Salek Sam M, Lussier Hoskyn Sarah, Johns Jeffrey, Allen Nicola, Sehgal Chander
University of Hertfordshire, School of Life and Medical Sciences, Hatfield, United Kingdom.
Institute for Medicines Development, Outcome Research Division, Cardiff, United Kingdom.
Front Pharmacol. 2019 Feb 18;9:1578. doi: 10.3389/fphar.2018.01578. eCollection 2018.
This analysis follows our recent study showing that Canadian public reimbursement delays have lengthened from regulatory approval to listing decisions by public drug plans and delayed public access to innovative medicines, mainly due to processes following the Common Drug Review (CDR) and the pan-Canadian Oncology Drug Review (pCODR). Public drug plans participate in a pan-Canadian Pharmaceutical Alliance (pCPA) joint negotiation process before making decisions about whether or not to reimburse a product reviewed through CDR and pCODR. This research aims to report the findings from a comprehensive analysis of pCPA process times, times to reimbursement by public payers in Canada, and to explore the opportunities to reduce total delays in public reimbursement with a specific focus on the pCPA process. An analysis was conducted of pCPA timelines with respect to making decisions about products and indications reviewed through CDR/pCODR, and focusses on three separate time components: time to begin negotiating, time spent negotiating, and time to implement the negotiation (i.e., time to list) in each of nine jurisdictions (i.e., 10 provinces of Canada, excluding Quebec). This study demonstrates the role of post-CDR/pCODR processes in large and lengthening delays to listing new medicines. Notably, oncology products have experienced the longest increases in time to begin negotiating and to complete negotiations. Trends in listing times post-pCPA across provinces are less clear, however, it appears that consistency in terms of timelines across provinces is not happening quite so smoothly for oncology products compared to non-oncology products. Listing rates also appear to be declining for non-oncology products, although this trend is less conclusive for oncology products. Challenges need to be addressed to improve efficiency, transparency, and ultimately reduce pCPA timelines and total timelines to public reimbursement. Suggested ways to improve and streamline the listing process are: (1) transparent target timelines and associated performance incentives for the pCPA and public plan decisions, (2) parallel HTA-pCPA processes to enable pCPA negotiations to start part-way through the HTA review and allow pCPA negotiation information to be fed back into the HTA review, and (3) innovative agreements that consider patient input and earlier coverage with real-world evidence development.
本分析基于我们最近的一项研究,该研究表明,加拿大公共报销延迟时间从监管批准延长至公共药品计划的上市决定,导致公众获取创新药物的时间推迟,这主要归因于加拿大药物评审(CDR)和泛加拿大肿瘤药物评审(pCODR)之后的流程。在决定是否报销通过CDR和pCODR评审的产品之前,公共药品计划会参与泛加拿大药品联盟(pCPA)的联合谈判过程。本研究旨在报告对pCPA流程时间、加拿大公共支付方的报销时间进行全面分析的结果,并探索减少公共报销总延迟的机会,特别关注pCPA流程。针对通过CDR/pCODR评审的产品和适应症的决策,对pCPA时间线进行了分析,重点关注三个不同的时间组成部分:开始谈判的时间、谈判所花费的时间以及在九个司法管辖区(即加拿大10个省,不包括魁北克省)中每个辖区实施谈判的时间(即上市时间)。本研究证明了CDR/pCODR后流程在新药上市的长时间和不断延长的延迟中所起的作用。值得注意的是,肿瘤产品开始谈判和完成谈判的时间增加最长。然而,pCPA之后各省的上市时间趋势不太明确,与非肿瘤产品相比,肿瘤产品在各省时间线的一致性方面似乎进展不太顺利。非肿瘤产品的上市率似乎也在下降,尽管这一趋势在肿瘤产品方面不太确定。需要应对各种挑战以提高效率、透明度,并最终缩短pCPA时间线和公共报销的总时间线。建议改进和简化上市流程的方法包括:(1)为pCPA和公共计划决策设定透明的目标时间线及相关绩效激励措施;(2)并行的卫生技术评估 - pCPA流程,使pCPA谈判能够在卫生技术评估审查过程中中途开始,并允许将pCPA谈判信息反馈到卫生技术评估审查中;(3)考虑患者意见并通过真实世界证据开发实现更早覆盖的创新协议。