| Literature DB >> 27516740 |
Winnie de Bruijn1, Cristina Ibáñez2, Pia Frisk3, Hanne Bak Pedersen4, Ali Alkan5, Patricia Vella Bonanno6, Ljiljana S Brkičić7, Anna Bucsics8, Guillaume Dedet9, Jaran Eriksen10, Joseph O Fadare11, Jurij Fürst12, Gisselle Gallego13, Isabella P Godói14, Augusto A Guerra Júnior14, Hakkı Gürsöz5, Saira Jan15, Jan Jones16, Roberta Joppi17, Saim Kerman5, Ott Laius18, Newman Madzikwa19, Einar Magnússon20, Mojca Maticic21, Vanda Markovic-Pekovic22, Amos Massele23, Olayinka Ogunleye24, Aisling O'Leary25, Jutta Piessnegger26, Catherine Sermet27, Steven Simoens28, Celda Tiroyakgosi29, Ilse Truter30, Magnus Thyberg31, Kristina Tomekova32, Magdalena Wladysiuk33, Sotiris Vandoros34, Elif H Vural5, Corinne Zara2, Brian Godman35.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Infection with the Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) is a widespread transmittable disease with a diagnosed prevalence of 2.0%. Fortunately, it is now curable in most patients. Sales of medicines to treat HCV infection grew 2.7% per year between 2004 and 2011, enhanced by the launch of the protease inhibitors (PIs) boceprevir (BCV) and telaprevir (TVR) in addition to ribavirin and pegylated interferon (pegIFN). Costs will continue to rise with new treatments including sofosbuvir, which now include interferon free regimens.Entities:
Keywords: Hepatitis C; boceprevir; cross national drug utilization study; demand-side measures; introduction new medicines; sofosbuvir; telaprevir
Year: 2016 PMID: 27516740 PMCID: PMC4964878 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2016.00197
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
Reported anti-HCV prevalence rates (adjusted for the adult population), genotype 1 (GT1) distribution and estimated diagnose and treatment rate (Dore et al., .
| Adult anti-HCV | 0.5% | 0.9% | 0.7% | – | 1.7% | 0.6% | – | 2.0% | 0.2% | 0.7% | 1.0% | 0.6% |
| prevalence | (0.1–0.7%) | (0.1–1.2%) | (0.5–0.7%) | (0.4–2.6%) | (0.4–1.1%) | (1.6–7.3%) | (0.1–0.4%) | (0.5–0.7%) | (0.6–2.1%) | (0.4–1.2%) | ||
| Genotype 1a | 20.3% | – | 34.0% | 1.0% | 25.5% | 14.8% | 13.1% | 4.2% | 14.8% | 38.2% | 8.1% | 24.4% |
| Genotype 1b | 51.6% | 50.4% | 12.0% | 71.0% | 43.8% | 29.7% | 37.4% | 57.5% | 15.7% | 7.0% | 83.7% | 11.9% |
| Genotype 1c | – | 8.6% | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – |
| Estimated diagnosed rate (2013) | 37% | 43% | 59% | – | 40% | 69% | – | – | 61% | 81% | 16% | 35% |
NB: AU, Austria; BE, Belgium; DK, Denmark; EE, Estonia; ES, Spain; FR, France; HR, Croatia; IT, Italy; NL, the Netherlands; SE, Sweden; TR, Turkey; UK, United Kingdom.
Details of methods of financing healthcare, GDP spent on health and data providers (Godman et al., .
| Austria (AT) | Health Insurance | 43,390 | 11.0 | Data Warehouse of the Federation of Austrian Social Insurance Institutions—covers 98% of the population |
| Belgium (BE) | Health Insurance | 39,860 | 11.2 | National Institute for Health and Disability Insurance (INAMI-RIZIV) |
| Croatia (HR) | Health Insurance | 18,760 | 7.3 | Croatian Health Insurance Fund covering over 99% of the population. HCV treatments funded from a separate budget for expensive medicines |
| Denmark (DK) | Taxation | 43,430 | 10.6 | Danish Prescription Registry |
| Estonia (EE) | Health Insurance | 22,500 | 5.7 | Estonian Health Insurance Fund |
| France | Health Insurance | 38,847 | 11.8 | SNIIRAM (The National Information System of public Health Insurances) |
| Italy (IT) | Taxation | 32,920 | 9.1 | Medicines Utilization Unit's elaboration of data from Osmed Database and Tracciabilità del farmaco |
| The Netherlands (NL) | Health Insurance | 43,510 | 12.9 | The Drug Information System of Dutch National Health Care Institute |
| Slovenia (SI) | Health Insurance | 27,240 | 9.2 | The National Institute of Public Health and Health Insurance Institute Prescription database |
| Spain—Catalonia (ES—CT) | Taxation | 31,670 | 8.9 | Catalan Health Service drug prescription database (DATAMART) |
| Sweden (SE) | Taxation | 43,980 | 9.7 | National Swedish Prescribed Drug Register |
| Turkey (TR) | Health Insurance | 18,020 | 5.6 | Utilization information from the Ministry of Health sourced from IMS |
| UK—Scotland | Taxation | 37,340 | 9.1 | Prescribing Information Systems (PIS) from NHS National Services Scotland Corporate Warehouse |
DDDs for medicines to treat Hepatitis C.
