Health Economics Unit, Melbourne School of Population and Global Health, University of Melbourne, 207 Bouverie St, Carlton 3053, Melbourne, VIC, Australia.
Centre for Health Economics, Research and Evaluation (CHERE), University of Technology Sydney, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
Pharmacoeconomics. 2022 Feb;40(2):157-182. doi: 10.1007/s40273-021-01107-5. Epub 2021 Nov 5.
Measuring and valuing health-related quality of life (HRQOL) in children can be challenging but is an important component for providing decision makers with accurate information to fund new interventions, including medicines and vaccines for public subsidy. We review funding submissions of medicines made to the Pharmaceutical Benefits Advisory Committee contained in public summary documents to examine the use of child-specific HRQOL measures in decision making in Australia. A sample frame of medicines used by children was derived from four sources. Public summary documents relating to these medicines were searched in the Pharmaceutical Benefits Advisory Committee web resources for whether they related to children (aged under 18 years) and contained HRQOL information and/or cost-utility analyses. Data about the use of utilities in decision making were extracted and analysed. Of the 1889 public summary documents available, 62 public summary documents (29 medicines) contained information pertaining to children and utilities. Of these, four public summary documents included child-specific HRQOL measures, 16 included adult HRQOL measures, 11 included direct elicitation and the HRQOL source was not defined in 31 documents. Excluding documents using child-specific HRQOL measures, we considered that in 85% of medicines, decision making uncertainty might have been reduced by using child-specific HRQOL measures. Despite the growing literature on economic analysis in paediatric populations, the use of child-specific HRQOL measures in submissions to the Pharmaceutical Benefits Advisory Committee was minimal. Submissions involved inconsistent approaches, use of adult measures and weights, and substantial gaps in evidence. We recommend the consistent use of child-specific measures to improve the evidence base for decisions about medicines for children in Australia.
衡量和评估儿童健康相关生活质量(HRQOL)可能具有挑战性,但这是为决策者提供准确信息以资助新干预措施(包括用于公共补贴的药物和疫苗)的重要组成部分。我们审查了提交给药品福利咨询委员会的药品资金申请,这些申请包含在公开摘要文件中,以检查在澳大利亚的决策中使用特定于儿童的 HRQOL 措施的情况。从四个来源得出了儿童使用的药物样本框架。在药品福利咨询委员会的网络资源中搜索与这些药物相关的公开摘要文件,以确定它们是否与儿童(18 岁以下)有关,并包含 HRQOL 信息和/或成本效用分析。提取并分析了关于在决策中使用效用的数据。在可用的 1889 份公开摘要文件中,有 62 份(29 种药物)包含与儿童和效用相关的信息。其中,四份公开摘要文件包含特定于儿童的 HRQOL 措施,十六份包含成人 HRQOL 措施,十一份包含直接 elicitation,而 31 份文件中未定义 HRQOL 来源。不包括使用特定于儿童的 HRQOL 措施的文件,我们认为在 85%的药物中,使用特定于儿童的 HRQOL 措施可能会降低决策不确定性。尽管关于儿科人群经济分析的文献不断增加,但在向药品福利咨询委员会提交的申请中,使用特定于儿童的 HRQOL 措施的情况很少。提交的申请涉及方法不一致、使用成人措施和权重,以及证据存在重大差距。我们建议一致使用特定于儿童的措施,以改善澳大利亚儿童药物决策的证据基础。