Goeree Ron, He Jing, O'Reilly Daria, Tarride Jean-Eric, Xie Feng, Lim Morgan, Burke Natasha
Programs for Assessment of Technology in Health (PATH) Research Institute, St Joseph's Healthcare Hamilton, ON, Canada;
Clinicoecon Outcomes Res. 2011;3:89-104. doi: 10.2147/CEOR.S14404. Epub 2011 Jun 2.
Health technology assessments (HTA) generally, and economic evaluations (EE) more specifically, have become an integral part of health care decision making around the world. However, these assessments are time consuming and expensive to conduct. Evaluation resources are scarce and therefore priorities need to be set for these assessments and the ability to use information from one country or region in another (geographic transferability) is an increasingly important consideration.
To review the existing approaches, systems, and tools for assessing the geographic transferability potential or guiding the conduct of transferring HTAs and EEs.
A systematic literature review was conducted of several databases, supplemented with web searching, hand searching of journals, and bibliographic searching of identified articles. Systems, tools, checklists, and flow charts to assess, evaluate, or guide the conduct of transferability of HTAs and EEs were identified.
Of 282 references identified, 27 articles were reviewed in full text and of these, seven proposed unique systems, tools, checklists, or flow charts specifically for geographic transferability. All of the seven articles identified a checklist of transferability factors to consider, and most articles identified a subset of 'critical' factors for assessing transferability potential. Most of these critical factors related to study quality, transparency of methods, the level of reporting of methods and results, and the applicability of the treatment comparators to the target country. Some authors proposed a sequenced flow chart type approach, while others proposed an assessment of critical criteria first, followed by an assessment of other noncritical factors. Finally some authors proposed a quantitative score or index to measure transferability potential.
Despite a number of publications on the topic, the proposed approaches and the factors used for assessing geographic transferability potential have varied substantially across the papers reviewed. Most promising is the identification of an extensive checklist of critical and noncritical factors in determining transferability potential, which may form the basis for consensus of a future tool. Due to the complexities of identifying appropriate weights for each of the noncritical factors, it is still uncertain whether the assessment and calculation of an overall transferability score or index will be practical or useful for transferability considerations in the future.
卫生技术评估(HTA)总体而言,更具体地说经济评估(EE),已成为全球卫生保健决策不可或缺的一部分。然而,这些评估耗时且成本高昂。评估资源稀缺,因此需要为这些评估设定优先级,并且在另一个国家或地区使用来自一个国家或地区的信息的能力(地理可转移性)是一个日益重要的考虑因素。
回顾用于评估地理可转移性潜力或指导卫生技术评估和经济评估转移实施的现有方法、系统和工具。
对多个数据库进行系统的文献综述,并辅以网络搜索、期刊手工检索以及对已识别文章的书目检索。识别出用于评估、评价或指导卫生技术评估和经济评估可转移性实施的系统、工具、清单和流程图。
在识别出的282篇参考文献中,对27篇文章进行了全文综述,其中7篇提出了专门针对地理可转移性的独特系统、工具、清单或流程图。所有这7篇文章都确定了一份需要考虑的可转移性因素清单,并且大多数文章确定了用于评估可转移性潜力的“关键”因素子集。这些关键因素大多与研究质量、方法的透明度、方法和结果的报告水平以及治疗对照在目标国家的适用性有关。一些作者提出了一种按顺序的流程图式方法,而另一些作者则建议首先评估关键标准,然后评估其他非关键因素。最后,一些作者提出了一个定量分数或指数来衡量可转移性潜力。
尽管有许多关于该主题的出版物,但在所审查的论文中,用于评估地理可转移性潜力的提议方法和因素差异很大。最有前景的是确定了一份在确定可转移性潜力时关键和非关键因素的广泛清单,这可能构成未来工具达成共识的基础。由于为每个非关键因素确定适当权重的复杂性,未来总体可转移性分数或指数的评估和计算是否对可转移性考虑实际有用仍不确定。