Willke Richard J, Neumann Peter J, Garrison Louis P, Ramsey Scott D
International Society for Pharmacoeconomics and Outcomes Research, Lawrenceville, NJ, USA.
Center for the Evaluation of Value and Risk in Health, Tufts Medical Center, Boston, MA, USA.
Value Health. 2018 Feb;21(2):155-160. doi: 10.1016/j.jval.2017.12.011.
The sixth section of our Special Task Force (STF) report reviews and comments on recent US-oriented value assessment frameworks, specifically those published by the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association, the Institute for Clinical and Economic Research, the American Society of Clinical Oncology, the National Comprehensive Cancer Network, and the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center. We review published commentaries that address the validity, reliability, and conceptual underpinnings of these frameworks. We find common themes of critique regarding the strengths and limitations across frameworks. Particular shortcomings of some frameworks pose greater threats to their face validity and utility compared with others. The most significant limitations include lack of clear perspective (e.g., patient vs. health plan) and poor transparency in accounting for costs and benefits. We then review how each framework adheres to core STF recommendations, with particular emphasis on whether the framework can be used to support coverage decisions by health insurers, and whether it adheres to core principles of cost-effectiveness analysis. The Institute for Clinical and Economic Research framework most closely adheres to core STF recommendations. Others have significant limitations that vary widely from framework to framework. We also review how the frameworks follow STF recommendations for addressing potentially relevant issues beyond cost-effectiveness analysis - for example, equity in resource allocation and patient heterogeneity. Finally, we review whether and how each framework uses value thresholds and addresses affordability concerns. We conclude with suggestions for further research, particularly in the areas of testing the measurement and use of novel elements of value and deliberative processes.
我们特别工作组(STF)报告的第六部分对近期以美国为导向的价值评估框架进行了回顾和评论,具体涉及美国心脏病学会/美国心脏协会、临床与经济研究学会、美国临床肿瘤学会、国家综合癌症网络以及纪念斯隆凯特琳癌症中心发布的那些框架。我们回顾了已发表的评论,这些评论涉及这些框架的有效性、可靠性和概念基础。我们发现了关于各框架优缺点的共同批评主题。与其他框架相比,一些框架的特定缺点对其表面效度和实用性构成了更大威胁。最显著的局限性包括缺乏明确的视角(例如,患者与健康计划)以及在成本和效益核算方面透明度不足。然后,我们回顾了每个框架如何遵循特别工作组的核心建议,特别强调该框架是否可用于支持健康保险公司的承保决策,以及它是否遵循成本效益分析的核心原则。临床与经济研究学会的框架最紧密地遵循了特别工作组的核心建议。其他框架存在重大局限性,且因框架而异。我们还回顾了这些框架如何遵循特别工作组关于解决成本效益分析之外潜在相关问题的建议——例如,资源分配的公平性和患者异质性。最后,我们回顾了每个框架是否以及如何使用价值阈值并解决可负担性问题。我们以进一步研究的建议作为结论,并特别强调了在测试价值新要素的衡量和使用以及审议过程等领域的研究。