Health technology assessment (HTA) informs evidence-based decision-making for resource allocation in healthcare; however, the topic selection phase that determines which technologies proceed to full assessment is underexplored and often lacks fairness and transparency, particularly disadvantaging orphan medicinal products (OMPs) for rare diseases. We drew on selectively identified literature and illustrative HTA experiences to advance an opinion-driven argument about equity in topic selection for OMPs, grouping insights into three domains: structural challenges, conceptual frameworks and policy strategies. Structural barriers in topic selection include a lack of institutionalised, participatory processes, overreliance on prioritisation criteria implicitly aligned with population-wide impact and minimal engagement with stakeholders representing the rare disease community, resulting in the systematic under-prioritisation of OMPs. Procedural and value frameworks, including multi-criteria decision analysis (MCDA), evidence-informed deliberative processes (EDPs), accountability for reasonableness (A4R), equity weighting and Health Equity Impact Assessment (HEIA), can help agencies incorporate social value and fairness before formal appraisal, but remain unevenly operationalised. Policy strategies such as equity-oriented horizon scanning, open nomination systems, and special pathways for OMPs are highlighted as feasible approaches to promote fairness. Achieving equity in HTA topic selection for OMPs requires both policy and cultural change, and embedding pluralistic value frameworks, engaging stakeholders and adopting specific policy tools are essential steps towards ensuring that rarity is met with heightened ethical attention rather than exclusion.
Hosseini et al. (Sun,) studied this question.
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