Langley Paul C
College of Pharmacy, University of Minnesota.
Innov Pharm. 2021 Feb 16;12(1). doi: 10.24926/iip.v12i1.3702. eCollection 2021.
Medicaid formulary committees and other gatekeepers face a difficult task. On the one hand they can utilize technical expertise in evaluating the real world evidence for clinical, quality of life and resource utilization claims for competing products while on the other hand they may be asked to assess claims built by simulation models for pricing and product access. A common option has been to take modeled claims from third parties such as the Institute for Clinical and Economic Review (ICER) at face value without challenging the model structure, its assumptions and its incremental cost-per-QALY claims set against competing products or the existing standard of care. Unfortunately, from the available evidence, it seems clear that many formulary assessment groups, last but not least those for whom the ICER modeling claims are targeted, have little if any appreciation of the limitations of ICER modeling. There are two substantive issues: (i) a failure to appreciate the limitations imposed by the standards of normal science for credible, empirically evaluable and replicable product claims and (ii) an understanding of limitations imposed by the axioms of fundamental measurement. In the latter case, a failure to recognize that the quality adjusted life year (QALY) is an impossible mathematical construct (hence the I-QALY). To these limitations should be added the potential for constructing competing imaginary claims. Surprisingly, ICER has provided the ideal opportunity to construct competing claims with the launch in late 2020 of the ICER Analytics cloud platform. Formulary committees and other health decision makers should be aware that claims based on the ICER Analytics platform together with competing lifetime modelled claims all fail the standards of normal science. Factoring these into formulary decisions is not only misguided but may have unintended consequences for pricing and access that may disadvantage significantly patients and caregivers. We have spent too much time debating the merits or otherwise of the I-QALY for targeted patient groups with the parties failing to recognize that the focus on simulated cost-per-I-QALY value assessments is a mathematical folly; I-QALY claims are a chimera. The I-QALY, at long last, should be abandoned together with modelled lifetime simulations. Medicaid formulary decision makes should rethink the required evidence base for formulary decisions and negotiations. Care should be taken to revisit previous negotiations where ICER recommendations have been utilized to support pricing and access.
医疗补助药品目录委员会及其他把关者面临一项艰巨任务。一方面,他们可利用专业技术来评估竞争产品在临床、生活质量及资源利用方面的实际证据;另一方面,他们可能会被要求评估基于模拟模型提出的定价和产品准入方面的主张。一种常见做法是直接接受来自第三方(如临床与经济评论研究所(ICER))的模型化主张,而不质疑模型结构、其假设以及与竞争产品或现有医疗标准相比的每质量调整生命年增量成本主张。不幸的是,从现有证据来看,很明显许多药品目录评估小组,尤其是那些ICER建模主张所针对的小组,对ICER建模的局限性几乎没有什么认识。有两个实质性问题:(i)未能认识到正常科学标准对可信、可实证评估和可复制的产品主张所施加的限制;(ii)对基本测量公理所施加的限制缺乏理解。在后一种情况下,未能认识到质量调整生命年(QALY)是一个不可能的数学结构(因此才有I - QALY)。除了这些限制之外,还存在构建相互竞争的虚构主张的可能性。令人惊讶的是,ICER在2020年末推出ICER Analytics云平台,为构建相互竞争的主张提供了理想契机。药品目录委员会及其他医疗决策者应意识到,基于ICER Analytics平台的主张以及相互竞争的终身模型化主张均不符合正常科学标准。将这些因素纳入药品目录决策不仅是错误的,而且可能对定价和准入产生意想不到的后果,这可能会严重不利于患者和护理人员。我们花了太多时间与各方争论针对特定患者群体的I - QALY的优缺点,却没有认识到专注于模拟的每I - QALY成本价值评估是一种数学上的愚蠢行为;I - QALY主张是一种幻想。最终,I - QALY连同模型化的终身模拟都应被摒弃。医疗补助药品目录决策者应重新思考药品目录决策和谈判所需的证据基础。应谨慎重新审视此前利用ICER建议来支持定价和准入的谈判。