| Literature DB >> 32695425 |
David Tordrup1, Hendrika A van den Ham1, Julie Glanville2, Aukje K Mantel-Teeuwisse1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: High prices of pharmaceutical products are an increasing challenge in high- and low-income countries. Governments in many countries have implemented pricing policies to ensure affordability of medicines to patients and healthcare systems. The World Health Organization published in 2015 the Guideline on Country Pharmaceutical Pricing Policies, which was based on a series of evidence reviews in the preceding years.As part of the ongoing update of this guideline, we present a protocol for 10 systematic literature reviews on pharmaceutical pricing policies to be covered by the updated guideline.Entities:
Keywords: GRADE; Pharmaceutical pricing policies; Protocol; Risk of bias; Systematic literature review
Year: 2020 PMID: 32695425 PMCID: PMC7366307 DOI: 10.1186/s40545-020-00228-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pharm Policy Pract ISSN: 2052-3211
Definitions of pricing policies and strategies
| Term | Definition (from [ |
|---|---|
| Reference pricing | Reference pricing, also known as benchmark pricing, refers to the approach of understanding the appropriateness of prices of medicines based on selected benchmark prices, either from other jurisdictions (e.g. countries or other administrative regions) or a group of comparable medicines in the same system/formulary. For the purpose of this review, reference pricing is stratified as external and internal reference pricing: External reference pricing (ERP; also known as international reference pricing) refers to the practice of using the price of a pharmaceutical product (generally ex-manufacturer price, or other common point within the distribution chain) in one or several countries to derive a benchmark or reference price for the purposes of setting or negotiating the price of the product in a given country. Reference may be made to single-source or multisource supply products [ The practice of using the prices of identical medicines (ATC 5 level) or similar products (ATC 4 level) or even with therapeutic equivalent treatment (not necessarily a medicine) in a country in order to derive a benchmark or reference price for the purposes of setting or negotiating the price or reimbursement of the product in a given country. |
| Value-based pricing | Countries set prices for new medicines and/or decide on reimbursement based on the therapeutic value the medicines confer, usually assessed through health technology assessment (HTA). |
| Cost-plus pricing | Pricing policy that takes into account production costs, promotional expenses, research & development, administration costs, overheads and a profit to determine a price. |
| Setting price and mark-up thresholds across the pharmaceutical supply and distribution chain | Setting price threshold means specifying maximum prices, also referred to as price caps or price ceilings, or specifying maximum mark-up percentage. A mark-up represents the additional charges and costs that are applied to the price of a commodity in order to cover overhead costs, distribution charges, and profit. In the context of the pharmaceutical supply chain, policies might involve regulation of wholesale and retail mark-ups as well as pharmaceutical remuneration. |
| Promoting price transparency | The sharing, disclosure and dissemination of information related to medicine prices to the public and relevant parties to ensure accountability. Full price transparency includes the publication of medicine prices at all price types (e.g. ex-factory prices, pharmacy retail prices), the disclosure of the net transaction prices of medicines between the suppliers (e.g. manufacturers, service providers) and the payers/purchasers (governments, consumers), the sharing and publication of the contents of pricing arrangements, such as risk-sharing schemes and other managed-entry agreements, including the actual pricing and input factors that determine a medicines prices (e.g. production costs, R&D costs, added therapeutic value). (adapted from [ |
| Price discounts for single source pharmaceuticals | Discount is the general term to describe to a price reduction granted to specified purchasers under specific conditions prior to purchase. Different types of price reductions include a rebate (payment made to the purchaser after the transaction has occurred), or upon meeting certain pre-agreed terms and conditions as specified in so-called managed-entry agreements. The latter arrangements are usually classified into financial-based MEA (e.g. flat discounts, price-volume agreements, capping) and performance-based MEA (e.g. risk-sharing agreement, coverage with evidence development). Single source pharmaceuticals are pharmaceutical products supplied by a company that holds the patent rights, exclusive marketing rights, or supply agreements in a specific jurisdiction. |
| Promoting the use of quality assured generic and biosimilar medicines | Strategies directed at patients, prescribers or pharmacists to encourage the use of generic or similar biological medicines. |
| Competitive pricing based on tendering and negotiation | An approach that determines prices through tendering or negotiation among suppliers of medicines that are identical or comparable in chemical composition, pharmacological mechanisms and therapeutic use, taking into account factors such as quality, supply conditions. Tendering is any formal and competitive procurement procedure through which tenders (offers) are requested, received and evaluated for the procurement of goods, works or services, and as a consequence of which an award is made to the tenderer whose tender/offer is the most advantageous. Negotiation refers to “discussion aimed at reaching an agreement” [ |
| Pooled procurement | Pooled procurement refers to the arrangement where financial and non-financial resources are combined across various purchasing authorities to create a single entity for purchasing health products (e.g. medicines) on behalf of the individual purchasing authorities [ |
