Literature DB >> 20831295

Comparative effectiveness regulations and pharmaceutical innovation.

John A Vernon1, Joseph H Golec, J Stedman Stevens.   

Abstract

As healthcare reform evolves and takes shape, comparative effectiveness research (CER) appears to be one of the central topics on the national healthcare agenda. Over the past couple of years, comparative effectiveness has been explicitly incorporated in more than ten bills. For example, the passage of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 authorized $US1.1 billion for CER. Comparative effectiveness, when costs are formally considered, offers the hope of efficient resource allocation within US healthcare markets. However, the future operationalization and implementation of comparative effectiveness is uncertain, and there exist potentially negative, and unintended, consequences under certain scenarios. One example, and the focus of this article, is pharmaceutical innovation. Incentives for pharmaceutical R&D could be affected if drug development costs increase as a result of firms having to bear, directly or indirectly, the costs of running larger, randomized, head-to-head comparative effectiveness trials. While this may or may not be the case with current and future comparative effectiveness legislation and its subsequent implementation, the potential consequences for pharmaceutical innovation warrant recognition. This is the purpose of the article. To achieve this goal, we develop several models of clinical trial design, drug development costs and R&D investment. By example, we shed light on the causal links between the models and the ways in which industry R&D investment can be affected.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20831295     DOI: 10.2165/11537570-000000000-00000

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pharmacoeconomics        ISSN: 1170-7690            Impact factor:   4.981


  7 in total

1.  The price of innovation: new estimates of drug development costs.

Authors:  Joseph A DiMasi; Ronald W Hansen; Henry G Grabowski
Journal:  J Health Econ       Date:  2003-03       Impact factor: 3.883

2.  Examining the link between price regulation and pharmaceutical R&D investment.

Authors:  John A Vernon
Journal:  Health Econ       Date:  2005-01       Impact factor: 3.046

3.  The impact of new drug launches on longevity: evidence from longitudinal, disease-level data from 52 countries, 1982-2001.

Authors:  Frank R Lichtenberg
Journal:  Int J Health Care Finance Econ       Date:  2005-03

4.  Drug development costs when financial risk is measured using the Fama-French three-factor model.

Authors:  John A Vernon; Joseph H Golec; Joseph A Dimasi
Journal:  Health Econ       Date:  2010-08       Impact factor: 3.046

5.  Economic evaluation and cost-effectiveness thresholds: signals to firms and implications for R & D investment and innovation.

Authors:  John A Vernon; Robert Goldberg; Joseph Golec
Journal:  Pharmacoeconomics       Date:  2009       Impact factor: 4.981

6.  Comparative effectiveness research: the view from the NHLBI.

Authors:  Michael S Lauer
Journal:  J Am Coll Cardiol       Date:  2009-03-24       Impact factor: 24.094

7.  Comparative effectiveness and health care spending--implications for reform.

Authors:  Milton C Weinstein; Jonathan A Skinner
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2010-01-06       Impact factor: 91.245

  7 in total
  1 in total

1.  Perspectives on comparative effectiveness research: views from diverse constituencies.

Authors:  Dave Nellesen; Howard G Birnbaum; Paul E Greenberg
Journal:  Pharmacoeconomics       Date:  2010       Impact factor: 4.981

  1 in total

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