Spinner Daryl S, Birt Julie, Walter Jeffrey W, Bowman Lee, Mauskopf Josephine, Drummond Michael F, Copley-Merriman Catherine
RTI Health Solutions, Research Triangle Park, NC, USA.
Clinicoecon Outcomes Res. 2013;5:69-85. doi: 10.2147/CEOR.S39624. Epub 2013 Jan 30.
Health-technology assessment (HTA) plays an important role in informing drug-reimbursement decision-making in many countries. HTA processes for the Pharmaceutical Benefits Advisory Committee (PBAC) in Australia, the Common Drug Review (CDR) in Canada, and the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) in England and Wales are among the most established in the world. In this study, we performed nine in-depth case studies to assess whether different clinical evidence bases may have influenced listing recommendations made by PBAC, CDR, and NICE.
Nine drugs were selected for which the three agencies had provided listing recommendations for the same indication between 2007 and 2010. We reviewed the evidence considered for each listing recommendation, identified the similarities and differences among the clinical evidence bases considered, and evaluated the extent to which different clinical evidence bases could have contributed to different decisions based on HTA body comments and public assessment of the evidence.
HTA agencies reached the same recommendation for reimbursement (recommended for listing) for four drugs and different recommendations for five drugs. In all cases, each agency used different evidence bases in their recommendations. The agencies considered overlapping sets of clinical comparators and trials when evaluating the same drug. While PBAC and NICE considered indirect and/or mixed-treatment comparisons, CDR did not. In some cases, CDR and/or NICE excluded trials from review if the drug and/or the comparator were not administered according to the relevant marketing authorization.
In the listing recommendations reviewed, considerable variability exists in the clinical evidence considered by PBAC, CDR, and NICE for drug-listing recommendations. Differences in evidence resulted from differences in the consideration of indirect and mixed-treatment comparison data and differences in medical practice in each jurisdiction.
卫生技术评估(HTA)在许多国家的药物报销决策中发挥着重要作用。澳大利亚的药物福利咨询委员会(PBAC)、加拿大的普通药物审查(CDR)以及英格兰和威尔士的国家卫生与临床优化研究所(NICE)的HTA流程是世界上最成熟的流程之一。在本研究中,我们进行了九项深入的案例研究,以评估不同的临床证据基础是否可能影响了PBAC、CDR和NICE做出的上市推荐。
选择了九种药物,这三个机构在2007年至2010年期间针对相同适应症提供了上市推荐。我们审查了每项上市推荐所考虑的证据,确定了所考虑的临床证据基础之间的异同,并根据HTA机构的评论和对证据的公开评估,评估了不同的临床证据基础在多大程度上可能导致了不同的决策。
HTA机构对四种药物做出了相同的报销推荐(推荐上市),对五种药物做出了不同的推荐。在所有情况下,每个机构在其推荐中使用了不同的证据基础。这些机构在评估同一药物时考虑了重叠的临床对照和试验集。虽然PBAC和NICE考虑了间接和/或混合治疗比较,但CDR没有。在某些情况下,如果药物和/或对照未按照相关市场授权进行给药,CDR和/或NICE会将试验排除在审查之外。
在所审查的上市推荐中,PBAC、CDR和NICE在药物上市推荐中考虑的临床证据存在很大差异。证据差异源于对间接和混合治疗比较数据的考虑差异以及每个司法管辖区医疗实践的差异。