Medical Technology Research Group, Department of Health Policy, London School of Economics, Houghton Street, London, WC2A 2AE, England.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2022 Aug 20;22(1):1066. doi: 10.1186/s12913-022-08437-w.
Despite the increased utilisation of Managed Entry Agreements (MEAs), empirical studies assessing their impact on achieving better access to medicines remains scarce. In this study we evaluated the role of MEAs on enhancing availability of and timely access to a sample of oncology medicines that had received at least one prior rejection from reimbursement.
Funding decisions and their respective timelines for all oncology medicines approved between 2009 and 2018 in Australia, England, Scotland and Sweden were studied. A number of binary logit models captured the probability (Odds ratio (OR)) of a previous coverage rejection being reversed to positive after resubmission with vs. without a MEA. Gamma generalised linear models were used to understand if there is any association between time to final funding decision and the presence of MEA, among other decision-making variables, and if so, the strength and direction of this association (Beta coefficient (B)).
Of the 59 previously rejected medicine-indication pairs studied, 88.2% (n = 45) received a favourable decision after resubmission with MEA vs. 11.8% (n = 6) without. Average time from original submission to final funding decision was 404 (± 254) and 452 (± 364) days for submissions without vs. with MEA respectively. Resubmissions with a MEA had a higher likelihood of receiving a favourable funding decision compared to those without MEA (43.36 < OR < 202, p < 0.05), although approval specifically with an outcomes-based agreement was associated with an increase in the time to final funding decision (B = 0.89, p < 0.01). A statistically significant decrease in time to final funding decision was observed for resubmissions in Australia and Scotland compared to England and Sweden, and for resubmissions with a clinically relevant instead of a surrogate endpoint.
MEAs can improve availability of medicines by increasing the likelihood of reimbursement for medicines that would have otherwise remained rejected from reimbursement due to their evidentiary uncertainties. Nevertheless, approval with a MEA can increase the time to final funding decision, while the true, added value for patients and healthcare systems of the interventions approved with MEAs in comparison to other available interventions remains unknown.
尽管管理准入协议(MEA)的使用有所增加,但评估其对改善药品可及性影响的实证研究仍然很少。在这项研究中,我们评估了 MEA 在增强一组已被报销申请拒绝的肿瘤药物的供应和及时获得方面的作用,这些药物至少被拒绝过一次。
研究了 2009 年至 2018 年期间在澳大利亚、英国、苏格兰和瑞典批准的所有肿瘤药物的资金决定及其各自的时间表。一些二项逻辑模型捕捉了在重新提交时与没有 MEA 相比,先前的覆盖范围拒绝被推翻为正面的概率(优势比(OR))。使用伽马广义线性模型来了解是否存在与最终资金决定之间的时间与 MEA 等决策变量之间的任何关联,如果存在,这种关联的强度和方向(β系数(B))。
在所研究的 59 种先前被拒绝的药物-适应症对中,88.2%(n=45)在重新提交 MEA 后获得了有利的决定,而 11.8%(n=6)没有。没有 MEA 的原始提交到最终资金决定的平均时间为 404(±254)和 452(±364)天。与没有 MEA 的情况相比,重新提交 MEA 的可能性更大,得到有利的资金决定(43.36<OR<202,p<0.05),尽管与基于结果的协议专门批准会增加最终资金决定的时间(B=0.89,p<0.01)。与英格兰和瑞典相比,在澳大利亚和苏格兰的重新提交中观察到最终资金决定时间的统计学显著减少,对于具有临床相关而不是替代终点的重新提交也是如此。
MEA 可以通过增加对由于证据不确定性而原本被拒绝报销的药物的报销可能性,来改善药物的供应。然而,MEA 的批准会增加最终资金决定的时间,而与其他可用干预措施相比,MEA 批准的干预措施对患者和医疗保健系统的真正附加值仍然未知。