| Literature DB >> 29523564 |
Tarang Sharma1, Moni Choudhury2, Juan Carlos Rejón-Parrilla3, Pall Jonsson3, Sarah Garner2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) was established in 1999 and provides national guidance and advice to improve health and social care. Several steps in the research cycle have been identified that can support the reduction of waste that occurs in biomedical research. The first step in the process is ensuring appropriate research priority setting occurs so only the questions that are needed to fill existing gaps in the evidence are funded. This paper summarises the research priority setting processes at NICE.Entities:
Keywords: priority setting; research priorities; research waste; resource allocation
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29523564 PMCID: PMC5855177 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2017-019777
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Example format for research recommendation rationale to support prioritisation
| Potential criterion | Explanation |
| Importance to patients, service users or the population | What would be the impact of any new or altered guidance on the population (eg, acceptability to patients or service users, quality of life, morbidity or disease prevalence, severity of disease or mortality)? |
| Relevance to NICE guidance | How would the answer to this question change future NICE guidance (ie, generate new knowledge or evidence)? How important is the question to the overall guidance? High: the research is essential to inform future updates of key recommendations in the guidance. Medium: the research is relevant to the recommendations in the guidance, but the research recommendations are not essential to future updates. Low: the research is of interest and will fill existing evidence gaps. |
| Relevance to the NHS, public health, social care and voluntary sectors | What would be the impact on the NHS, public health, social care and voluntary sector and (if relevant) the public sector of any new or altered guidance (eg, financial advantage, or effect on staff, strategic planning or service delivery)? |
| National priorities | Is the question relevant to a national priority area (such as a national policy or parliamentary paper)? |
| Current evidence base | What are the problems with the current evidence base? (That is, why is further research needed?) |
| Equality | Does the research recommendation have any relevance to equality? For example, does it focus on groups needing special consideration, or on a technology, intervention or service that is not available for use by people with certain disabilities? |
| Feasibility | Can the proposed research be carried out within a realistic timescale? |
| Other comments | Any other important issues that should be mentioned, such as potential funders, outcomes of previous attempts to address this issue or methodological problems. |
NHS, National Health Service; NICE, National Institute for Health and Care Excellence.
Figure 1The NICE research recommendations process. NETSCC, NIHR Evaluation, Trials and Studies Coordinating Centre; NICE, National Institute for Health and Care Excellence; NIHR, National Institute for Health Research.
Summary of the cost of National Institute of Health Research (NIHR)-funded projects (as of 31 March 2016)
| NICE priority topics | NICE database topics | Total | ||||
| No of NETS projects | Funded cost (£) | No of NETS projects | Funded cost (£) | No of NETS projects | Funded cost (£) | |
| HTA programme | 24 | £24 369 414 | 22 (I TAR) | £15 805 225 | 46 | £40 174 639 |
| PHR programme | 4 | £1 764 186 | 26 | £16 448 522 | 30 | £18 212 708 |
| HS&DR programme | NA | NA | 2 | £738 188 | 2 | £738 188 |
| Total | 28 | £26 133 600 | 50 | £32 991 935 | 78 | £59 125 535 |
Source: NIHR Evaluations, Trials and Studies (NETS) Coordinating Centre (NETSCC).
HS&DR, Health Services & Delivery Research; HTA, Health Technology Assessment; NA, not applicable; NICE, National Institute for Health and Care Excellence; PHR, Public Health Research.
Methodological research projects funded through Methodology Research Programme (MRP) in 2009 (approximately £2.3 million)
| Research project | Principal investigator | Primary research institute | Project duration (months) | Value funded |
| Widening the spectrum of health outcomes used in Health Technology Assessment: integrated synthesis and mapping to QALYs | Professor A E Ades | University of Bristol | 24 | 238 868 |
| Use of generic and condition-specific measures in NICE decision making | Dr L Longworth | University of Sheffield | 24 | 289 189 |
| Preparatory study for the re-evaluation of the EQ-5D tariff | Dr A Tsuchiya | University of Sheffield | 18 | 242 969 |
| Economic modelling of diagnostic/treatment pathways in NICE clinical guidelines | Dr J Lord | Brunel University | 24 | 284 471 |
| Properties of statistical methods for indirect and mixed treatment comparison – a computer simulation evaluation | Dr F Song | University of East Anglia | 12 | 96 810 |
| Methodological search filter performance: assessment to improve efficiency of evidence information retrieval. | Ms C Lefebvre | NHS R&D Programme | 24 | 95 833 |
| Methods to estimate the NICE cost-effectiveness threshold | Professor M Sculpher | University of York | 24 | 351 357 |
| Methods for the Indirect estimation of health state utilities | Professor C McCabe | University of Leeds | 24 | 194 949 |
| Methods for strengthening evaluation and implementation: specifying components of behaviour change interventions | Professor S Michie | University College London | 36 | 509 200 |
EQ-5D, EuroQol 5 dimensions; NICE, National Institute for Health and Care Excellence; QALYs, quality-adjusted life-years.
Figure 2Process of identifying methodological research priorities at NICE and relationship with Medical Research Council (MRC): example 2010–2012. NICE, National Institute for Health and Care Excellence.