPEAKER_00

The evidence requirements shift from proving biosimilar equivalents to demonstrating system-level implementation strategies.

SPEAKER_01

These developments point to fundamental changes in how we approach evidence strategy. NICE's unified prioritization creates more predictable timelines but requires stronger stakeholder intelligence. EMA's approval momentum demands faster market access preparation.

SPEAKER_00

The integration of supply chain considerations and active biosimilar implementation shows HTA bodies expanding their operational scope beyond traditional assessment roles. Evidence teams need broader strategic thinking.