| Literature DB >> 28752223 |
Ebenezer Kwabena Tetteh1, Steve Morris2, Nigel Titcheneker-Hooker2.
Abstract
The administration of (biologically-derived) drugs for various disease conditions involves consumption of resources that constitutes a direct monetary cost to healthcare payers and providers. An often ignored cost relates to a mismatch between patients' preferences and the mode of drug administration. The "intangible" benefits of giving patients what they want in terms of the mode of drug delivery is seldom considered. This study aims to evaluate, in monetary terms, end-user preferences for the non-monetary attributes of different modes of drug administration using a discrete-choice experiment. It provides empirical support to the notion that there are significant benefits from developing patient-friendly approaches to drug delivery. The gross benefits per patient per unit administration is in the same order of magnitude as the savings in resource costs of administering drugs. The study argues that, as long as the underlying manufacturing science is capable, a patient-centred approach to producing drug delivery systems should be encouraged and pursued.Entities:
Keywords: Discrete-choice experiments; Drug administration; Manufacturing; United Kingdom
Year: 2017 PMID: 28752223 PMCID: PMC5532178 DOI: 10.1186/s13561-017-0162-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Econ Rev ISSN: 2191-1991
Attributes, definitions and attribute-levels
| Attributes | Definitions | Levels |
|---|---|---|
| Method of drug administration | This attribute refers to the route by which therapeutically-active drug products are physically administered into a patient. The attribute-levels include all other “needle-free” methods of drug administration to capture the preferences of patients who desire oral drug delivery and/or have a fear of needles. | 1. Intravenous delivery |
| Dosing frequency | This attribute refers to the frequency of administering a drug for a single full course of treatment. Dosing frequency associated with repeated treatments should not be considered. | 1. Once every six months |
| Setting | This attribute refers to place (clinical and non-clinical settings) where a given drug is administered. Clinical settings include, for example, hospitals, outpatient clinics, care homes, offices of general practitioners/physicians etc. Non-clinical settings include home, schools and other public places. | 1. Clinical |
| Disruption to daily activities | This attribute refers to how a given method of drug administration or dosing frequency disrupts the daily activities of patients. Disruptions could be due to, for example, repeated venepuncture and, in the extreme, immobility (hospitalization for the sole purpose of drug administration). | 1. None |
| Risk of adverse events | This attribute refers to features of drug administration that might cause discomfort or injury to patients or health-staff administering drugs. This could be local or generalized adverse events such as indurations; damage to nerves and blood vessels; abscess formation around the sites of injection etc. This is separate from side-effects of the drug molecule itself. | 1. None |
| Cost | This attribute refers to the additional time and travel costs borne out-of-pocket by the patient each time they have to take or their medicines or it has to be given to them by health workers. | 1. £0 |
Notes: * This refers to the situation where people, if properly trained, could self-administer the drug in a non-clinical setting; or otherwise, their medications will have to be delivered to them under the supervision of qualified healthcare professional, for example, a community or district nurse. Given this set of attributes and attribute-levels, we have a full factorial of 2304 (= 4432) possible profiles or treatment combinations
Fig. 1Example choice set
Explanatory variables
| Variables | Definitions (Effects coding) |
|---|---|
| INTRAVENOUS | =1 if a drug is administered intravenously (1, 0, 0, −1) |
| SUBCUTANEOUS | =1 if a drug is administered subcutaneously (0, 1, 0, −1) |
| INTRAMUSCULAR | =1 if a drug is administered ntramuscularly (0, 0, 1, −1). The reference category (−1) is administration via needle-free routes |
| DOSFREQ | Continuous variable referring to the number of unit administrations over a one year period for a single full course of treatment |