| Tax exemptions or tax reductions for pharmaceuticals | Tax is a compulsory transfer of money from private individuals, institutions or groups to the government. It may be levied upon wealth or income (direct taxation) or in the form of surcharges on prices (indirect taxation). It may be paid to the central government (central taxation) or to the local government (local taxation). There are two main categories of tax: direct taxes, which are levied by governments on the income of individuals and corporations, and indirect taxes, which are added to the prices of goods and services. Direct taxes, along with social security taxes, generally make up about two-thirds of total government revenue in high-income countries. In low-income countries, indirect taxes, on international trade or on the purchase of goods and services, are major sources of government revenue. Policies relevant to pharmaceutical products might involve the reduction of taxes on medicines, or the exemption of medicines from taxes, particularly sales taxes [ |
Definitions of the primary outcomes
| Term | Operational definition | Measurement unit |
|---|---|---|
| Price | Price components, observed or derived, along the value chain from manufacturer, distributor, service providers to patients | Absolute or percentage changes in reported currency unit(s) or price indices. Expenditure or sales data (aggregate of price and volume) as a proxy for price and volume if these are not individually reported. |
| Volume | Quantity provided or used | Number of units sold, supplied, prescribed, dispensed, or consumed |
| Availability | A patient is able to obtain when needed, for free or for a fixed fee, a pharmaceutical product which is listed on the national formulary | Presence-absence binary measurement and qualitative assessment as reported, e.g. a medicine is available when it is found in this facility by the data collector on the day of the visit |
| Affordability | “the ability to purchase a necessary quantity of a product or level of a service without suffering undue financial hardship” World Bank cited by Lancet Commission on Essential Medicines. | For health system: Proportion of spending on medicines compared to historical expenditure on medicines or other health products and services, or as reported in the literature |
| For individual patients: The number of days’ wages needed to pay for the cost of treatment, using wage benchmarks such as salary of the lowest paid government worker and national minimum wage, or as reported in the literature |
Definitions of secondary outcomes
| Term | Operational definition | Measurement unit |
|---|---|---|
| Transparency | See price transparency in Table | Qualitative description, as presented in literature |
| Efficiency | AHRQ’s definition: Avoiding waste, including waste of equipment, supplies, ideas, and energy. Allocative efficiency: Allocating resources in such a way as to provide the optimal mix of goods and services to maximise the benefits to society Technical efficiency: Using the least amount of resources or the right combination of inputs to produce a given mix of goods and services | As measured and presented in literature or qualitative description, as presented in literature Qualitative measures of process efficiency, e.g. timeliness, resource-intensiveness |
| Shortage | EMA’s definition: a shortage of a medicinal product occurs when there are changes to either demand or supply of the medicine, so that clinical need can no longer be met. A medicine shortage causes temporary unavailability. The total stock across all levels of the national supply chain, across all geographical regions, cannot meet demand during a medicine shortage | As measured and presented in literature or qualitative description, as presented in literature |
| Quality of pharmaceutical products | Whether products are substandard or falsified (SF) WHO’s definitions: Substandard: Also called “out of specification”, these are authorized medical products that fail to meet either Falsified: Medical products that deliberately/fraudulently misrepresent their identity, composition or source. | Occurrence of SF products |
| Safety | IOM’s definition: the prevention of harm to patients | As measured and presented in literature |
| Unethical conduct | Business or professional conduct that contravenes social norms or social responsibilities | Qualitative description, as presented in literature |
| Illegal conduct | Business or professional conduct that contravenes the law | Qualitative description, as presented in literature |
| Equity | Differences in [access or] health that are avoidable and also considered unfair or unjust | Qualitative assessment, including assessing differences in the relative effect size of the intervention; assessing indirectness of evidence to disadvantaged populations and/or settings. |
AHRQ: Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, EMA: European Medicines Agency, IOM: Institute of Medicine, WHO: World Health Organization
Summary of the inclusion and exclusion criteria
| Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria | |
|---|---|---|
| Intervention | Ten pharmaceutical pricing policy interventions, as specified and defined in Table | Studies without one of the ten prespecified policy interventions |
| Outcome | Studies including price, volume, availability or affordability as primary outcome | Studies without one of the four primary outcomes |
| Study design | randomised trial, non-randomised trial, and observational studies with at least one comparator or counterfactual | All other study designs that do not include at least one comparator or specifying a counterfactual. These include case series. |
| Countries | All countries | None |
| Settings | All settings | None |
| Time period | 2004–2019 (publication date) | Studies with publication date before 1 January 2004 |
| Language | All languages | None |