| Bocepravir (BCV) | J05AE11 | 2.4 g (oral) |
| Peg-interferon alfa-2a | L03AB11 | 26 mcg (parenteral) |
| Peg-interferon alfa-2b | L03AB10 | 7.5 mcg (parenteral) |
| Ribavirin | J05AB04 | 1 gm (oral) |
| Telaprevir (TVR) | J05AE11 | 2.25 gm (oral) |
Calculated percentages for triple therapy vs. all HCV treated patients.
| 45% GT1 prevalence | 11.3–22.5% | 30.2–41.4% |
| 65% GT1 prevalence | 16.2–32.5% | 43.5–59.7% |
Description 4E method—Education, Engineering, Economics, and Enforcement (Garuoliene et al., .
| Education | • Activities include educational programmes that influence prescribing: e.g., national and regional guidelines with inclusion criteria, monitoring requirements, EBM initiatives (rational prescribing), and benchmarking (quality control), e.g., monitoring of prescribing against agreed guidance coupled with feedback, e.g., “Wise list” in Stockholm, Sweden |
| • Activities also include education for patients including public awareness through campaigns, world hepatitis day, flyers/printed material, as well as prescribing guidance for patients to enhance patient-doctor communication | |
| Engineering | • This refers to organizational or managerial interventions |
| • Activities include programs and interventions to optimize prescribing: e.g., structured programmes to optimize the entry of new medicines, price: volume agreements, capping budgets, and prescribing targets | |
| • In addition any disease management programmes to optimize treatment including potential quality targets | |
| Economics | • Activities include positive and negative financial initiatives for all key stakeholder groups |
| • Examples include percentage reimbursement/patient co-payment levels as well as financial incentives for physicians | |
| Enforcement | • Activities include regulations such as those enforced by law; e.g., prescribing restrictions including designated signatures on prescription forms, prior authorization schemes and compulsory agreements such as compulsory international non-proprietary name (INN) prescribing and compulsory generic substitution |
Summary of most important demand side measures among European countries to influence the prescribing of BCV and TVR post-launch.
| Austria | Enforcement | • Prior authorization scheme with cost-sharing for TVR |
| Engineering | • PIs are reimbursed according to the published “limitations of prescription”—as long as a patient meets the criteria defined in the “limitations of prescription” his/her treatment will be approved and thus reimbursed | |
| • No reimbursement of BCV for null responders | ||
| Belgium | Enforcement | • Need prior approval from the Health Insurance companies according to agreed criteria (chapter IV medicine) before PIs can be used. |
| • Otherwise, 100% patient co-payment if prescribing does not follow agreed criteria | ||
| Bosnia and Herzegovina (Republic of Srpska) | Education | • Guidelines available for the diagnosis and treatment of chronic hepatitis C |
| • Increasing public awareness as well as campaigns stating that there is free, voluntarily, anonymous testing and counseling for patients with suspected HCV. Alongside this, distribution of educational materials—helped by establishing counseling centers for hepatitis and HIV | ||
| Economics | • Therapy initiated only in specialist centers for patients with hepatitis | |
| Engineering | • Health Insurance Fund purchases medicines for patients with HCV under a 1-year (centralized tender) with defined reimbursement conditions; otherwise 100% co-payment | |
| Enforcement | • However, neither BCV (market authorization in B&H in 2012) or TVR (no application so far submitted in B&H) are currently reimbursed (100% co-payment); so far (March 2016) there have been no requests for a refund sent to the Health Insurance Fund | |
| • Proposed wholesale price by the manufacturer within the market authorization process was €4720/package | ||
| Croatia | Engineering | • Incidence and prevalence of HCV has been declining in Croatia in recent years through preventative measures. These include ensuring safety of blood products, reducing drug abuse as well as programs to reduce infection rates among intravenous drug users |
| • Both BCV and TVR are reimbursed and on the list of expensive products since 2013 (BCV in Official Gazette 49/2013 and for TVR in Official Gazette 67/2013) | ||
| • They are both reimbursed for triple therapy but with defined guidance for use for reimbursement. Treatment is reimbursed only in hospitals to ensure prescribing is in line with current guidelines/guidance | ||
| France | Education | • The prevention and management of HCV has been on the public health agenda in France since the early 1990s, with an extensive network of hepatologists and reference centers |
| • The authorities through the referral centers also research outcomes from current treatment approaches | ||
