| Literature DB >> 30443897 |
Karin Schölin Bywall1, Jorien Veldwijk2,3, Mats G Hansson2, Ulrik Kihlbom2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is increasing interest in involving patient preferences for benefits and risks in regulatory decision making. Therefore, it is essential to identify patient perspectives regarding the value of patient preference information (PPI).Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30443897 PMCID: PMC6525140 DOI: 10.1007/s40271-018-0344-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Patient ISSN: 1178-1653 Impact factor: 3.883
Generating topics for focus groups
| Regulatory | Patient | Focus group topics | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Main categories | Topics | Main categories | Topics | |
| Patient input; patient influence | Patient involvement in the regulatory process | Perceived value of RA patient preferences in the regulatory process | ||
| Current situation; value to regulators; value to patients | The value of patient preferences in the regulatory process | Informing decisions; commission decision | Patient preferences in the regulatory process | |
| Information to drug developer; information to prescriber; information to regulators; structured approach | Patient preferences in the MPLC | The importance of patient preferences; patient preferences on treatments; importance of patient preferences | Patient preferences in the MPLC | |
| Measuring preferences; implementing results; benefits with preference methods | Methods for measuring patient preferences | Sample; measure preferences; who is measuring the preferences | Methods for measuring patient preferences | Operationalisation of preference studies |
| Informing patients | The need to inform patients | Need for patient knowledge; experts make final decision; well-informed patients in decision making | The need to inform patients | Perceived need among patients to be informed |
MPLC medical product lifecycle, RA rheumatoid arthritis
List of codes
| Codes | Sub-categories | Main categories |
|---|---|---|
| Patient influence decisions | Benefits with patient preferences in decisions | Values of using RA PPI in regulatory decisions |
| Patients’ rights to be involved in decisions | ||
| Patient-friendly medical products benefit patients | ||
| Economic benefits for society | ||
| Representativeness | ||
| Limited regulatory view | Limitations with patient preferences in decisions | |
| Patient heterogeneity | ||
| Knowledge about RA | ||
| Patient-friendly medical products for RA | Value of patient preferences in RA-related decisions | |
| Chronic condition | ||
| High prevalence | ||
| Life style | ||
| Quality of life for patients with RA | ||
| Patient satisfaction | Future expectations | |
| Patient-friendly medical products for all patients | ||
| Quality of life improvements | ||
| Compliance with medical products | ||
| Better decisions and treatments | ||
| Economic expectations | ||
| Not by pharmaceutical companies | Concerns | Operationalisation of patient-preference studies |
| Drug discovery | When to conduct | |
| Clinical trials | ||
| Application | ||
| Evaluation | ||
| Decision | ||
| Post-approval | ||
| Mixed group | Participants | |
| Time from symptoms to diagnosis | ||
| Experience | ||
| Information about product development | Medical products | Information needs in a preference study |
| Information about medical product | ||
| Information about administration | ||
| Information about side effects | ||
| Information about risks | ||
| Information about RA | RA information | |
| Use of results | Aim | |
| Information about regulatory process | ||
| Online | Communication format | |
| Offline |
PPI patient preference information, RA rheumatoid arthritis
Patients in focus groups (N = 18)
| Characteristic |
|
|---|---|
| Sex | |
| Female | 17 |
| Male | 1 |
| Education level | |
| Low | 5 |
| Medium | 5 |
| High | 8 |
| Mean age (range), years | 59 (28–79) |
| Years with RA (range) | 1–42 |
| Interview location | |
| Stockholm | 11 |
| Uppsala | 7 |
aUnless otherwise indicated
| Patients thought it was important to be involved in regulatory decisions and that patient preference information (PPI) could be valuable to consider when including their preference. |
| PPI in regulatory decisions may ultimately lead to compliance with treatment, which could improve clinical outcomes in patients with rheumatoid arthritis. |
| Adequately informing patients about the medical product characteristics included in a preference study can increase the value of PPI in regulatory decision making. |