June 2, 2026 |
Across sessions, panels, and conversations on the ground in Denver, there was a noticeable shift in both mindset and momentum. Many of the themes discussed in previous years are now being actively implemented, with teams moving beyond theory and into execution.

Here are five key takeaways shaping the future of Medical Affairs.
1. Medical Affairs is stepping into a strategic leadership role
Medical Affairs is no longer operating at the margins of strategy. It is increasingly being brought earlier into the development process, co-leading product launches, in some situations functionally leading product launch, and influencing enterprise decision-making.
As Gemma Pfister (Senior Consulting Executive, Inizio Ignite) and Eric Wood (Head of Commercial, Transformation, Inizio Ignite) observed, teams are now “required to translate complex science into enterprise value,” reflecting a fundamental shift in expectations.
There is also a growing emphasis on engaging at a more senior level. Varun Renjen (Partner, Inizio Ignite) highlighted the importance of Medical Affairs leaders being able to “speak the pipeline, the top line and the bottom line,” reinforcing the need for commercial fluency alongside scientific expertise.
This evolution marks a turning point. Medical Affairs is not just supporting strategy, it is helping define it.
2. The shift from activity to impact is accelerating
A consistent theme throughout MAPS was the need to move beyond activity-based metrics and demonstrate real, measurable impact.
Jo Ann Saitta (Head of Data & AI, Inizio Ignite), pointed to the growing focus on “where they are moving the needle on patient impact,” with teams increasingly leveraging real-world data to demonstrate changing behaviors and value.
Importantly, this is not about proving value for the first time. As Eric Wood reflected, “medical has already reached the milestone of proving effectiveness.” The challenge now is to communicate that value more clearly and consistently across the organization.
Dean McAlister (Executive Vice President, Biotech Enterprise Solutions, Inizio Biotech) captured this shift powerfully, highlighting the importance of bringing data to life through storytelling: “we move it from hands and feet to the hearts and minds of the people involved.”
The implication is clear. Demonstrating impact is no longer optional. It is a core capability for Medical Affairs teams.
Read the full blog here.
This content was provided by Inizio
Latest Content from Inizio
In the second of a series of posts focusing on each of the ‘MINT’ markets, I take an in-depth look at the opportunities and challenges for pharma in Indonesia, with...
Pegasus, the UK’s leading independent health communications consultancy, picked up the much coveted ‘Consultancy of the Year’ award at last week’s Communiqué Awards 2014, fighting off stiff competition from the...
If you can only research one ASEAN market, which one do you choose?Our Free Thinking paper investigates the opportunities for pharma in ASEAN and outlines the factors you need to...
Our Free Thinking white paper looks at the opportunities for biosimilars and the threats to innovator biologics.
Marc Yates, Director of Emerging Markets at pharma market research specialist Research Partnership, shares insights from his experience of working in BRIC and beyond.
Marc Yates, Director of Emerging Markets at pharma market research specialist Research Partnership, shares insights from his experience of working in BRIC and beyond.
Mary Assimakopoulos, Founding Director of global pharma market research specialist Research Partnership discusses how pharma can benefit from improved patient understanding.
Mary Assimakopoulos, Founding Director of global pharma market research specialist Research Partnership discusses how pharma can benefit from improved patient understanding
Oncology is arguably the most exciting area of medicine in which to be working today. Biomarkers and companion diagnostics offer incredibly valuable predictive power, which is of benefit to payers,...
Pegasus, the UK’s leading independent health communications consultancy, added three awards to its 2014 portfolio at last weekend’s AMEC International Summit 2014 in Amsterdam