| NONCLINICAL_SELF | =1 if a drug is self-administered in non-clinical settings (1, 0, −1) |
| NONCLINICAL_SUPV | =1 if a drug is administered in non-clinical settings under the supervision of a qualified healthcare professional (0, 1, −1). The reference category (−1) is drug administration in clinical settings |
| DDA_MODERATE1 | =1 if a given mode of administration is associated with moderate but manageable disruption to respondents’ daily activities (1, 0, 0, −1) |
| DDA_MODERATE2 | =1 if a given mode of drug administration is associated with moderate disruptions to daily activities that a respondent cannot cope with (0, 1, 0, −1) |
| DDA_SEVERE | =1 if a given mode of drug administration is associated with severe disruption to the respondent’s daily activities (0, 0, 1, −1). The reference category (−1) is a mode of administration that carries no risk of disruption to patients’ daily activities |
| RAE_MODERATE | =1 if the risk of adverse events associated with a given mode of drug administration s moderate (1, 0, −1) |
| RAE_SEVERE | =1 if the risk of adverse events associated with a given mode of drug administration is severe (0, 1, −1). The reference category (−1) is drug delivery that is associated with no risk of adverse events |
| COST | Continuous variable indicating the time and travel costs borne by patients per unit administration |
| A | Alternative-specific constant = 1 for drug option |
| FEMALE | =1 if survey respondent is female (1, −1). The reference category (−1) are males |
| RESPONDENTAGE | Continuous variable indicating the age of a survey respondent |
| VOCATIONAL | =1 if the highest level of education attained by a respondent is vocational training (1, 0, −1) |
| GCSEs_O + A | =1 if the highest level of education attained by a respondent is GCSEs O′ and A’ levels (0, 1, −1). The reference category (−1) are respondents with “higher education” |
| EMPLOYED | =1 if respondent is employed (1, −1). The reference category (−1) are those who are currently unemployed |
| INCOME_1 | =1 if respondent’s annual household income is under £15,000 (1, 0, 0, 0, −1) |
| INCOME_2 | =1 if respondent’s annual household income is between £15,000 and £29,999 (0, 1, 0, 0, −1) |
| INCOME_3 | =1 if respondent’s annual household income is between £30,000 and £49,999 (0, 0, 1, 0, −1) |
| INCOME_4 | =1 if respondent’s annual household income is between £50,000 and £75,000 (0, 0, 0, 1, −1). The reference category (−1) are respondents with annual household income in excess of £75,000 |
| PRIOR_ ILLNESS | =1 if a survey respondent had received medical treatment under the advice or guidance of a qualified health worker over the past year (1, −1). The reference category (−1) are those who remained healthy over the past year |
Demographic characteristics of sample
| Characteristics (of 442 respondents) | N (% of sample) |
|---|---|
| Gender | |
| Male* | 181 (40.95) |
| Female | 261 (59.05) |
| Respondents’ age | |
| 17–34 years | 151 (34.16) |
| 35–49 years | 155 (35.07) |
| ≥ 50 years | 136 (30.77) |
| Employment status | |
| Employed | 307 (69.46) |
| Unemployed* | 135 (30.54) |
| Household-income category | |
| < £15,000 (per year) | 109 (24.66) |
| £15,000 – £29,999 (per year) | 134 (30.32) |
| £30,000 – £49,999 (per year) | 118 (26.70) |
| £50,000 – £75,000 (per year) | 52 (11.76) |
| > £75,000 (per year)* | 29 (6.56) |
| Highest education achieved | |
| GCSEs O & A levels | 189 (42.76) |
| Higher education* | 212 (47.96) |
| Vocational training | 41 (9.28) |
| Prior illness (in the past year) | |
| Yes | 178 (40.27) |
| No* | 264 (59.73) |
Notes: N = number of respondents; * indicates the reference category for the effects coding used (see also Table 2)
Econometric results
| Dependent variable: CHOICE PROBABILITY | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MNL model | HMNL model | EMNL model | MMNL model | LCMNL model | ||
| Variables/Coefficients: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| INTRAVENOUS | −0.011 (0.091) | 0.005 (0.057) | 0.017 (0.042) | −0.026 (0.110) | −0.119 (0.439) | 0.021 (0.123) |
| SUBCUTANEOUS | 0.021 (0.043) | 0.016 (0.027) | 0.002 (0.019) | −0.016 (0.049) | −0.073 (0.130) | 0.070 (0.060) |
| INTRAMUSCULAR | −0.136 (0.049)** | −0.090 (0.031)** | −0.111 (0.037)** | −0.123 (0.053)* | −0.560 (0.210)** | −0.219 (0.064)*** |
