PRECISIONheor, Los Angeles, CA.
J Manag Care Spec Pharm. 2021 Aug;27(8):996-1008. doi: 10.18553/jmcp.2021.20600. Epub 2021 Apr 12.
The landscape for hemophilia A prophylaxis is rapidly expanding from factor VIII replacement therapy to include novel treatments such as nonfactor replacement therapies that may enhance coagulation (e.g., emicizumab) or inhibit anticoagulant pathways (e.g., fitusiran and concizumab). For payers, this expansion presents challenges in balancing well-established treatments with new options that cost more and have lesser known real-world safety and efficacy. To evaluate likely coverage practices for hemophilia A prophylaxis therapies among U.S. payers given evolving real-world data on safety and efficacy. A 3-round modified Delphi process was conducted with representatives of U.S. commercial health plans who had considerable expertise in managing populations of patients with hemophilia. Round 1 consisted of an online questionnaire; round 2 involved an online discussion about the aggregated results from round 1; and round 3 allowed participants to revise their responses from round 1 based on insights gained during round 2. Questions elicited ratings, rankings, and estimates on access restrictions based on given safety and efficacy information for hemophilia A prophylaxis therapies. Consensus was reached if ≥ 74% of panelists (14 of 19) were within 1 SD of the median group estimate during round 3. 19 Payers participated in the research. Among them, 94% dealt with commercial insurance, 94% with Medicare, and 81% with Medicaid; 79% had spent ≥ 5 years in their current role. Panelists reported limited access restrictions on hemophilia A prophylaxis therapies; the most common restrictions were prior authorization (n = 16, 84%) and quantity level limits (n = 13, 67%). Tiering and step therapy were reported by 7 respondents (39%). Respondents agreed that there was an 80% median likelihood that ≥ 9 additional patients with any safety event (e.g., thrombotic event, death) per year would trigger access restrictions, with the median likelihood of restrictions increasing to 95% for another ≥ 10 patients with safety events per year. Respondents also agreed that > 5 thrombotic events requiring treatment per patient per year would have a 98% median likelihood of leading to access restrictions and that ≥ 5 years of real-world safety and efficacy data would be highly likely (95% median likelihood) to affect coverage decisions. Noncoverage was highly unlikely (ranked fifth or sixth of 6 by 14 respondents), as was no restriction-coverage parity (ranked sixth of 6 by 10 respondents). All else being equal, cost continues to affect access policies, with respondents agreeing that a 13%-30% difference in net cost may lead to preferred formulary treatment for a drug with superior efficacy and noninferior safety, inferior efficacy and noninferior safety, or noninferior efficacy and inferior safety. Payers prefer treatments with well-understood efficacy, safety, and cost over newer treatments with uncertain long-term effects. Relatively unrestricted access to legacy and new hemophilia A prophylaxis will likely continue unless additional real-world safety concerns or major cost differences emerge. Financial support for this study was provided by Takeda Pharmaceutical Company, which was involved in study concept and design. Graf, Tuly, Harley, and Pednekar are employees of PRECISIONheor, a research consultancy to the health and life sciences industries that was contracted by Takeda to conduct this study and write the manuscript. Batt served as a consultant on this project through PRECISIONheor.
美国支付者对血友病 A 预防治疗方案的覆盖范围实践,考虑到安全性和有效性方面的真实世界数据不断发展。 由于新型治疗方法(如可能增强凝血的非因子替代疗法[例如,emicizumab]或抑制抗凝途径的疗法[例如,fitusiran 和 concizumab])正在取代因子 VIII 替代疗法,血友病 A 预防治疗领域的格局正在迅速扩大。对于支付者而言,这在平衡成熟的治疗方法与成本更高且真实世界安全性和有效性知之甚少的新选择方面带来了挑战。 为了评估美国支付者对血友病 A 预防治疗方案的可能覆盖范围,鉴于安全性和有效性方面的真实世界数据不断发展。采用了具有管理血友病患者人群丰富专业知识的美国商业健康计划代表参与的三轮改良德尔菲法流程。第一轮包括在线问卷调查;第二轮涉及关于第一轮汇总结果的在线讨论;第三轮允许参与者根据第二轮获得的见解修改第一轮的回复。问题引出了基于给定的血友病 A 预防治疗方案的安全性和有效性信息的访问限制的评分、排名和估计。如果在第三轮中,≥74%的小组成员(19 名中的 14 名)在中位数小组估计值的 1 SD 内,则达成共识。 19 家支付者参与了这项研究。其中,94%处理商业保险,94%处理医疗保险,81%处理医疗补助;79%在当前职位上工作了≥5 年。小组成员报告对血友病 A 预防治疗方案的限制访问;最常见的限制是事先授权(n=16,84%)和数量级别限制(n=13,67%)。有 7 位受访者(39%)报告了分层和阶梯治疗。受访者一致认为,每年每增加≥9 名出现任何安全事件(例如血栓事件、死亡)的患者,中位数可能性为 80%,将触发访问限制,而每年另外增加≥10 名安全事件患者的中位数可能性增加到 95%。受访者还一致认为,每年每例患者需要治疗的血栓事件≥5 次,极有可能(95%的中位数可能性)导致限制访问,并且≥5 年的真实世界安全性和有效性数据极有可能(95%的中位数可能性)影响覆盖范围决策。不覆盖的可能性极低(在 14 位受访者的 6 个排名中排名第五或第六),不限制覆盖范围的可能性也较低(在 10 位受访者的 6 个排名中排名第六)。在其他条件相同的情况下,成本继续影响访问政策,受访者一致认为,在具有优越疗效和非劣效安全性、疗效较差和非劣效安全性或非劣效疗效和较差安全性的药物中,净成本差异 13%-30%可能导致首选配方治疗。 支付者更愿意选择疗效、安全性和成本方面了解较好的治疗方法,而不是具有不确定长期影响的新型治疗方法。除非出现额外的真实世界安全问题或出现重大成本差异,否则对传统和新型血友病 A 预防治疗的相对无限制的访问可能会继续。 这项研究的资金由武田制药公司提供,该公司参与了研究的概念和设计。Graf、Tuly、Harley 和 Pednekar 是 PRECISIONheor 的员工,该咨询公司受武田制药公司委托进行这项研究并撰写手稿。Batt 通过 PRECISIONheor 担任该项目的顾问。