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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Innovation in cardiovascular disease in Europe with focus on arrhythmias: current status, opportunities, roadblocks, and the role of multiple stakeholders

David O. ArnarJoost LumensKarl-heinz KuckAndreas BollmannNikolaos DagresGerhard HindricksSylvie BoveJohn CammBetty Van VleymenPaulus KirchhofFrits W. PrinzenMartin C. MichelPanos E. VardasBarbara CasadeiPeter J. Schwartz

subject

0301 basic medicineBig Datamedia_common.quotation_subjectBig dataBasic scienceContext (language use)Disease030204 cardiovascular system & hematologyArrhythmias03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinePhysiology (medical)Health careDevicesGeneticsMedicineInnovationReimbursementPatentsmedia_commonbusiness.industryComputer modelsCertaintyPublic relationsPersonalized medicineReimbursementElectrophysiologyClinical trial030104 developmental biologyCardiology and Cardiovascular MedicinebusinessRisk assessmentHealthcare providers

description

The European Heart Rhythm Association (EHRA) held an Innovation Forum in February 2016, to consider issues around innovation. The objective of the forum was to extend the innovation debate outside of the narrow world of arrhythmia specialists and cardiology in general, and seek input from all stakeholders including regulators, strategists, technologists, industry, academia, health providers, medical societies, payers, and patients. Innovation is indispensable for a continuing improvement in health care, preferably at higher efficacy and lower costs. It requires people who have been trained in a good scientific environment, high-quality research for achieving ground breaking inventions and the certainty of return on innovation investments. In the context of cardiovascular disease, innovation can imply better risk assessment and stratification, device technology, drug development, and process design. Several areas of promising developments were identified as well as several roadblocks to innovation. To drive innovation forward all stakeholders need to play a significant role. In a globalized and extremely competitive world, the leading role of Europe in medical innovation can only be achieved through a combined and well-coordinated effort from all involved parties.

10.1093/europace/eux095https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:fac54db8-1c23-41ee-a5e0-8ce5244da205