| Literature DB >> 33574682 |
Ilinca A Dutescu1, Sean A Hillier1.
Abstract
Antibiotic resistance is an urgent public health threat that has received substantial attention from the world's leading health agencies and national governmental bodies alike. However, despite increasing rates of antibiotic resistance, pharmaceutical companies are reluctant to develop new antibiotics due to scientific, regulatory, and financial barriers. Nonetheless, only a handful of countries have addressed this by implementing or proposing financial incentive models to promote antibiotic innovation. This study is comprised of a systematic review that aimed to understand which antibiotic incentive strategies are most recommended within the literature and subsequently analyzed these incentives to determine which are most likely to sustainably revitalize the antibiotic pipeline. Through a case study of Canada, we apply our incentive analysis to the Canadian landscape to provide decision-makers with a possible path forward. Based on our findings, we propose that Canada support the ongoing efforts of other countries by implementing a fully delinked subscription-based market entry reward. This paper seeks to spark action in Canada by shifting the national paradigm to one where antibiotic research and development is prioritized as a key element to addressing antibiotic resistance.Entities:
Keywords: Canada; antibiotics; antimicrobial resistance; financial incentives; health policy
Year: 2021 PMID: 33574682 PMCID: PMC7872909 DOI: 10.2147/IDR.S287792
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Infect Drug Resist ISSN: 1178-6973 Impact factor: 4.003
Figure 1Study flowchart according to the PRISMA recommendations.Notes: PRISMA figure adapted from Liberati A, Altman D, Tetzlaff J, et al. The PRISMA statement for reporting systematic reviews and meta-analyses of studies that evaluate health care interventions: explanation and elaboration. Journal of clinical epidemiology. 2009;62(10). Creative Commons.33
Characteristics of the Included Articles
| Authors, Year | Type of Article | Comparative? | Pro Push Incentives? | Pro Pull Incentives? | Recommendation? | Enforced/ Managed by? |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Årdal et al | Perspective | Yes | Yes | Yes | MER (partially delinked model): market-price model | N/D |
| Årdal et al | Pilot study | Yes | N/D | Yes | MER (partially delinked model) | Government |
| Baraldi et al | Qualitative study (interviews) | Yes | N/D | N/D | N/D | N/D |
| Batista et al | Review | Yes | Yes | Yes | N/D | Multi-national (EU) |
| Bhatti et al | Perspective | No | Yes | Yes | Mix/hybrid; tax credits, MER | Government |
| Brogan et al | Perspective | No | Yes | Yes | Mix/hybrid; OMA model | NGO Government |
| Brogan et al | Perspective | No | Yes | Yes | Mix/hybrid; OMA model | NGO Government |
| Brogan et al | Commentary | No | Yes | Yes | Mix/hybrid; early-stage push funding, OMA model | Multi-national (G20) |
| Ciabuschi et al | Simulation study | Yes | Yes | Yes | Mix/hybrid; grants for SMEs, MERs for large pharmaceutical companies | N/D |
| Daniel et al | Perspective | Yes | Yes | Yes | MER (PAVE award) | PPPs |
| Daniel et al | Perspective | Yes | N/D | Yes | MER (PAVE award) | PPPs (PAVE award is paid by insurance companies) |
| Darrow et al | Review | Yes | Yes | Yes | Mix/hybrid; grants in early stages of research, advance market commitments | NGO |
| Hojgard | Review | Yes | Yes | N/D | Subsidise R&D costs, levied fee on antibiotic use | Multi-national (WHO) |
| Hollis et al | Perspective | No | N/D | Yes | MER (de-linkage models), Pigouvian tax on non-human antibiotic use | Global coordination |
| James | Perspective | No | No | No | Does not support financial incentives | Global infrastructure to address antibiotic resistance |
| Kesselheim et al | Perspective | Yes | Yes | Yes | Conservation-based market exclusivity | N/D |
| Kesselheim et al | Review | Yes | Yes | Yes | Mix/hybrid ACE program; MER, value-based reimbursements (eg, advance market commitments), conservation-based market exclusivity, grants | PPPs |
| Laxminarayan et al | Perspective | Yes | No | Yes | Conservation-based market exclusivity | PPPs |
| Livermore | Perspective | No | Yes | No | Push incentives: reducing developmental costs and barriers to market-entry | Government/regulatory bodies |
| Luepke et al | Review | Yes | Yes | Yes | Mix/hybrid | Global coordination |
| Lum et al | Perspective | No | N/D | Yes | Diagnosis confirmation model for the hospital setting, value-based reimbursements, MER | Government |
| Mckellar et al | Perspective | Yes | No | Yes | Increase antibiotic prices | N/D |
| Morel et al | Commentary | Yes | N/D | Yes | MER (fully delinked approach) | Global coordination |
| Okhravi et al | Simulation study | Yes | N/D | Yes | MER | N/D |
| Outterson et al | Review | No | N/D | Yes | MER | Multi-national |
| Outterson et al | Review | No | N/D | Yes | MER | Multi-national |
| Renwick et al | Review | Yes | Yes | Yes | Mix/hybrid; 1–2 push incentives and 1 large pull incentive | Government |
| Renwick et al | Perspective | No | Yes | Yes | Mix/hybrid; expand late-stage push funding of clinical trials, implement a global pull mechanism (MER or OMA) | Multi-national |
