New MHRA data strategy to harness Real World Evidence and AI to drive medical product innovation

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The MHRA has published it’s data strategy, defining the regulator’s vision for how data, digital technology, and Real-World Evidence (RWE) can be used to deliver their vision of ensuring the UK is a global leader in healthcare innovation.
Recognising the opportunities of the UK health data landscape, alongside the enormous challenges of fragmented digital technologies across the NHS, the MHRA Data Strategy sets out five core themes.
Key in these are the recognition that frameworks need to be in place to let innovators use Real-Word Evidence (RWE) to underpin regulatory processes and that all parties need to understand how they can safely exploit AI to improve processes from product development through to post market surveillance.
Theme 1: Support data-driven innovation, early access, and interdisciplinary data science to underpin our regulatory framework
The MHRA, like other global regulators, recognises that industry needs to understand how RWE can be used to support regulatory processes if innovative products are to reach patients. Potential issues with randomised clinical trials including sample sizes, representative patient groups and duration are often more prevalent with novel, digital products. Theme 1 attempts to provide clarity on regulation to enable innovators to develop and apply new approaches to collecting RWD and generating quality evidence.
The data strategy identifies opportunities for RWD to impact regulation throughout the project lifestyle, in processes from defining disease epidemiology and informing trial design to post-authorisation safety and effectiveness studies.
The MHRA plans to do the following to deliver Theme 1:
Theme 2: Enable effective, timely, and proportionate regulatory decision-making through Real-World Evidence
The data strategy identifies some key issues in using RWD to support regulatory decisions, including harmonised standards, representative data and duration of data collection. These issues are compounded by challenges in the NHS arising from the fragmentation of technologies across regions and between care settings.
A key tool in this will be the MHRA’s research service, the Clinical Practice Research Datalink (CPRD), which makes available anonymised data from 65 million patients from GP practices across the UK.
The MHRA plans to do the following to deliver Theme 2:
Theme 3: Develop, extend, and integrate our capabilities in data and digital technologies
The MHRA intends to invest in its people to ensure it has the relevant expertise to address data requirements.
The MHRA plans to do the following to deliver Theme 3:
Theme 4: Establish, embed, and expand synergistic partnerships across the data ecosystem
The MHRA stresses the value of partnerships with academic institutions and medical organisations, both in UK and internationally, to achieve the strategy’s aims. This network will provide evidence and methodologies to assist regulatory decision making, supporting innovative product development and early market access.
The MHRA plans to do the following to deliver Theme 4:
Theme 5: Safely and responsibly harness the potential of artificial intelligence and advanced analytics throughout the product lifecycle
The MHRA recognises the huge potential for AI and ML to assist with making data-driven decisions.
The data strategy highlights that a cautious approach is needed when employing these technologies in the Healthcare sector. For example, uncertainty and reproducibility of outcomes must be considered and quantified. Grappling with this, the MHRA intends to focus on the quality of the data used to train algorithms, and ensure clear accountability where these tools are used.
The MHRA plans to do the following to deliver Theme 5:
If you have any questions about the regulation of medical products or market access, please contact our Healthcare team. This article was written by Rory Trust and Zoe Williams.
This strategy will support us to draw upon the wide range of data sources from across the United Kingdom and beyond and help us to enable earlier access to innovative products through proactive approaches to monitoring post-marketing safety
https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/66ea9144c069f68b7681bce8/Data_strategy_2024_4.pdf