A New Health Networking Infrastructure on Cancer Is Taking Shape in Europe: A Not-to-Miss Opportunity for the EU Regulatory System
Paolo Giovanni Casali, Stefano Capri

Abstract
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TopicsEconomic and Financial Impacts of Cancer · Health Systems, Economic Evaluations, Quality of Life · Science, Research, and Medicine
At the inaugural EAA convention in Copenhagen (Europe’s Evolving HTA Regulation and Its Relevance for ‘Beating Cancer’, in May 2022), it was suggested that, in the future, the pillars necessary to fully address the problem of cancer should be communicated (i.e., the comprehensive cancer centres, JANE, and the EU’s HTA endeavour). This Editorial represents a development in those themes, and to some extent, it represents two sides of the same coin, i.e., the clinical and the HTA sides. In 2021, the European Union (EU) launched the EU Beating Cancer Plan [1]. This is a Europe-wide initiative by which the EU sets ambitious targets for the following years in order to improve cancer survival. Among the many efforts foreseen by this initiative, there was the creation of a European network of comprehensive cancer centres and the creation of new “Networks of Expertise” (NoEs). Two EU Joint Actions started therefrom, in order to pave the way for the creation of such networks; additionally, two follow-up Joint Actions are currently in progress with the aim of deploying such networks. The networks of European comprehensive cancer centres will be called EUNetCCC. There will be seven Networks of Expertise on the following items: survivorship; palliative care; poor-prognosis cancers; economic technologies (i.e., technologies that are based on the ability to process large amounts of biological data, as the whole set of genes in genomics, etc.); high-tech medical resources; personalized primary and secondary prevention; and adolescents and young adults with cancer. These networks will be created within the aforementioned Joint Actions, while four other European networks have been in place since 2017 in the area of rare cancers: the European Reference Networks (ERNs) EURACAN, EuroBloodNet, PaedCan, GENTURIS, respectively, on rare adult solid cancers, haematological neoplasms, paediatric cancers, and hereditary conditions predisposing to cancer [2]. It is well known that rare cancers are marked by difficulties in delivering appropriate care as well as in conducting clinical studies, thus resulting in health discrimination [3,4,5]. Health networks have a special role in addressing such challenges.
Therefore, in the future, the EU will be supported by 12 networks focused on cancer. At the moment, some of them are split up into domains that are networks themselves, as long as they pursue different tasks and are rooted in diverse communities. Aside from the 10 domains of EURACAN (each corresponding to one rare adult solid cancer), the NoE on high-tech medical resources will be split up into domains covering innovative radiation therapy, nuclear medicine, radiomics, innovative surgery, ablative techniques, cell therapies, and ex vivo testing, while the NoE on poor-prognosis cancer will be split up into at least two domains on pancreatic cancer and lung cancer. It follows that the EU is deploying a formidable array of health networks in the cancer arena.
The strength of this approach is that healthcare networking can well become a peculiar European asset. Clinical collaboration may be more difficult in other areas of the globe; therefore, the tool of formalized health networks can display great potential. Several opportunities can be brought about by these networks, including diminishing disparities among EU member states (MSs); sharing health data, possibly within the new EU Health Data Space (HDS); fostering clinical and translational research; and contributing to medical, patient, and public education and awareness. It is worth noting that networks can contribute to the improvement of prescription choices in anticancer drugs, whose economic impact is enormous. Global spending on cancer medicine increased to USD 223 billion in 2023, USD 25 billion more than in 2022, and it is projected to reach USD 409 billion by 2028 [6].
