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基于绩效的风险分担安排:美国支付方的经验。

Performance-Based Risk-Sharing Arrangements: U.S. Payer Experience.

机构信息

1 University of Maryland School of Pharmacy, Baltimore; Baylor Scott & White Health, Temple, Texas; and University of Texas, Austin.

2 University of Maryland School of Pharmacy, Baltimore, and Rutgers University, Piscataway, New Jersey.

出版信息

J Manag Care Spec Pharm. 2017 Oct;23(10):1042-1052. doi: 10.18553/jmcp.2017.23.10.1042.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

As a result of global concern about rising drug costs, many U.S. payers and European agencies such as the National Health Service have partnered with pharmaceutical companies in performance-based risk-sharing arrangements (PBRSAs) by which manufacturers share financial risk with health care purchasing entities and authorities. However, PBRSAs present many administrative and legal challenges that have minimized successful contract experiences in the United States.

OBJECTIVE

To (a) identify drug and disease characteristics and contract components that contribute to successful PBRSA experiences and the primary barriers to PBRSA execution and (b) explore solutions to facilitate contract negotiation and execution.

METHODS

A 37-item, web-based survey instrument (Qualtrics), approximately 20 minutes in duration, was open during July and August 2016. The survey was emailed to 90 pharmacy and medical directors of various health care organizations. Statistical analysis included the Kruskal-Wallis test and chi-square tests to examine differences among payer responses. Survey responses were anonymized and data were aggregated.

RESULTS

Twenty-seven individuals completed the survey (30% completion rate). The majority of respondents worked for regional health plans (52%, n = 14), covering at least 1 million lives (63%, n = 17), with at least 7 years of managed care experience (81%, n = 22). A total of 51 PBRSAs were active among respondents at the time of the survey. Easily obtainable and evaluable drug data and medical data were the most important drug and disease attributes for successful PBRSAs, respectively. Pharmacy claims and patient demographic data were assessed as "very easy and inexpensive" to collect. Type and amount of manufacturer payment for drug outcome performance failure, endpoint measurement, and necessary clinical data for drug performance measurement were all critical factors for successful PBRSAs. Standardized contract templates and transparent contract financial risk evaluation and modeling ranked highest among methods of manufacturer facilitation of PBRSAs. This study was limited by sample size and survey questions were limited to explanation of PBRSAs at the disease state level.

CONCLUSIONS

On the basis of PBRSA experiences, respondents noted that drug use in chronic medical conditions and objective drug outcome performance measurements were favorable drug characteristics and serve as the primary source of satisfaction for these types of contracts. Third parties and manufacturers can facilitate the uptake and success of PBRSAs by developing standardized contracting templates in addition to other methods that increase their stake in the arrangement. Looking forward, mounting perceptions of success in this realm of contracting for pharmaceuticals may contribute in the quest for value-based payments in the U.S. health care system.

DISCLOSURES

The construction of the survey and payment for survey respondents were supported by Charles River Associates. Parece is an employee of Charles River Associates. Goble and Ung are completing fellowship training sponsored by Novartis and Celgene, respectively, but do not have any conflicts of interest and did not receive any funding related to this study. Navarro reports consulting fees from Analysis Group, TEVA, and Amgen, unrelated to this study. Van Boemmel-Wegmann declares no conflict of interest. Study concept and design were contributed by Navarro, Goble, Ung, and Parece. Navarro took the lead in data collection, along with Goble and Ung, and data interpretation was performed by van Boemmel-Wegmann, Goble, and Ung. The manuscript was written by Goble, Ung, Navarro, and van Boemmel-Wegmann and revised by all of the authors.

摘要

背景

由于人们对药品成本不断上涨的担忧日益加剧,许多美国支付方和欧洲机构(如英国国家医疗服务体系)已与制药公司合作,通过绩效型风险分担安排(PBRSA)分担财务风险,药品采购实体和主管部门。然而,PBRSA 存在许多行政和法律方面的挑战,导致美国成功的合同经验有限。

目的

(a)确定有助于 PBRSA 成功的药物和疾病特征以及合同组成部分,以及执行 PBRSA 的主要障碍;(b)探讨促进合同谈判和执行的解决方案。

方法

在 2016 年 7 月至 8 月期间,使用一个包含 37 个项目的基于网络的调查问卷(Qualtrics),大约需要 20 分钟完成。调查问卷通过电子邮件发送给 90 名来自不同医疗保健组织的药剂师和医疗主任。统计分析包括 Kruskal-Wallis 检验和卡方检验,以检查支付方的回答差异。调查结果匿名处理,数据汇总。

结果

共有 27 人完成了调查(完成率为 30%)。大多数受访者来自地区性健康计划(52%,n=14),覆盖至少 100 万个人的健康保险(63%,n=17),具有至少 7 年的管理式医疗保健经验(81%,n=22)。在调查时,受访者中共有 51 个 PBRSA 正在生效。易于获取和评估的药物数据和医疗数据分别是 PBRSA 成功的最重要的药物和疾病属性。药物使用情况的理赔和患者人口统计学数据被评估为易于获取和低廉。制造商因药物疗效失败、终点测量和药物疗效测量所需的临床数据而支付的药物疗效表现的类型和金额都是 PBRSA 成功的关键因素。制造商促进 PBRSA 的方法中,使用标准化合同模板和透明的合同财务风险评估和建模排名最高。本研究受到样本量的限制,且调查问题仅限于疾病状态层面的 PBRSA 解释。

结论

基于 PBRSA 的经验,受访者指出,慢性病患者的药物使用情况和客观的药物疗效测量是有利的药物特征,是这些类型合同的主要满意度来源。第三方和制造商可以通过制定标准化的合同模板以及增加对安排的参与程度等其他方法,促进 PBRSA 的采用和成功。展望未来,在药品合同领域取得成功的预期可能会推动美国医疗保健系统寻求基于价值的支付方式。

披露

该调查的构建和对调查参与者的支付均由 Charles River Associates 提供支持。Parece 是 Charles River Associates 的员工。Goble 和 Ung 正在接受诺华和 Celgene 分别赞助的奖学金培训,但没有任何利益冲突,也没有与本研究相关的任何资金。Navarro 报告了与 Analysis Group、TEVA 和 Amgen 的咨询费,与本研究无关。Van Boemmel-Wegmann 无利益冲突。研究概念和设计由 Navarro、Goble、Ung 和 Parece 贡献。Navarro 与 Goble 和 Ung 一起负责数据收集,数据解释由 van Boemmel-Wegmann、Goble 和 Ung 进行。手稿由 Goble、Ung、Navarro 和 van Boemmel-Wegmann 撰写,并由所有作者修订。

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