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Introduction
The Medical Affairs Professional Society (MAPS) is pleased to share our 2023 Medical Metrics Benchmarking Report. This Report is based on findings from 51 leading organizations representing the Pharmaceutical, Biotech, and Medical and Diagnostic Device sectors regarding capturing metrics and developing insights to influence the Medical and enterprise strategy.
Survey Design and Analysis: MAPS would like to thank Boston Consulting Group for moderating the Ambassador Alliance session during the MAPS 2023 Global Annual Meeting in Nashville, TN, and Tim Mikhelashvili, CEO & Co-Founder, Amedea Pharma, Inc. for developing and executing the survey.
Respondents: MAPS selected 51 representatives from 30 Pharma companies, 10 Biotech Companies, 9 Medical Devices companies and 2 Medical Diagnostics companies. All responses were anonymous, meaning the self-reported industry type reflected in the baseline data overview may not align with the breakdown of the invitees.
Companies that completed the survey:
01. Baseline Data
Medium-Large pharma accounts for ~50% of represented Medical Affairs professionals sample, with biotech being the next most-represented, at ~20% of respondents. Consumer health and CRO cohorts were not represented within this survey. Majority of surveyed group work across Medical strategy and Medical operations. Least-represented functions include Compliance, Medical Technology, and Rare disease/gene therapy (all <20% of respondents).
02. Executive Summary of Insights
This report summarizes results of the 2023 Medical Affairs Metrics Benchmark Survey, representing 51 completed responses. This survey was fielded to get the latest insights on Medical Affairs organizations’ perspective on metrics, activities, and outcomes.
Key insights
03. Metrics, Activities & Outcomes
Most respondents believe capturing metrics is important for communicating Medical’s value story within the medical function, driving quality performance, and aligning strategic goals. Internal communication to Medical Affairs stakeholders represents the largest value-add of capturing metrics, as affirmed by ~96% of respondents. In comparison, external stakeholder communication to other functions and to HCPs, payers and provides, etc., is cited as significantly lower value-add from metrics capture, as indicated by ~20% respondent. This gap in prioritization of internal versus external communication highlights the need for Medical teams to better communicate their mandate beyond internal teams into cross functional business units and the healthcare ecosystem overall.
Within metrics, engagement with KOL, creating Medical action plan and Medical education/ training are the top three tracked activities. Medical action plan includes strategy, spend, completion of MLRs, and all relevant internally aligned goals. Publications, collaborative studies and scientific congresses are tracked by approximately 16% of the respondents. Medical communication is the least prioritized activity for most respondents. Tracking
these activities provides a clear representation of Medical’s status quo priorities, however it would be interesting to explore how the lower tier activities can be utilized as to improve performance, value proposition, and strategic alignment.
In regards to outcomes as Metrics- about 25% of the respondents do not track outcomes at all. Among those who do, outcomes related to Medical action plan, Medical education, and KOL interactions are among the top three tracked outcomes. Outcomes considered for Medical education include attendance at webinars or in-person trainings, workshops, etc. Lastly, some key measurable outcomes from KOL interactions are number of first-time visits, follow-up visits and completed/resolved Medical information queries as indicated by 41% of the respondents. Some outcomes that are not as well represented by respondents are dissemination of Medical communication, guidance updates, launch success and proprietary offerings.
Looking into internally facing activities that are captured and monitored in alignment with Medical’s goals, there is variability across companies. Medical educational workshops (47%) and cross functional collaborations (20%) are the most captured internal activities. 25% of the respondents do not capture internal facing activities and 8% could not identify/specify the activities.
Numerous activities that are discussed as part of this analysis are tracked and stored in distinct platforms as metrics across Medical teams. CRM, SharePoint and Excel spread sheets are top tools for tracking activity metrics with CRM being the most popular” with “CRM are the most popular tool for tracking activity metrics.
Within Medical Affairs organizations, quality of KOL interactions and achievements of Medical action plan are both ranked as top metric or outcome, highlighting some ambiguity on outcomes versus activity metrics. 60% agree KOL interactions is a top metric to track value of Medical, followed by impact of Medical Insights (40%) and success of Medical Action Plan (30%). Launch, HEOR submissions and strategic partnerships are low in ranking for metrics that show Medical’s value. As we consider improving Medical’s visibility throughout a product lifecycle, greater involvement with launch activities and evidence generation via HEOR dossiers may be of great value.
