| Literature DB >> 25275236 |
Michael Schlander1, Silvio Garattini, Søren Holm, Peter Kolominsky-Rabas, Erik Nord, Ulf Persson, Maarten Postma, Jeff Richardson, Steven Simoens, Oriol de Solà Morales, Keith Tolley, Mondher Toumi.
Abstract
Drugs for ultra-rare disorders (URDs) rank prominently among the most expensive medicines on a cost-per-patient basis. Many of them do not meet conventional standards for cost-effectiveness. In light of the high fixed cost of R&D, this challenge is inversely related to the prevalence of URDs. The present paper sets out to explain the rationale underlying a recent expert consensus on these issues, recommending a more rigorous assessment of the clinical effectiveness of URDs, applying established standards of evidence-based medicine. This may include conditional approval and reimbursement policies, which should be combined with a firm expectation of proof of a minimum significant clinical benefit within a reasonable time. In contrast, current health economic evaluation paradigms fail to adequately reflect normative and empirical concerns (i.e., morally defensible 'social preferences') regarding healthcare resource allocation. Hence there is a strong need for alternative economic evaluation models for URDs.Entities:
Keywords: consensus statement; cost–effectiveness; economic evaluation; fairness; health technology assessment; medical ethics; medical need; orphan medicines; quality-adjusted life year; social preferences
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25275236 DOI: 10.2217/cer.14.34
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Comp Eff Res ISSN: 2042-6305 Impact factor: 1.744