As the adage goes, you only get one chance to make a first impression. A successful product launch hinges on ensuring your new treatment enters a marketplace where its need and value are well understood. Each approval comes with its own unique set of circumstances related to the marketplace—for example, first to market, genericized space, company or industry baggage—but some fundamentals remain relatively immutable: those of patient advocacy engagement.
Patient advocacy groups (PAGs) have gained influence due to a convergence of factors, including increased FDA interest in patient perspectives from trial design to risk/benefit considerations, shared decision-making and cost sharing, pricing and expanded access policy debates, heightened consumerism and greater recognition of how social determinants impact adherence and health outcomes. These factors have all led to an environment where patients are simultaneously burdened and emboldened, and where their need for PAG support, education and advocacy is greater than ever before.
Patients are not the only stakeholders who need PAGs more than ever before. Increasingly, patient advocates are fueling successful product launches by providing guidance on meaningful treatment outcomes and viable trial protocols, contributing insight related to commercialization efforts and collaborating on patient engagement and education resources.
Engagement with patient advocacy groups is no longer something to turn on six to nine months prior to launch; early connectivity pays off. And it’s not just about checking a box. At the center of every successful industry-advocacy relationship there must be transparency and two-way dialogue in order to mitigate missed expectations and ensure new treatment entrants are truly addressing genuine patient needs.
After years of supporting industry and advocacy groups in their quest to collaborate on better outcomes for patients, here are our top 10 recommendations for meaningful PAG engagement on the runway to launch and beyond.