Policy Debate
Organised by the European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology
Cancer clinical trials and, in general, cancer clinical research are, by definition, multi-modal disciplines. It is not enough to discover and register new drugs. Getting cancer under control, or even better, curing it, requires researchers to perform complex clinical studies that integrate drugs, companion diagnostics, new or improved surgical procedures, and new approaches to radiotherapy.
Moving towards precision medicine is one of today’s important objectives in the EU as can be witnessed on the DG Research and Innovation website:
“Today, many medicines do not work effectively for a large number of the patients they are supposed to treat. Personalized medicine aims to improve this situation by providing the right diagnosis leading to prevention or to treatment at the right dose to the right patient at the right time.” & “Personalized medicine depends on the use of relevant biomarkers and the development of appropriate diagnostic methods, both in vivo and in vitro, for the stratification of patients into groups.”
Research is indeed becoming more targeted. It incorporates technologies that exploit ever increasing amounts of data using Big Data technologies. It aims to integrate all available information and includes data resulting from analysis of biological material and, more and more, genetic data. The general approach is holistic in a drive towards maximizing performance and minimizing costs and time.
Europe’s clinical research regulatory ship is being outfitted to face this storm.
Legislative frameworks have been developed in silos, and the needs of clinical research and even its very nature is poorly understood. Legislations focus on either healthcare or commercialization of a product and not on the required research. In the last two years the EU has drafted several major regulations touching on clinical trials, in vitro diagnostics, medical devices and data protection, all of which will impact clinical research, yet the silo approach makes the overall framework inconsistent and potentially damaging to EU capacity to make rapid progress in the field of precision medicines.
This conference will explore the interface between the Clinical Trial Regulation, expected to be applicable in 2016-2017, and the In vitro Diagnostics and Data Protection regulations now being discussed by the EU Parliament and Council.
It will conclude with a pragmatic but creative brainstorming session on how might rapidly fix issues identified within the limits of the new or soon to become legal framework.
Policy Debate
Organised by the European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology
The role of screening and early diagnosis in identifying eye diseases as comorbidities of non-communicable diseases
“European policy response to rare cancers: the case of sarcoma”
8th February 2017, 14h30-16h30
European Parliament, Altiero Spinelli building, room A5E-2, Brussels
The European Parliament Interest Group on Allergy and Asthma invites you to the policy symposium “United Action for Allergy and Asthma” at the Europea
On the 20th of June 2017, Brussels will become the capital of Flavour.
Consumer rights
Sustainable agriculture, safer food, strong rural communities
At the European Parliament in Brussels in room A3G-3.
On Wednesday 27 September 2017 from 14h30 - 17h30.
European Policy Response to Metastatic Breast Cancer
Tuesday 17th October 2017, 12.00-14.00 CET
Hosted by MEP Heinz K. Becker (EPP, Austria)
The Biobanking and BioMolecular resources Research Infrastructure - European Research Infrastructure Consortium (BBMRI-ERIC) is hosting a seminar to assess the impact of the GDPR on FP9 health research and examine how the Code of Conduct for Health Research being developed by BBMRI-ERIC a
There are currently over 200 million women living with diabetes and this total is projected to increase to more than 300 million by 2040. Diabetes is the ninth leading cause of death in women globally, causing 2.1 million deaths each year.