The only threat to these networks is that they may miss such a huge goal amid their numerous potential weaknesses. It is no coincidence that the first Joint Action on Networks of Expertise on Cancer (JANE) ended its preparatory effort by publishing a “green paper” raising several questions about the future of all EU health networks [7]. Some questions had to do with how to best implement health networking, exploring and improving its cost/effectiveness (in the end, it is noteworthy that the medical literature is lacking in research on health networking tools). On top of that, while ERNs were launched by the EU Commission under the legislative tool of the EU Cross-Border Healthcare Directive, both EUNectCCC and the NoEs will be launched through the tool of the two Joint Actions. In any case, not all ERNs will be legal entities, thus preventing them from being able to do several things, among which are sponsoring clinical trials, raising funds, etc. This may also impact how these networks will be able to collect and process health data in a legal framework that is greatly affected by how European and national data protection authorities interpret the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), thereby impairing the ambitions of the HDS. In addition, this is in an operational framework in which the interoperability of electronic health records is still a dream, albeit in the age of artificial intelligence (AI) [8]. Another open question has to do with the relationship of these networks with the industry. The main open questions, however, have to do with how the Europe-wide and national levels can complement each other and give rise to an interconnected system of European and national networks acting together. Ideally, these European networks should become “networks of networks”, i.e., European networks of national/regional networks (at least in regard to the largest MSs). This is challenging within the well-known context of a union whose founding treaties do not incorporate health. Thus, ambitions are great, but weaknesses are manifold and need to be tackled, as long as these networks grow. Finally, network activities could positively contribute to direct prescriptive choices in anticancer drugs that also take into account the economic aspects of treatments, considering the enormous economic impact of such drugs. Indeed, global spending on cancer medicine increased to USD 223 billion in 2023, which is USD 25 billion more than in 2022, and this is projected to reach USD 409 billion by 2028 [6].
All this said, while trying to effectively answer the open questions raised by the JANE green paper, one may wonder which opportunities may be implied by the development of those networks under the regulatory perspective, with regard to both anticancer drugs and medical devices. We list some of them here.
The authors believe that the potential of such virtuous circles could hardly be exaggerated. Clearly, the weaknesses of these networks, as put forth by the JANE green paper, may be a limiting factor. On the other hand, early successes might stimulate the EU to upscale the status of these networks, at a time when it is very clear, much beyond healthcare, that many EU rules may need to be revised in order to be competitive in a challenging world.
Thus, what is needed now is the study of networks—how to best exploit their potential, how to direct their action, and how to maximize their cost/effectiveness should become areas of interest for a highly multidisciplinary audience of researchers. This could make the most of a peculiar European asset. Then, the scientific community, along with patient communities, should interact with regulators in order to envisage the best forms of cooperation. The political level can then be involved in an attempt to foster discussions about how to fix some of the most obvious weaknesses of the current EU health networks. Challenges to this approach are not easy to take on, but it is definitely worth it, and this is also true from a regulatory perspective.
The reference list from the paper itself. Each links out to its DOI / PubMed record.
- 1Europe’s Beating Cancer Plan Available online: https://health.ec.europa.eu/system/files/2022-02/eu_cancer-plan_en_0.pdf(accessed on 20 January 2025)
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- 3Gatta G. van der Zwan J.M. Casali P.G. Siesling S. Tos A.P.D. Kunkler I. Otter R. Licitra L. Mallone S. Tavilla A. Rare cancers are not so rare: The rare cancer burden in Europe Eur. J. Cancer 2011472493251110.1016/j.ejca.2011.08.00822033323 · doi ↗ · pubmed ↗
- 4Casali P.G. Trama A. Rare Cancers Agenda 2030 EU Joint Action on Rare Cancers Lugano, Switzerland 2019978-88-31642-71-2
- 5Casali P.G. Bruzzi P. Bogaerts J. Blay J.-Y. Rare Cancers Europe (RCE) Consensus Panel. Rare Cancers Europe (RCE) methodological recommendations for clinical studies in rare cancers: A European consensus position paper Ann. Oncol.20152630030610.1093/annonc/mdu 45925274616 PMC 4304377 · doi ↗ · pubmed ↗
- 6IQVIA Institute for Human Data Science Global Oncology Trends 2024: Outlook to 2028 IQVIA Durham, NC, USA 2024
- 7Casali P.G. Antoine-Poirel H. Berrocoso S. Blay J.Y. Dubois T. Ferrari A. Fullaondo A. Hovig E. Jagodzińska-Mucha P. Ługowska I. Health networking on cancer in the European Union: A ‘green paper’ by the EU Joint Action on Networks of Expertise (JANE)ESMO Open 20251010412610.1016/j.esmoop.2024.10412639874899 PMC 11799966 · doi ↗ · pubmed ↗
- 8Casali P.G. Vyas M. European Society for Medical Oncology (ESMO). Data protection and research in the European Union: A major step forward, with a step back Ann. Oncol.202132151910.1016/j.annonc.2020.10.47233096210 · doi ↗ · pubmed ↗
