TY - JOUR
T1 - Clouds across the new dawn for clinical, diagnostic and biological data
T2 - Accelerating the development, delivery and uptake of personalized medicine
AU - Horgan, Denis
AU - Capoluongo, Ettore
AU - Dube, France
AU - Trapani, Dario
AU - Malapelle, Umberto
AU - Rovite, Vita
AU - Omar, Muhammad Imran
AU - Alix-Panabières, Catherine
AU - Rutkowski, Piotr
AU - Bayle, Arnaud
AU - Hackshaw, Allan
AU - Hofman, Paul
AU - Subbiah, Vivek
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston.
PY - 2023/11/1
Y1 - 2023/11/1
N2 - Growing awareness of the genetic basis of disease is transforming the opportunities for improving patient care by accelerating the development, delivery and uptake of personalised medicine and diseases diagnostics. This can mean more precise treatments reaching the right patients at the right time at the right cost. But it will be possible only with a coherent European Union (EU) approach to regulation. For clinical and biological data, on which the EU is now legislating with its planned European Health Data Space (EHDS), it is crucial that the design of this new system respects the constraints also implicit in the testing which generates data. The current EHDS proposal may fail to meet this requirement. It risks being over-ambitious, while taking insufficient account of the demanding realities of data access in daily practice and current economics/business models. It is marred by imprecision and ambiguity, by overlaps with other EU legislation, and by lack of clarity on funding. This paper identifies key issues where legislators should ensure that the opportunities are not squandered by the adoption of over-hasty or ill-considered provisions that jeopardise the gains that could be made in improved healthcare.
AB - Growing awareness of the genetic basis of disease is transforming the opportunities for improving patient care by accelerating the development, delivery and uptake of personalised medicine and diseases diagnostics. This can mean more precise treatments reaching the right patients at the right time at the right cost. But it will be possible only with a coherent European Union (EU) approach to regulation. For clinical and biological data, on which the EU is now legislating with its planned European Health Data Space (EHDS), it is crucial that the design of this new system respects the constraints also implicit in the testing which generates data. The current EHDS proposal may fail to meet this requirement. It risks being over-ambitious, while taking insufficient account of the demanding realities of data access in daily practice and current economics/business models. It is marred by imprecision and ambiguity, by overlaps with other EU legislation, and by lack of clarity on funding. This paper identifies key issues where legislators should ensure that the opportunities are not squandered by the adoption of over-hasty or ill-considered provisions that jeopardise the gains that could be made in improved healthcare.
KW - European Health Data Space (EHDS)
KW - business models
KW - clinical trials
KW - diagnostics
KW - healthcare data
KW - in vitro diagnostics legislation
KW - policy
KW - regulation
KW - uptake
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85153733532&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1515/dx-2023-0022
DO - 10.1515/dx-2023-0022
M3 - Article
C2 - 37036891
AN - SCOPUS:85153733532
SN - 2194-8011
VL - 10
SP - 356
EP - 362
JO - Diagnosis
JF - Diagnosis
IS - 4
ER -