European Joint Clinical Assessment PICO Scoping Process: Analysis of Current Approaches and Recommendations.
Kalpana D'Oca, Eline Darquennes, Chloé Garrigues, Aristeidis Draganigos, Natalie Steck
Abstract
Open AccessThe PICO framework determines the scope of the Joint Clinical Assessment (JCA) under the EU HTA Regulation (EU HTAR), with PICO consolidation being a critical final step of the scoping process. Due to limited clarity on how consolidation works in practice, Health Technology Developers (HTDs) may simulate PICO scoping as a strategic tool to guide the development of robust JCA submissions. A review of 14 publications, representing 35 individual PICO exercises across 20 indications (74% in oncology), showed an average of 7 countries participating per exercise and 8 consolidated PICOs per analysis. A separate PICO scoping simulation focused on a first-line immuno-oncology treatment for metastatic non-small cell lung cancer (mNSCLC) generated 67 PICOs, reflecting the anticipated perspectives of 25 countries, largely driven by biomarker and histology-based sub-populations. The limited number of published examples and country participation restricts the ability to draw clear conclusions or confidently predict the output of PICO scoping in a real life JCA processes. The simulation also raised questions about whether all sub-populations should be included or consolidated further. Overall, there is a need for greater clarity in the JCA PICO scoping process, in particular the consolidation step, to facilitate high-quality evidence generation and support the EU HTAR to meet its goals of efficiency, transparency, and equity in health technology evaluation across Europe, along with more consistent patient access.