Among rating or ranking of outcomes, qualitative reporting is the most common practice across the industry as indicated by 47% of the respondents. In contrast, about 30% respondents quantitatively rank by impact on corporate or functional strategic goals. About 20% either do not rank/rate or didn’t identify methods to do so. This finding helps us better understand that outcomes can be measured both qualitatively and quantitatively to capture a holistic picture of Medical’s accomplishments and progress.
04. Communicating Metrics & Outcomes
Communicating value of Medical is often the core theme of discussions among Medical teams and leaders. In this section of the analysis we look closer at how the metrics and outcomes we have discussed in the prior sections is communicated within and beyond the Medical organization.
Team activity metrics are communicated with both cross functional management teams and within Medical Affairs internal management teams. Sharing these metrics cross functionally can improve visibility of Medical and demonstrate value to the broader organization.
On the other hand, individual activity metrics are mostly shared directly with evaluated individuals as expected. Teams often have insight on individual activity metrics as well, which can drive incentive structures for improved performance.
Medical’s outcomes and activities are widely shared even among non-Medical management teams to help demonstrate value of Medical across the organization. 33% of the respondents share outcomes across function as well.
05. Medical Strategies
Activities and outcomes are insightful when guiding Medical strategy. ~75% of respondents agree that activities or outcomes guide strategy, but only ~40% of respondents employ both in a distinct manner, reflecting prior finding on lack of distinction between activities and outcomes. This signals an opportunity for more nuanced data-driven strategies and appropriate categorization of such metrics.
Roughly only ~40% of respondents analyze the relationship between activities and outcomes systematically, suggesting a substantial majority that does not analyze such synergies or even when tracked, it is not systematic. Streamlining such analyses can bring tremendous value for Medical’s growth within the organization, drive performance and identify opportunities for improvement.
Additional analyses on metrics validity and relevance (graphs not included in this report) show that only a few teams are tracking activities and metrics to influence their Medical strategy. A sizable 70% do not have methodology in place to analyze the relationship between activities and outcomes, hence unable to capture the impact value of Medical. This further corroborate the finding in our analysis that showing that 50% of respondents don’t believe or are unaware of their function’s contribution to the overall Medical strategy and action plan. Among the small percentage those who do think activities influence strategy, 39% believe insights and 20% believe cross functional activities shape strategy.
06. Medical Insights
Medical insights are leveraged at various capacities by Medical teams. ~60% of respondents reported tracking insights in CRMs and reporting them as metrics, while ~25% track insights but do not include them as metrics. Some respondents take insights further, and report the associated outcomes as metrics. Our analysis identifies a discrepancy among Medical organizations on whether insights can be included in metrics or not.
07. Medical Affairs Dashboards
CRMs and similar dashboards are utilized to track activities such as KOL interactions, actionable inside, publications, progress of investigator-initiated studies and medical communication. Broad opportunity exists to increase activity coverage across Medical Affairs workstreams, given that only MSL/KOL interactions and MSL insights are tracked among majority of respondents. Higher-quality insight generation can be achievable through automation of advanced data techniques (e.g., automated ingestion and sentiment analysis of KOL feedback), currently infrequently represented.
Discussion and insights from the Ambassador Alliance session at MAPS (Nashville, March 26th, 2023):
Post-benchmarking, 31 Biopharma and MedTech companies came together at the Ambassador Alliance session to debate, interpret, and dialogue key topics for Medical and these benchmark findings around metrics and insights*. Here are key takeaways from the discussion.
Current gaps and areas of opportunities in Medical metrics:
This benchmark highlighted Medical strengths in collecting and tracking activity data but showed the clear need to better identify, capture and communicate enterprise impact metrics to both the broader enterprise as well as across the healthcare ecosystem. There is a long-standing value narrative gap due to heterogeneity and breadth of Medical Affairs departments.
Evolution of Medical to improve how we create and use metrics
Medical teams do valuable work in Biopharma and MedTech, however they need to optimize the way they measure impact and outcomes in addition to activity metrics to be able to play a more strategic role in the drug development lyfe-cycle. Key capabilities that need to be enhanced include:
Key insights:
*For the purpose of this report: We define Insight as an accurate and deep understanding of a disease, the patient and the practice of medicine that is connected to seeing a business, drug development or patient solution that facilitates reaching a goal.
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© 2024 Medical Affairs Professional Society (MAPS). All Rights Reserved Worldwide.