4.6 Review

Frameworks for Health Technology Assessment at an Early Stage of Product Development: A Review and Roadmap to Guide Applications

Journal

VALUE IN HEALTH
Volume 26, Issue 8, Pages 1258-1269

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.jval.2023.03.009

Keywords

early health technology assessment; framework; health technology; product development

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Early health technology assessment (eHTA) is used to evaluate and optimize the value proposition of a medical product and inform decision making in the early stages of development. This study reviewed and summarized existing eHTA frameworks, which provide systematic approaches for evidence generation and decision making.
Objectives: Early health technology assessment (eHTA) can be used to evaluate and optimize a medical product's value proposition and to inform go/no-go decisions by using health economic modeling, literature scanning, and stakeholder preference studies at an early stage of development. eHTA frameworks offer high-level guidance on conducting this complex, iterative, and multidisciplinary process. The objective of this study was to review and summarize existing eHTA frameworks, understood as systematic approaches to guide early evidence generation and decision making.Methods: Using a rapid review methodology, we identified all relevant studies published in English, French, and Spanish from PubMed/MEDLINE and Embase until February 2022. We only included frameworks relevant to the preclinical and early clinical (phase I) stages of medical product development.Results: From 737 reviewed abstracts, 53 publications describing 46 frameworks were selected for inclusion and classified into categories based on their scope: (1) criteria frameworks, which provide an overview of eHTA; (2) process frameworks, which offer stepwise guidance for conducting eHTA, including preferred methods; and (3) methods frameworks, which provide detailed descriptions of specific eHTA methods. Most of the frameworks did not specify their target users or the specific stage of technology development.Conclusions: Despite some variability and gaps found across existing frameworks, the structure provided by this review helps inform eHTA applications. Remaining challenges are the frameworks' limited accessibility to users without a background in health economics, poor distinctions being made among early lifecycle stages and technology types, and the inconsistent terminology used to describe eHTA in different contexts.

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