Aix-Marseille University, Marseille, France.
Pierre Fabre Laboratories, Paris, France.
Med Decis Making. 2023 Oct-Nov;43(7-8):961-972. doi: 10.1177/0272989X231188073. Epub 2023 Jul 22.
This study aimed to compare reimbursement recommendations by the British National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) and the French National Authority for Health (Haute Autorité de Santé; HAS) for oncology new medicines indicated for the treatment of solid tumors.
Public assessment reports published on NICE and HAS Web sites between January 1, 2015, and December 31, 2021, describing appraisals for public reimbursement for oncology new medicines indicated for the treatment of solid tumors were searched and systematically reviewed. Biosimilars and generic drugs were excluded from the analysis.
Overall, 119 public assessment reports published by NICE and 134 by HAS were identified, with 101 interventions assessed by both agencies. Of 101, 38 (38%) interventions received similar recommendations, 38 (38%) were recommended for different populations, and 25 (25%) were endorsed by one agency but rejected by the other. The main reason NICE would not recommend a drug was due to lack of cost-effectiveness, whereas HAS would primarily reject a drug on the grounds of insufficient clinical evidence.
The major divergence between agencies is the key criterion used for reimbursement recommendations. NICE mainly considers cost-effectiveness, whereas HAS primarily focuses on the clinical value of interventions. This contributes to the variability in reimbursement recommendations and leads to differential access to oncology new medicines indicated for the treatment of solid tumors among patients in France, and England and Wales.
Both the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) and the National Authority for Health (Haute Autorité de Santé; HAS) have established formal health technology assessment (HTA) processes and offer universal public health care coverage. However, both agencies diverge in the weight given to different elements of evidence during HTA evaluations. NICE uses cost-effectiveness as key criterion for recommendations on drug reimbursement, while HAS mostly limits its assessment to clinical value.For oncology new medicines indicated for treating solid tumors between 2015 and 2021, recommendations differed 62% of the time between NICE and HAS, primarily due to the distinct key decision-making criteria each HTA agency uses.For 4 interventions not endorsed by NICE, HAS saw these drugs as providing a substantial enhancement in clinical value over existing treatments, potentially providing an edge in price negotiations. Conversely, NICE deemed these drugs as not delivering adequate value for money in comparison with current therapies.A key difference between the 2 agencies is HAS's insistence on methodological rigor in efficacy results, compared with NICE's more flexible approach, considering descriptive efficacy results in cost-effectiveness modeling.
本研究旨在比较英国国家卫生与保健优化研究所(NICE)和法国国家卫生管理局(Haute Autorité de Santé;HAS)对新的肿瘤学药物的报销建议,这些药物适用于治疗实体瘤。
在 NICE 和 HAS 网站上,检索并系统回顾了 2015 年 1 月 1 日至 2021 年 12 月 31 日期间发布的描述新的肿瘤学药物公共报销评估的公共评估报告,这些药物适用于治疗实体瘤。分析中排除了生物类似药和仿制药。
共确定了 NICE 发布的 119 份公共评估报告和 HAS 发布的 134 份公共评估报告,这两个机构共评估了 101 项干预措施。在这 101 项干预措施中,有 38 项(38%)获得了类似的建议,38 项(38%)适用于不同的人群,25 项(25%)被一个机构认可但被另一个机构拒绝。NICE 不推荐一种药物的主要原因是缺乏成本效益,而 HAS 主要基于临床证据不足而拒绝一种药物。
机构之间的主要分歧在于报销建议使用的关键标准。NICE 主要考虑成本效益,而 HAS 主要关注干预措施的临床价值。这导致了报销建议的差异,并导致法国、英格兰和威尔士的实体瘤治疗新肿瘤药物的可及性存在差异。
国家卫生与保健优化研究所(NICE)和国家卫生管理局(HAS)都建立了正式的健康技术评估(HTA)流程,并提供普遍的公共医疗保健覆盖。然而,这两个机构在 HTA 评估中对不同证据要素的重视程度存在差异。NICE 将成本效益作为药物报销建议的关键标准,而 HAS 主要将其评估限制在临床价值上。对于 2015 年至 2021 年期间治疗实体瘤的新肿瘤药物,NICE 和 HAS 的建议有 62%的时间存在差异,主要原因是每个 HTA 机构使用的关键决策标准不同。对于 NICE 不支持的 4 种药物,HAS 认为这些药物在临床价值方面提供了实质性的提高,可能在价格谈判中具有优势。相反,NICE 认为与现有疗法相比,这些药物的性价比不高。这两个机构的一个主要区别是 HAS 坚持在疗效结果方面采用严格的方法学,而 NICE 则采用更灵活的方法,在成本效益建模中考虑描述性疗效结果。