| • Only physicians specialized in hepatology, internal medicine or infectious diseases are allowed to initiate treatment with DAAs including BCV and TVR | ||
| Iceland | Education | • Both BCV and TVR are reimbursed |
| • Guidelines are available but currently no health authority activities directing prescribing | ||
| • More recently a nationwide treatment-project where all HCV infected patients are being offered the second generation DDA's over a 2–3 years period. | ||
| • Alongside this, a large scale epidemiological study is ongoing to ascertain whether it is possible eliminate HCV from a small, relatively confined population such as Iceland | ||
| Ireland | Education | • Surveillance system in place to collect effectiveness, safety, tolerability and economic outcomes from current treatments including BCV and TVR |
| • All patients prescribed triple therapy are obliged to be registered with the Irish Hepatitis C Outcome and Research Network (ICORN) treatment database which captures longitudinal data | ||
| • Dispensing of BCV and TPR is restricted to hospitals only to ensure appropriate governance of treatment | ||
| Italy | Education | • Italian Horizon Scanning group issuing information on medicines for patients with chronic HCV to national and regional authorities |
| • Price volume agreements - if expenditure on BCV and TVR exceeds pre-set thresholds, manufacturers payback any differences to the Italian National Health Service | ||
| • As a result, BCV has a patient cap of 6000 patients for 2 years and a sales cap of €120 million/year and 5% discount with pegIFN. TVR has a patient cap of 2000 patients the first year, 3000 patients for the second year and re-negotiation above 4000 patients. Sales cap of €100 million/per year. Re-negotiation above €80 million per year | ||
| • Physicians need to be validated by the Italian Medicines Agency with only selected centers and physicians allowed to prescribe treatment. | ||
| • In the Veneto Region, a special network of centers exists to administer HCV medicines | ||
| • Patient registers are in place for patients receiving PI to monitor their use according to agreed guidance (and increasingly monitor outcomes in the future). Patient entry encouraged as part of the payment system for hospitals; otherwise hospitals will not reimbursed for the medicines costs for patients with HCV | ||
| Malta | Economics, Enforcement | • Treatments initially were not reimbursed by the National Health Service. Some patients bought their treatment privately or were supported through NGOs. Alpha interferon was originally used and later pegylated interferon and ribavirin became standard treatments in Malta (Brincat et al., |
| • Subsequently, a one-time donation of medicines was undertaken by pharmaceutical companies enabling some patients to be initiated with ledipasvir/sofosbuvir | ||
| • Recently, newer treatments including sofosbuvir were included in the National Formulary List to be provided free of charge through the National Health Service. Their use is regulated by protocols approved by the HCV Patient Management Committee | ||
| Netherlands | Enforcement | • Need prior approval according to agreed guidance before a PI can be dispended |
| Slovakia | Enforcement | • To be eligible for reimbursement, a psychiatrist must make a statement that drug abusers are abstinent for at least 1 year |
| Slovenia | Education | • Detailed patient register schemes which include additional data for prescribing a PI: fibrosis stage, IL28B type, prior HCV treatment, type of PI included in treatment, lead-in phase and rapid virological response |
| • When patients with HCV are treated, data is added according to the national protocol for the management of HCV in patients with HCV. The registry was established in 2007 | ||
| • Slovenia has a National Viral Hepatitis Expert Group since 1997, established to develop national treatment guidelines and evaluate the efficacy and safety of different treatment approaches in clinical practice | ||
| • Since 1997, there is a national network of a named list of infectologists and hepatologists in 5 reference centers for treatment of viral hepatitis. These are the only physicians who can prescribe HCV therapy (in accordance with the national guidelines) | ||
| • Since 2007, there is an interdisciplinary National healthcare network across the country for the treatment of HCV in patients who inject themselves with drugs | ||
| • The Health Insurance Institute of Slovenia (ZZZS) has a possibility to control physician prescribing where regulations exist. When prescribing is not in line with prescribing restrictions, the provider physician/hospital has to pay a fine | ||
| Spain—Catalonia | Education | • Available algorithms of chronic HCV treatment at a national and regional level, including IL28B testing as well as selection of dual or triple therapy in naïve/relapsers/non-responder patients |
