| Literature DB >> 27226832 |
Abstract
Because of significant differences in institutional contexts, health technology assessment (HTA) systems that are in place in core pharmaceutical markets may not be suitable, fully or in part, for middle-income countries (MICs) and for other noncore markets. Particular challenges may arise when systems based on the economic evaluation paradigm are conceptualized and implemented in MICs, sometimes with an insufficient level of awareness of the local institutional factors that influence pricing and reimbursement decision making. Focusing on pharmaceuticals, this article investigates possible development directions for HTA systems in MICs and noncore markets bearing similar institutional characteristics, and it provides recommendations for a balanced assessment system (BAS). For this, the main paradigms of HTA have also been reviewed briefly and factors influencing HTA and pricing and reimbursement decisions in MICs and in similar noncore countries have been summarized. The proposed BAS framework takes into account available resources and capabilities and is supposed to facilitate access to new pharmaceuticals while ensuring the transparency of decision-making processes and the stability of the pharmaceutical budget.Entities:
Keywords: balanced assessment; health technology assessment (HTA); middle-income countries (MIC); multi-criteria decision analysis (MCDA); pharmaceutical assessment; reimbursement decisions
Year: 2014 PMID: 27226832 PMCID: PMC4865748 DOI: 10.3402/jmahp.v2.23181
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Mark Access Health Policy ISSN: 2001-6689
Fig. 1Three paradigms of health technology assessment (5). UK, United Kingdom; PL, Poland; HU, Hungary; KS, South Korea; FR, France; IT, Italy; JP, Japan; TW, Taiwan; SE, Sweden; CA, Canada; AU, Australia. Note: Countries are not clear ‘archetypes’ themselves; instead they are shown at the paradigm to which they are closest (13).
Fig. 2Transparency is dependent on appropriate methodology and a well-designed process.
Example of a BAS assessment grid for a hypothetical middle-income EU member state
| Dimension | Example criteria | Score |
|---|---|---|
| Simplified economic evaluation | ||
| A. Indicators of cost-effectiveness | 1. The pharmaceutical has been assessed to be cost-effective in the indication submitted for public funding in a payer-commissioned economic evaluation by a leading HTA agency | TBD |
| 2. The pharmaceutical has been assessed to be cost-effective | TBD (but lower than 1) | |
| 3. All other cases | 0 | |
| B. Budget impact | 4. Primary budget impact analysis substantiates with reasonable robustness that the pharmaceutical will save resources in public pharmaceutical expenditure | TBD |
| 5. Primary budget impact analysis substantiates with reasonable robustness that the pharmaceutical will save resources in the total health care | TBD (but lower than 4) | |
| 6. Primary budget impact analysis substantiates with reasonable robustness that the pharmaceutical will not increase public pharmaceutical expenditure by more than ‘X’ (or ‘Y%’) | TBD (but lower than 5) | |
| 7. All other cases | 0 | |
| C. Accessibility with public funding in peer countries | 8. The pharmaceutical is accessible with public funding in at least ‘X’ peer countries (as defined by national legislation) | TBD |
| 9. The pharmaceutical is accessible with public funding in less than ‘X’ but more than ‘Y’ peer countries (as defined by national legislation) | TBD (but lower than 8) | |
| 10. All other cases | 0 | |
| Assessment of value for patients and society | ||
| D. Therapeutic value added | 11. The pharmaceutical has been found to offer important therapeutic/clinical benefit by one or more leading HTA agency/agencies | TBD |
| 12. The pharmaceutical has been found to offer modest therapeutic/clinical benefit by one or more leading HTA agency/agencies | TBD (but lower than 11) | |
| 13. The side effect profile of the pharmaceutical is substantially more favorable than that of the comparator therapy, | TBD | |
| 14. The side effect profile of the pharmaceutical is somewhat more favorable than that of the comparator therapy, | TBD (but lower than 13) | |
| 15. The pharmaceutical company has substantiated through publicly available data for at least ‘X’ peer countries that the real-life therapeutic effectiveness of the pharmaceutical is superior to the real-life therapeutic effectiveness of the comparator | TBD | |
| 16. The pharmaceutical company has substantiated that the medicinal product improves ease-of-use (convenience for patients) in comparison with the comparator | TBD | |
| E. Ethical considerations and health policy priorities | 17. The reimbursement application is submitted with an indication that it has been declared a primary public health priority by national health-care authorities | TBD |
| 18. The pharmaceutical holds an orphan designation | TBD | |
| 19. The reimbursement application is submitted in a pediatric indication | TBD | |
| 20. The reimbursement application is submitted in a therapy area where no new active substance has been accepted for public funding in the past ‘X’ years | TBD |
Comparator choice:
As a main rule, the comparator should be the most widely used reimbursed medicine in a country for which the product seeking reimbursement offers a therapeutic alternative.
If the product seeking reimbursement does not substitute any already reimbursed product, the comparator should be the most widely available standard (palliative, supportive, non-medicinal, etc.) therapy. If no treatment is available, palliative care should be used as a comparator.
If the product seeking reimbursement has any alternative(s) from the same ATC4-level group(s) (=analogue) that is (are) already reimbursed in essentially the same indication, then the comparator should be the lowest priced product in this set of alternatives. The lowest price should be calculated as daily cost of therapy on a prescribed daily dose (PDD) basis depending on the SMPC.
(BAS, balanced assessment system; HTA, health technology assessment.)
Fig. 3Balanced assessment system (BAS) in middle-income countries (MICs).
Example of an outcome table in a BAS
| Total score (calculated as the sum of individual scores) | Listing decision |
|---|---|
| 0–49 | Not reimbursable |
| 50–69 | Conditional reimbursement with programmed reimbursement review within 18–24 months |
| 70 and above | Unconditional reimbursement in the indication requested |
BAS, balanced assessment system.
Fig. 4Possible high-level scheme for the pricing and reimbursement process in a middle-income country. PRB, pricing and reimbursement body; HTAG, health technology assessment group.
Notes: (1) The process only applies to reimbursement decisions for new pharmaceuticals. Price-only applications may be dealt with in a much simpler system.