Antioch Kathryn M, Drummond Michael F, Niessen Louis W, Vondeling Hindrik
Guidelines and Economists Network International (GENI), Department of Epidemiology and Preventive Medicine, Monash University Australia, 27 Monaro Road, Kooyong, VIC 3144 Australia.
GENI Board, Centre for Health Economics, University of York, Alcuin A Block, Heslington, York, YO10 5DD UK.
Cost Eff Resour Alloc. 2017 Feb 10;15:1. doi: 10.1186/s12962-017-0063-x. eCollection 2017.
Economic evidence is influential in health technology assessment world-wide. Clinical Practice Guidelines (CPG) can enable economists to include economic information on health care provision. Application of economic evidence in CPGs, and its integration into clinical practice and national decision making is hampered by objections from professions, paucity of economic evidence or lack of policy commitment. The use of state-of-art economic methodologies will improve this. Economic evidence can be graded by 'checklists' to establish the best evidence for decision making given methodological rigor. New economic evaluation checklists, Multi-Criteria Decision Analyses (MCDA) and other decision criteria enable health economists to impact on decision making world-wide. We analyse the methodologies for integrating economic evidence into CPG agencies globally, including the Agency of Health Research and Quality (AHRQ) in the USA, National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) and Australian political reforms. The Guidelines and Economists Network International (GENI) Board members from Australia, UK, Canada and Denmark presented the findings at the conference of the International Health Economists Association (IHEA) and we report conclusions and developments since. The Consolidated Guidelines for the Reporting of Economic Evaluations (CHEERS) 24 item check list can be used by AHRQ, NHMRC, other CPG and health organisations, in conjunction with the Drummond ten-point check list and a questionnaire that scores that checklist for grading studies, when assessing economic evidence. Cost-effectiveness Analysis (CEA) thresholds, opportunity cost and willingness-to-pay (WTP) are crucial issues for decision rules in CEA generally, including end-of-life therapies. Limitations of inter-rater reliability in checklists can be addressed by including more than one assessor to reach a consensus, especially when impacting on treatment decisions. We identify priority areas to generate economic evidence for CPGs by NHMRC, AHRQ, and other agencies. The evidence may cover demand for care issues such as involved time, logistics, innovation price, price sensitivity, substitutes and complements, WTP, absenteeism and presentism. Supply issues may include economies of scale, efficiency changes, and return on investment. Involved equity and efficiency measures may include cost-of-illness, disease burden, quality-of-life, budget impact, cost-effective ratios, net benefits and disparities in access and outcomes. Priority setting remains essential and trade-off decisions between policy criteria can be based on MCDA, both in evidence based clinical medicine and in health planning.
经济证据在全球卫生技术评估中具有影响力。临床实践指南(CPG)可使经济学家纳入有关医疗保健提供的经济信息。专业人士的反对意见、经济证据的匮乏或政策承诺的缺失阻碍了经济证据在CPG中的应用及其融入临床实践和国家决策。采用先进的经济方法将改善这种情况。经济证据可通过“清单”进行分级,以便在方法严谨性的基础上确定决策的最佳证据。新的经济评估清单、多标准决策分析(MCDA)和其他决策标准使卫生经济学家能够对全球决策产生影响。我们分析了将经济证据纳入全球CPG机构(包括美国的卫生研究与质量机构(AHRQ)、澳大利亚国家卫生与医学研究委员会(NHMRC)以及澳大利亚的政治改革)的方法。来自澳大利亚、英国、加拿大和丹麦的指南与经济学家国际网络(GENI)董事会成员在国际卫生经济学家协会(IHEA)会议上展示了研究结果,我们在此报告自那时以来的结论和进展。在评估经济证据时,美国卫生研究与质量机构(AHRQ)、澳大利亚国家卫生与医学研究委员会(NHMRC)、其他CPG和卫生组织可使用《经济评估报告综合指南》(CHEERS)的24项清单,并结合德拉蒙德十点清单以及一份对该清单进行评分以评估研究的问卷。成本效益分析(CEA)阈值、机会成本和支付意愿(WTP)通常是CEA决策规则中的关键问题,包括临终治疗。清单中评估者间信度的局限性可通过纳入多名评估者以达成共识来解决,尤其是在影响治疗决策时。我们确定了澳大利亚国家卫生与医学研究委员会(NHMRC)、美国卫生研究与质量机构(AHRQ)及其他机构为CPG生成经济证据的优先领域。证据可能涵盖护理需求问题,如所需时间、后勤、创新价格、价格敏感性、替代品和互补品、支付意愿、旷工和出勤主义。供应问题可能包括规模经济、效率变化和投资回报率。涉及的公平和效率衡量指标可能包括疾病成本、疾病负担、生活质量、预算影响、成本效益比率、净效益以及获取和结果方面的差异。在循证临床医学和卫生规划中,确定优先事项仍然至关重要,政策标准之间的权衡决策可基于多标准决策分析(MCDA)。