| DOSFREQ | −0.001 (0.000)*** | −0.0005 (0.000)*** | −0.001 (0.000)** | −0.001 (0.000)*** | −0.003 (0.001)*** | −0.001 (0.000)** |
| NONCLINICAL_SELF | 0.167 (0.037)*** | 0.108 (0.025)*** | 0.112 (0.038)** | 0.210 (0.039)*** | 0.424 (0.128)*** | 0.146 (0.045)** |
| NONCLINICAL_SUPV | −0.122 (0.028)*** | −0.078 (0.019)*** | −0.067 (0.025)** | −0.120 (0.030)*** | −0.124 (0.093) | −0.098 (0.037)** |
| DDA_MODERATE1 | 0.391 (0.033)*** | 0.239 (0.033)*** | 0.214 (0.074)** | 0.437 (0.038)*** | 1.210 (0.150)*** | 0.264 (0.050)*** |
| DDA_MODERATE2 | −0.267 (0.042)*** | −0.171 (0.032)*** | −0.167 (0.059)** | −0.300 (0.046)*** | −1.058 (0.141)*** | −0.075 (0.061) |
| DDA_SEVERE | −0.525 (0.039)*** | −0.336 (0.044)*** | −0.308 (0.103)** | −0.588 (0.044)*** | −1.376 (0.184)*** | −0.324 (0.057)*** |
| RAE_MODERATE | 0.169 (0.034)*** | 0.108 (0.024)*** | 0.111 (0.041)** | 0.212 (0.038)*** | 0.522 (0.141)*** | 0.067 (0.043) |
| RAE_SEVERE | −0.743 (0.039)*** | −0.461 (0.056)*** | −0.406 (0.138)** | −0.869 (0.044)*** | −2.342 (0.215)*** | −0.204 (0.059)*** |
| COST | −0.008 (0.001)*** | −0.005 (0.001)*** | −0.004 (0.001)** | −0.0118 (0.040)*** | −0.012 (0.002)*** | −0.008 (0.001)*** |
| A | −0.054 (0.054) | −0.033 (0.034) | 0.002 (0.025) | −0.073 (0.066) | 0.370 (0.274) | −0.122 (0.073)! |
| Entropy | ― | ― | (1.026, 0.717) | ― | ― | |
|
| ― | 0.170 (0.035)*** | ― | ― | ― | |
|
| ― | −0.230 (0.085)** | ― | ― | ― | |
|
| ― | −0.199 (0.054)*** | ― | ― | ― | |
|
| ― | ― | ― | ― | 0.49 | 0.51 |
|
| ― | ― | ― | ― | −0.892 (0.324)** | — |
|
| ― | ― | ― | ― | 0.577 (0.203)** | — |
|
| — | — | — | — | 0.285 (0.122)* | — |
|
| 0.024 (0.009)** | |||||
| Log-likelihood (AIC) | −2855.357 (5736.713) | −2812.19 (5670.381) | −2837.971 (5670.381) | −2782.51 (5611.019) | −2652.879 (5379.757) | |
Notes: SE = standard error. For the HMNL and LCMNL models, we report selected effects of respondent-characteristics on the scale-parameter and latent-class membership. MMNL model was estimated using 500 Halton draws of correlated normally-distributed coefficients for the variables A, INTRAVENOUS and SUBCUTANEOUS and a log-normal distributed cost coefficient. *** p < 0.001 ** p < 0.01 * p < 0.05! p < 0.10. AIC = Akaike Information Criterion
Marginal willingness-to-pay estimates
| MNL model | HMNL model | EMNL model | MMNL model | LCMNL model | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Variables: |
|
|
|
|
|
| INTRAVENOUS | −2.12 (−4.09, −0.16)* | 1.17 (−0.74, 3.08) | 3.43 (1.73, 5.14)* | 2.31 (−2.86, 7.49)* | 5.85 (−50.38, 62.07) |
| SUBCUTANEOUS | 2.35 (1.37, 3.32)* | 2.60 (1.58, 3.63)* | 0.23 (−0.52, 1.03) | −8.33 (−10.31, −6.34)* | 2.42 (−7.76, 12.59) |
| INTRAMUSCULAR | −17.43 (−18.65, −16.22)* | −19.19 (−20.41, −17.97)* | −26.08 (−27.15, −25.01)* | −9.39 (−11, −7.77)* | −40.63 (−72.47, −8.80)* |
| DOSFREQ | −0.08 (−0.09, −0.08)* | −0.09 (−0.094, −0.085)* | −0.12 (−0.13, −0.12)* | −0.10 (−0.10, −0.09)* | −0.23 (−0.30, −0.17)* |
| NONCLINICAL_SELF | 21.45 (20.51, 22.39)* | 22.41 (21.48, 23.35)* | 26.35 (25.55, 27.16)* | 31.01 (29.87, 32.14)* | 28.57 (21.40, 35.74)* |
| NONCLINICAL_SUPV | −15.45 (−16.06, −14.83)* | −15.74 (−16.36, −15.11)* | −15.46 (−15.95, −14.96)* | −19.83 (−20.64, −19.02)* | −15.53 (−26.04, −5.03)* |
| DDA_MODERATE1 | 50.09 (48.91, 51.27)* | 49.40 (48.15, 50.65)* | 50.14 (49.02, 51.27)* | 58.88 (57.65, 60.11)* | 84.71 (67.59, 101.82)* |
| DDA_MODERATE2 | −34 (−35.15, −32.85)* | −35.24 (−36.51, −33.97)* | −38.86 (−39.89, −37.83)* | −43.13 (−44.35, −41.92)* | −58.84 (−72.28, −45.40)* |
| DDA_SEVERE | −66.36 (−67.74, −64.99)* | −68.64 (−70.14, −67.14)* | −71.55 (−72.80, −70.30)* | −73.64 (−75.15, −72.14)* | −94.50 (−117.91, −71.10)* |
| RAE_MODERATE | 22.06 (21.20, 22.92)* | 22.64 (21.74, 23.53)* | 26.37 (25.59, 27.14)* | 30.32 (29.23, 31.41)* | 23.49 (17.29, 29.70)* |
| RAE_SEVERE | −94.65 (−96.64, −92.65)* | −94.77 (−96.85, −92.70)* | −94.75 (−96.58, −92.93)* | −116.08 (−117.65, −114.51)* | −130.32 (−165.12, −95.53)* |
Notes: The 95% CIs above are “standard or classical confidence intervals” calculated using 100 bootstrapped replicates of MWTP. This is because accurate, less-erratic and reliable “bootstrap confidence intervals” require replications in the order of 1000, which would have been computationally demanding and time consuming [32]. The confidence intervals reported are therefore not exact. * indicates confidence interval does not include zero