| Literature DB >> 32676998 |
Susan dosReis1, Beverly Butler2, Juan Caicedo3, Annie Kennedy4, Yoon Duk Hong5, Chengchen Zhang5, Julia F Slejko5.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Our objective was to identify patient-informed value elements that can be used to make value assessment more patient centered.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32676998 PMCID: PMC7479003 DOI: 10.1007/s40271-020-00433-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Patient ISSN: 1178-1653 Impact factor: 3.883
Fig. 1Identification and refinement of patient-informed elements of value with continuous patient stakeholder involvement. SAC stakeholder advisory committee
Stakeholder-derived definitions for the 47 patient-informed value elements at stage 1
| Patient-driven value element | Definition |
|---|---|
| Intermediate/surrogate endpoints | A treatment endpoint that may correlate with a true endpoint but does not always guarantee the true endpoint will be achieved |
| Tolerability | The ability to endure treatment (side effects, dosing, administration burden, etc.) |
| Symptom importance | Preference for some treatments over others, depending on the symptoms it can alleviate |
| New therapeutic option | New drug option that represents an innovative or breakthrough therapy |
| Side effects | The burden that the effects of medication present |
| Life expectancy | The degree to which the symptoms of a particular condition limit one’s normal/expected life expectancy |
| Conflict with religious beliefs | A treatment, intervention, or anything related to receiving the therapy that presents a conflict with one’s religion |
| Age of onset | The impact that the age of onset of a health condition plays into the personal benefit–risk assessment in therapeutic decision making. |
| Cultural barriers | A treatment, intervention, or anything related to receiving the therapy that presents a conflict with one’s cultural practices or beliefs |
| Stigma | The treatment, intervention, or anything related to receiving the therapy that presents a negative impact in the context of one’s society, culture, or beliefs |
| Length of treatment | The impact that the duration of treatment/intervention may have on burden in one’s daily life |
| Maintain social activities | The ability to continue activities in one’s social role during the treatment of a disease |
| Support network | Family, friends and/or a peer group, or community that lends support and encouragement during treatment |
| Ability to maintain relationships with peers | The extent to which the treatment, intervention, or anything related to therapy impedes one’s ability to maintain social relationships |
| Ability to maintain relationships with family members | The extent to which the treatment, intervention, or anything related to therapy impedes one’s ability to maintain family relationships |
| Fatigue | The impact of a treatment, intervention, or anything related to therapy on one’s physical and/or mental strength |
| Ability to work | The treatment, intervention, or anything related to therapy that allows or impedes one’s ability to work |
| Impact on depression | The effect of the treatment, intervention, and/or anything related to therapy on improving or worsening depression |
| Impact on anxiety | The effect of the treatment, intervention, and/or anything related to therapy on improving or worsening anxiety |
| Fear of rejection by family | The fear of explaining a treatment, intervention, or anything related to therapy to family due to concern about rejection |
| Fear of rejection by society | The fear of explaining a treatment, intervention, or anything related to therapy to people in society due to concern about rejection |
| Available treatment | The treatments, interventions, or therapy that are available based on the disease and/or the location of the patient |
| Treatment accessibility in socially neglected populations | Individuals with rare diseases or that are otherwise socially neglected populations have fewer treatment options and/or lack access to treatments |
| Impact on education | For some diseases, the impact of the treatment on one’s education/schooling |
| Impact on career | The impact of treatment on one’s career |
| Affordability | A treatment, intervention, or anything related to therapy that is/is not within one’s ability to pay for |
| Cost of treatment-related side effects | The cost to an individual and/or society to treat the side effects that arise from the treatment |
| Long-term costs | The ongoing costs of treatment and anything related to therapy (i.e., caregiving, etc.) that contribute to financial burden |
| Sibling costs | The burden of disease through the lens of siblings, i.e., sacrifices made and opportunities lost to siblings of an individual with a disease that may be pediatric or adult onset |
