Use of real-world evidence for oncology clinical decision making in emerging economies

Future Oncol. 2021 Aug;17(22):2951-2960. doi: 10.2217/fon-2021-0425. Epub 2021 May 28.

Abstract

Real-world evidence (RWE) can provide insights into patient profiles, disease detection, treatment choice, dosing strategies, treatment sequencing, adverse event management and financial toxicity associated with oncology treatment. However, the full potential of RWE is untapped in emerging economies due to structural and behavioral factors. Structural barriers include lack of regulatory engagement, real-world data availability, quality and integrity. Behavioral barriers include entrenched healthcare professional behaviors that impede rapid RWE understanding and adoption. These barriers can be addressed with close collaboration of healthcare stakeholders; of whom, regulators need to be at the forefront given their ability to facilitate use of RWE in healthcare policy and legislation.

Keywords: Asia-Pacific; Latin America; Middle East; effectiveness; electronic database; health policy; randomized clinical trials; real-world data; real-world evidence; safety.

Plain language summary

Lay abstract Traditionally, randomized clinical trials have been used to provide insights on new medical therapies and continue to remain the gold standard for approval. The-increasing availability of patient level data in the real-world, it is now possible to generate evidence regarding the usage and potential benefits or risks of a medical therapy derived from analysis of real-world data. This evidence is collectively referred to real-world evidence (RWE). randomized clinical trials and RWE are complementary and the area of Oncology especially benefits from RWE to guide clinical decision making across the patient journey. Key benefits include cancer screening and diagnosis, optimal treatment choices (including personalized medicine) and disease management such as dosing and treatment of side effects. In recent times, RWE generation in oncology has been prolific in the USA and western Europe. With expansive biopharmaceutical investments into infrastructure harnessing patient-level data and greater local regulatory guidance, oncology patients in emerging economies may now also have the opportunity to benefit from clinical decision making informed by RWE.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Clinical Decision-Making / methods*
  • Developing Countries
  • Evidence-Based Medicine / methods*
  • Humans
  • Medical Oncology / methods*
  • Neoplasms / therapy*
  • Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic

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