| • Register of prevalence and treatment outcomes ongoing | ||
| • Data from surveillance systems are used to regularly monitor expenditure and benchmarking among hospitals. Also monitoring of erythropoiesis factor requirements (management and impact of side effects) | ||
| • PI related data incorporated into the surveillance system. This includes the numbers of patients treated for HCV treated with a PI, which PI and PegIFN is selected as well as co-infected patients with HIV and organ transplanted patients treated with a PI | ||
| • It is recommended a multidisciplinary treatment approach is undertaken to improve care including for instance a gastroenterologist/infectious disease physician, psychiatrist, pharmacist and laboratory testing personnel | ||
| • Annual budgets for outpatient drug treatments are allocated to Catalan public hospitals (including drugs for cancer, HCV, multiple sclerosis, etc.) to help control costs | ||
| • There are currently no patient co-payments for HCV medicines in Catalan public hospitals | ||
| Sweden | Education | • National treatment guidelines available to guide treatment |
| • BCV is currently not reimbursed by the TLV (Dental and Pharmaceutical Benefits Agency - reimbursement authority in Sweden) but TVR is. However, all drugs for HCV infection, including TVR and BCV, are free for the patient since medicines for infectious diseases including Hepatitis C are free under the Infectious Diseases Act | ||
| • TVR is currently reimbursed without restriction | ||
| Turkey (Aygen et al., | Engineering | • BCV and TVR are reimbursed with restricted indications, e.g., triple therapy is reimbursed in combination with TVR in patients infected with HCV genotype 1 who have compensated liver disease and who have previously received PegIFN/RBV therapy and relapsed |
| • In patients with compensated liver disease, total treatment duration is 48 weeks with 12 weeks of TVR therapy, provided that the liver biopsy Ishak score is stage ≥4, the platelet count is below 100,000/mm3, or the prothrombin time is over 3 seconds | ||
| • In relapsed patients, total treatment duration is 24 weeks, including 12 weeks of TVR therapy if HCV RNA is negative at week 4 of treatment, and 48 weeks if HCV RNA is positive at week 4 of treatment | ||
| UK—Scotland | Engineering | • Pro-active approach to the introduction of triple therapy including BCV and TCR |
| • Patient numbers are tracked to check they agree with original predictions and the case for funding (in Tayside) |
NB. BCV, Boceprevir; DAAs, direct acting antivirals; pegIFN, pegylated interferon; PI, Protease inhibitor; TVR, Telaprevir. Estonia is not included in the Table as the pharmaceutical companies were providing first generations DAAs free of charge until recently.
Figure 1Uptake BCV and TVR across European countries from the month first reimbursed. Each Bar represents a 3 month period. Only the first quarter of 2012 and 2013 is displayed in the legend to include all countries. (A) Included countries are: AU, Austria; BE, Belgium; DK, Denmark; EE, Estonia; ES (CT), Catalonia (Spain). (B) Included countries are: IT, Italy; NL, the Netherlands; UK-Scot (TS), Tayside (Scotland); SI, Slovenia; SE, Sweden; TR, Turkey.
Figure 2Percentage utilization of TVR vs. ribavirin in quarters following reimbursement. NB: Upper range genotype 1 prevalence (=GT1) is 65% and highest percentages (50%) triple therapy containing TVR (mostly non-cirrhotic patients). Lower range GT1 prevalence is only 45% and lowest percentages (25%) triple therapy containing TVR (mostly cirrhotic patients).
Figure 3Percentage utilization of BCV vs. ribavirin in quarters following reimbursement. Upper range genotype 1 prevalence (=GT1) is 65% and highest percentages (92%) triple therapy containing BVC (mostly cirrhotic patients). Lower range GT1 prevalence is only 45% and lowest percentages (67%) triple therapy containing BVC (mostly naïve non-cirrhotic patients).
Reimbursed Euro per DDD (EUR/DDD) from the time of reimbursement until the latest available data (May 2013) of TVR and BCV.
| Austria | 321.48 | 310.44 | 146.60 | 116.11 |
| Belgium | 324.58 | 324.54 | 116.66 | 116.66 |
| Belgium | 315.29 | – | 113.31 | – |
| Croatia | 331.97 | 331.97 | 123.46 | 123.46 |
| Denmark | 394.65 | 384.53 | 145.53 | 131.62 |
| Netherlands | 300.23 | 302.66 | 114.51 | 114.05 |
| Slovenia | 302.31 | 291.64 | 113.10 | 113.10 |
| Spain-Catalonia | 304.74 | 304.74 | 103.92 | 103.92 |
| Sweden | 329.49 | 294.82 | 117.69 | 118.52 |
NB:
Dispensed in community pharmacy;
Dispensed in hospital pharmacy;
Price from basic list and price from expensive product list (same prices). Reimbursed prices of BCV and TVR should not be compared as different treatment paradigms.