| Long-term effects on family | The impact of a treatment, intervention, or anything related to therapy that can affect the family as a unit, financially or otherwise, over a 10-year time span and more |
| Relocation costs to be closer to patient | Costs to a family member or the individual undergoing treatment that is related to relocation in order to be closer to family so that caregiving, transport to appointments, clinical care, and care delivery is possible and/or feasible |
| Benefit-risk tradeoff for the community | An individual’s perspective of the risk versus benefit for the community before accepting and/or paying for a treatment |
| Benefit-risk tradeoff for patients | An individual’s assessment of whether the benefit of a treatment is worth the potential risk associated with the treatment, or vice versa |
| Maximum tolerable cost for benefit–risk tradeoff | The highest amount one is willing to pay for a treatment, intervention, or anything related to therapy |
| Appropriateness of care | The treatment chosen is the right intervention or therapy given the individual’s needs and preferences |
| System navigation | A group/person or tools that can help individuals navigate the system of care more easily |
| Provider relationship and trust | The trust one has in the system of care and the healthcare providers that help one make treatment decisions and/or access care |
| Proximity to care location | Treatment that is or is not accessible in or near one’s geographic locale |
| Reimbursed care | The amount of treatment or therapy costs that is covered by insurance or a third-party payer |
| Provider willing to deliver care | Having a provider in one’s insurance network that is able to deliver or offer the treatment needed |
| Pharmacy access to the medication | Access to the prescription medication at a pharmacy within one’s community, i.e., treatment that is not restricted to specialty pharmacies or distribution networks |
| Alternative treatments | Nonconventional treatments that may/may not be available as alternatives to existing treatments and/or therapy |
| Consistency of care | Consistency with respect to the receipt of treatment |
| Care transitions | A change to a new or different healthcare facility that impacts access to a treatment |
| Explanation of treatment (risks and benefits) | The ability of the healthcare provider to explain to the patient the expectations during the treatment |
| Predictable healthcare needs | The variability in a condition and ability to predict one’s care and treatment needs over the disease trajectory |
| Inability to plan | The ability to plan for one’s future, care needs, treatment, interventions, and/or anything related to therapy |
Value elements rated as high priority by patient stakeholders in the stage 2 evaluation
| >75% rated 12 elements as high priority | 50–75% rated 20 elements as high priority | 25–49% rated 9 elements as high priority | < 25% rated 4 elements as high priority |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tolerability | Length of treatment | Cultural barriers | Conflict with religious beliefs |
| Side effects | Maintain social activities | Stigma | Fear of rejection by family |
| Ability to maintain relationships with family | Support network | Sibling costs | Fear of rejection by society |
| Ability to work | Ability to relationships with peers | Pharmacy access to the medication | |
| Impact on depression | Fatigue | Alternative treatments | |
| Affordability | Impact on anxiety | Predictable healthcare needs | |
| Long-term costs | Cost of treatment-related side effects | Consistency of care | |
| Reimbursed care | Long-term effects on family | Age of onset | |
| Available treatment | Relocation costs to be closer to patient | Intermediate/surrogate endpoints | |
| Appropriateness of care | New therapeutic option | ||
| Provider willing to deliver care | System navigation | ||
| Explanation of treatment (risks & benefits) | Proximity to care location | ||
| Treatment access in socially neglected populations | |||
| Life EXPECTANCY | |||
| Impact on education | |||
| Impact on career | |||
| Inability to plan | |||
| Provider relationship & trust | |||
| Care transitions | |||
| Symptom importance |
Fig. 2Domains related to the patient-informed value elements
| Value assessment framework recommendations call for improving value measures to better align with what is important to patients. |
| This paper presents patient-informed value elements that were developed with continuous patient engagement throughout the process. |
| The work will advance the field of value assessment because it provides a set of novel and measurable patient-informed value elements that can be incorporated into existing value frameworks and economic evaluations to improve the health technology assessment, data-generation, and decision-making processes. |