National Institute for Health and Care Excellence, Level 1A, City Tower, Manchester, M1 4BT, UK.
Manchester Academic Health Science Centre, University of Manchester, Manchester, UK.
Appl Health Econ Health Policy. 2023 May;21(3):365-372. doi: 10.1007/s40258-022-00786-1. Epub 2023 Jan 17.
The silent pandemic of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is a global issue needing prompt attention. A comprehensive one-health approach across human and animal health, agriculture and the environment is needed to solve this, addressing overuse of antibacterials, and of course, optimising measures for preventing and controlling infection. We also need a robust pipeline of new antibacterials. However, the current pipeline is inadequate and several companies with new antibacterials have gone bankrupt due to low sales, leading to a 'broken market'. To address this, the UK has completed a project using novel approaches to value assessment and reimbursement for two antibacterials. The new funding arrangements for these products commenced on 1st July 2022, delinking reimbursement from volume of sales; a so-called 'pull incentive', with payments based on the added value to the whole-health and social-care system, not just to individual patients. This article describes how the project was devised, developed, and progressed. The learning from this work might help other countries to adopt or adapt the approach to fit with their national systems, and collectively achieve a global incentive to reinvigorate the antibacterial pipeline.
抗菌药物耐药性(AMR)这一无声的大流行是一个全球性问题,亟待关注。需要采取跨人类和动物健康、农业和环境的综合“同一健康”方法来解决这一问题,包括减少抗菌药物的过度使用,当然,还要优化预防和控制感染的措施。我们还需要有强大的新抗菌药物供应渠道。然而,目前的供应渠道不足,由于销售额低,几家拥有新抗菌药物的公司已经破产,导致出现了“破裂的市场”。为了解决这个问题,英国已经完成了一个使用新方法来评估和报销两种抗菌药物的项目。这些产品的新资金安排于 2022 年 7 月 1 日开始实施,将报销与销售数量脱钩;这是一种所谓的“拉动激励”,根据对整个健康和社会护理系统的附加值来支付费用,而不仅仅是针对个别患者。本文描述了该项目的设计、开发和进展情况。从这项工作中获得的经验教训可能有助于其他国家采用或调整这种方法,以适应其国家体系,并共同为振兴抗菌药物供应渠道提供全球激励。