Figure 4Expenditure on treatments for HCV (Euro/1000 inhabitants/quarter) from 2008 to 2013. NB: ◯ = reimbursement agreed BVC. Sweden and Denmark first quarter after EMA approval are included.
Price negotiations and other strategies across countries to reduce the expenditure burden of second generation DAAs.
| Australia | • Ongoing schemes in Australia to enable access to new effective DAAs, including potential pricing policies, as the proposed budget impact of over Australian $3 billion over a 5 year period is considered unaffordable |
| Brazil | • Negotiated prices for sofosbuvir are as low as US$7000/12-weeks treatment course |
| • Negotiated price for a bottle (28 capsules) of simeprevir in Brazil is US$1000 (Andrieux-Meyer et al., | |
| • BCV and TVR now removed from the public funded (SUS) treatment programmes in view of their lower effectiveness and greater side-effects compared with the second generation DAAs | |
| Egypt and India (Brennan and Shrank, | • Egyptian authorities negotiated a 99% discount of the US price—bringing its price in Egypt down to US $900 per 12-week course |
| • Sofosbuvir is being manufactured in India at a cost of < US$250/course as Gilead was denied a patent in India | |
| France | • Second generation DAAs were initially only reimbursed for advanced liver fibrosis (F2-F4) (Dedet, Personal Communication) |
| • More recently, the government in France introduced a new tax using a “progressive contribution scheme” | |
| • As a result, the Economic Committee for Health Products agreed a price of €13,667 per 28-tablet pack for sosfobuvir alone, i.e., approximately €5000 lower than the initial list price, at an overall negotiated price of €41,000 (US$51,000) for a 12-week course | |
| • Prices are likely to fall further with the launch of additional DAAs to help cure patients with HCV | |
| Georgia | • The minister of health, labor and social affairs in Georgia emailed Gilead to say they had a fund of US$5 million to help eradicate HCV with an infection rate of almost 7% |
| • Gilead subsequently agreed to provide sofosbuvir free of charge to help eliminate the disease within 10 years | |
| Italy | • The Italian Reimbursement Agency (AIFA) negotiated a price reduction scheme with the reimbursed price for “initial patients” at €37,000/patient/course dropping to €4000 for the “last” patients, averaging €18,000 per patient (Messori, |
| • As a result, overall expenditure for sofosbuvir in Italy is expected to be less than €500 million per year initially, which was acceptable to all30 | |
| South Africa | • Access to hepatitis treatment in South Africa remains limited due to a combination of patent, registration and cost barriers |
| • More recently, Gilead is allowing the importation of the fixed-dose combination treatment, HARVONI, with a preferential pricing for the public sector at just one one-hundredth of the US price, i.e., approximately R17,000 for a 12-week course | |
| Spain | • The negotiated price per course is approximately US$25,000 per course (EU 20,500) or lower, with the ministries of Health and Finance agreeing with the regional health ministries to establish a funding plan to ensure all eligible patients will be treated with the second generation DAAs for at least 12 weeks |
| • In addition, the health outcomes of patients will be assessed (Trooskin et al., | |
| Sweden | • Risk sharing arrangements to lower prices has resulted in improved access among the County Councils (Regions—budget holders) |
| • Alongside this, the authorities in Sweden are currently monitoring the effectiveness (viral load) and safety of second generation DAAs in routine clinical care | |
| USA | • Private Insurance Plans (Managed Care Organizations—MCOs) have included sofosbuvir in their formularies although a number of MCOs have included coverage alongside prior authorization (PA) to conserve resources |
| • Encouraging the use of second generation DAAs irrespective of the METAVIR score, along with PA schemes to encourage 8 weeks of treatment, has resulted in a plateau or fall in usage, endorsing this approach | |
| • MCOs alongside pharmacy benefit management (PBM) schemes have also established data registries to track patient outcomes in terms of relapses and/or reinfection rates | |
| • Among most State Medicaid schemes, patients must have a METAVIR score of F3 or F4, indicative of severe liver disease, to receive sofosbuvir | |
| • 30 States also require sofosbuvir to be prescribed by, or in consultation with, a specialist such as a hepatologist, gastroenterologist, or infectious disease physician before funding, and some States have introduced a sobriety requirement (Canary et al., | |
| • Proposals for new methods to finance such transformative therapies through healthcare loans and securitization (Montazerhodjat et al., |