Soprovich Allison, El Kurdi Sylvia, Eurich Dean T
Alliance for Canadian Health Outcomes Research in Diabetes, Li Ka Shing Centre for Health Research Innovation, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.
School of Public Health, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.
BMJ Open. 2017 Sep 11;7(9):e015497. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2016-015497.
Canada's Common Drug Review (CDR) evaluates drug data from published and unpublished research, as well as input from patient groups, to recommend provincial coverage. Currently, the CDR process gives manufacturers the opportunity to redact information in the final publicly available report. Patients often have strong feelings regarding the efficacy, harms, health-related quality of life (HRQL), and cost associated with the drugs under review and their redacted data. Highlighting Canada's approach will hopefully build on the growing international concern regarding transparency of clinical study data.
The purpose was to objectively examine and classify completed, publicly available CDR-Clinical Review Reports (CRR) for redactions, and compare them to the patients' reported interests as patient-centred outcomes.
Two independent reviewers searched for and examined publicly available CDR-CRR from November 2013-September 2016 through the Canadian Agency for Drugs and Technologies in Health (CADTH) on-line database. Both reviewers separately classified the redactions and patient-reported interests into the following categories: efficacy, harms, HRQL and costs. All discrepancies were rectified by consensus involving a third reviewer.
Fifty-two completed CDR-CRR were reviewed. 48 (92%) included patient-reported interests and 40 (77%) had redactions classified in the following categories: efficacy (75%), costs (48%), harms (38%), HRQL (23%). 89% of redactions were outcomes identified as patient-reported interests (69% efficacy, 42% harms, 36% cost, 33% HRQL). When examining drug characteristics, biological agents were statistically associated with increased odds of redactions with respect to either efficacy (OR 3.4, 95% CI 1.0 to 11.6) or harms (OR 3.5, 95% CI 1.02 to 12.4) compared with non-biological agents.
Whether data from the CDR-CRR used in the decision-making should be fully disclosed to the public is controversial. Our findings suggest clinical data (efficacy, harms, HRQL) matters to patients and should be publicly available within the CDR-CRR. Canada trails Europe and the USA regarding the transparency of clinical study data. This lack of transparency relates to the patient voice, and limits movement towards patient-centred care and patient-engaged research, restricting real-world value measurement.
加拿大药品通用审查(CDR)会评估已发表和未发表研究中的药物数据,以及患者群体的意见,以推荐省级医保覆盖范围。目前,CDR流程让制造商有机会在最终公开报告中编辑信息。患者通常对正在审查的药物的疗效、危害、健康相关生活质量(HRQL)以及成本及其编辑后的数据有着强烈的看法。突出加拿大的做法有望基于国际上对临床研究数据透明度日益增长的关注。
目的是客观审查并对已完成的、公开可用的CDR临床审查报告(CRR)中的编辑内容进行分类,并将其与患者报告的以患者为中心的结果的利益进行比较。
两名独立审查员通过加拿大卫生药品和技术局(CADTH)在线数据库,搜索并审查了2013年11月至2016年9月期间公开可用的CDR-CRR。两名审查员分别将编辑内容和患者报告的利益分为以下几类:疗效、危害、HRQL和成本。所有差异均通过第三名审查员参与的共识得到纠正。
审查了52份已完成的CDR-CRR。48份(92%)包含患者报告的利益,40份(77%)有编辑内容,分类如下:疗效(75%)、成本(48%)、危害(38%)、HRQL(23%)。89%的编辑内容是被确定为患者报告利益的结果(疗效69%、危害42%、成本36%、HRQL 33%)。在检查药物特性时,与非生物制剂相比,生物制剂在疗效(比值比3.4,95%置信区间1.0至11.6)或危害(比值比3.5,95%置信区间1.02至12.4)方面编辑内容增加的几率在统计学上具有相关性。
决策中使用的CDR-CRR数据是否应向公众完全披露存在争议。我们的研究结果表明临床数据(疗效、危害、HRQL)对患者很重要,应在CDR-CRR中公开。在临床研究数据透明度方面,加拿大落后于欧洲和美国。这种缺乏透明度与患者的声音相关,限制了向以患者为中心的护理和患者参与研究的转变,限制了真实世界价值的衡量。