NHS England's Treatments for Graft versus Host Disease following Haematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation is a clinical commissioning policy issued in 2017. It states that first-line treatment for chronic GVHD should be corticosteroids with or without a calcineurin inhibitor. Second-line treatment should be extracorporeal photopheresis, pentostatin, rituximab and imatinib. Third-line treatment should be mycophenolate mofetil, methotrexate or pulsed corticosteroids. The company presented a treatment pathway for chronic GVHD that it had developed with an advisory board of clinical and health economic experts. This proposed corticosteroids at first line, calcineurin inhibitors at second line, and extracorporeal photopheresis, rituximab, mycophenolate mofetil, sirolimus and imatinib at third line. The company positioned treatment with belumosudil 'as an alternative' to extracorporeal photopheresis, rituximab, mycophenolate mofetil, sirolimus and imatinib. But, the company's submission highlighted that belumosudil is intended to be used as a monotherapy after oral corticosteroids (with or without the addition of calcineurin inhibitors) and at least one other systemic therapy, such as sirolimus or the later addition of a calcineurin inhibitors (although the trials supporting the clinical effectiveness for belumosudil allowed for concomitant therapies; see section 3.3). The EAG proposed a different treatment pathway that it had discussed with clinical experts. The EAG's clinical experts considered first-line treatment to be corticosteroids with or without calcineurin inhibitors, second-line treatment to be extracorporeal photopheresis, and other therapies (such as imatinib, mycophenolate mofetil, pentostatin, pulsed corticosteroids, rituximab and sirolimus), including belumosudil, to be third line. The clinical experts emphasised that calcineurin inhibitors did not represent second-line therapy, and that calcineurin inhibitors have a larger impact in the acute setting than the chronic GVHD setting. One clinical expert said that first-line treatment is corticosteroids, and they would wait to see how a person's condition responds to treatment over the course of 4 weeks, before adding a calcineurin inhibitor or another treatment. They confirmed that they do not use calcineurin inhibitors as a separate line of therapy. In the belumosudil trials (see section 3.3), if someone started a calcineurin inhibitor after 4 weeks of corticosteroids, this counted as second-line therapy. The clinical experts agreed with the EAG's treatment pathway and felt that belumosudil should be positioned as a third-line therapy, after extracorporeal photopheresis. They noted that access to extracorporeal photopheresis is variable depending on location. They explained that the rising cost of living and the impacts of public transport strikes make it challenging for people to travel to their extracorporeal photopheresis services. They highlighted that although extracorporeal photopheresis is a good option for people with chronic GVHD, people would favour an oral option over having to travel because of the increased risk of catching infections on public transport (see section 3.1). The patient expert explained that at the stage of needing extracorporeal photopheresis, many people will be limited in their mobility from the severity of their skin or lung conditions. They emphasised the psychological impact of living with chronic GVHD and that people would prefer not to travel for extracorporeal photopheresis. The committee noted the high unmet need for a new treatment option after 2 systemic therapies. It concluded that current treatment options are limited, and an oral treatment would be beneficial. It also concluded that it preferred the EAG's treatment pathway.