| Rex et al | Perspective | No | N/D | Yes | MER (fully delinked approach based on bench-marked payments) | Multi-national |
| Rome et al | Simulation study | No | N/D | N/D | N/D | N/D |
| Savic et al | Review | No | Yes | N/D | Grants that are more targeted and effective | Pipeline coordinator |
| Sciarretta et al | Review | Yes | Yes | Yes | Mix/hybrid; MER (de-linkage models) | Global pull mechanism |
| Simpkin et al | Review | Yes | Yes | Yes | Mix/hybrid; late-stage push funding, tax incentives, value-based reimbursements, advanced market commitments, MER (with bonuses for meeting clinical goals) | Multi-national |
| Singer et al | Perspective | No | Yes | Yes | Mix/hybrid; open-source drug development | Multi-national |
| Sinha et al | Review | No | Yes | No | Early-stage push funding | N/D |
| So et al | Review | No | Yes | Yes | Mix/hybrid; OSDD initiative (Indian pilot business model; shared resources, with drug leads tested in publicly funded clinical trials and marketed as generic drugs) | PPPs |
| Spellberg | Review | No | Yes | No | Grants | PPPs |
| Talbot et al | Review | No | Yes | Yes | Mix/hybrid | N/D |
| Theuretzbacher et al | Review | No | N/D | Yes | MER (based on clinical value) | Global collaboration |
| Towse et al | Review | Yes | Yes | Yes | Pull incentives: MER, higher antibiotic prices | N/D |
| Towse et al | Perspective | Yes | N/D | Yes | MER (partially delinked model) - insurance model | Healthcare system |
| Vågsholm et al | Perspective | No | N/D | N/D | Pigouvian tax | Multi-national |
Abbreviations: MER, market entry reward; OMA, options market award; NGO, non-governmental organizations; PAVE, priority antimicrobial value and entry; PPPs, public-private partnerships; ACE, antibiotic conservation and effectiveness; OSDD, open-source drug discovery.
Trends Pertaining to Financial Incentive Models for Antibiotic Innovation in the Literature Between 2010 and 2020
| Publication Year | Number of Publications | Most Popular Recommendation |
|---|---|---|
| 2010 | 2 | X |
| 2011 | 3 | Pull incentives |
| 2012 | 1 | Pull incentives |
| 2013 | 1 | Mix/hybrid |
| 2014 | 3 | X |
| 2015 | 2 | MER |
| 2016 | 7 | Mix/hybrid |
| 2017 | 6 | MER |
| 2018 | 11 | MER |
| 2019 | 5 | Mix/hybrid |
| 2020 | 1 | MER |
Note: X = No majority in respective year.
Abbreviation: MER, market entry reward.
Characterizing the Advantages and Disadvantages of Financial Incentives for Antibiotic R&D
| Incentive Strategy | Policy Examples | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|---|
| Push Incentives | |||
| Grants | JPIAMR | - Lowers cost for R&D which will promote antibiotic innovation | - Risk of funding a project that ultimately will fail |
| Subsidies | – | - Lowers company cost for R&D which will promote antibiotic innovation | - Large amounts of public funding given to pharmaceutical companies may produce negative public opinion |
| Tax incentives | READI Act | - Easily implemented by the government | - If only tax credits, not useful for SMEs because they do not help cash flow |
| Pull Incentives | |||
| Advance market commitments | – | - Only rewards successful antibiotics | - Difficult to pre-determine drug specifications |
| Exclusivity/patent extensions | GAIN | - Drug companies will have a longer time to recuperate R&D costs post-market | - Resistance to the antibiotic could occur during period of patent extension which would decrease incentive value |
| Market entry reward (fully delinked) | UK Pilot | - Only rewards successful antibiotics | - Requires a substantial amount of funding to generate sustainable impact |
| Market entry reward (partially delinked) | Swedish Pilot | - Only rewards successful antibiotics | - Requires a substantial amount of funding to generate sustainable impact |
| Tradeable vouchers | REVAMP Act | - Only rewards successful antibiotics | - Does not effectively incentivize early-stage antibiotic development |
Abbreviations: JPIAMR, Joint Programming Initiative on Antimicrobial Resistance (global); CARB-X, Combating Antibiotic Resistant Bacteria Biopharmaceutical Accelerator (global), ND4BB, New Drugs for Bad Bugs (European Union); BARDA, Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (U.S.); NIH, National Institutes of Health (U.S.); MRC, Medical Research Council (U.K.); READI Act, Reinvigoratingl; Antibiotic and Diagnostic Innovation Act (U.S.); GAIN, Generating Antibiotic Incentives Now (U.S.); REVAMP Act, Re-Valuing Anti-Microbial Products Act (U.S.); R&D, research and development; SMEs, small-medium enterprises.
Criteria-Based Assessment of Recommended Incentive Strategy Using Modified Renwick et al18 Framework
| Incentive Strategy + Total Score | Improves NPV | Enables SME Participation | Enables Big Pharma Participation | Promotes Cooperation/ Synergy Among Key Players | Feasible Within Current Business Model | Piloted in Other Countries | Involves Delinking | Conditional Grants/Payments | Promotes Antibiotic Stewardship | Rewards Innovation | Improves Patient Access |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Push Incentives | |||||||||||
| Open-source drug discovery (4) | ✓ | ✓ | X | ✓ | X | ✓ | X | X | X | X | X |
| Grants (4) | ✓ | ✓ | X | X | ✓ | ✓ | X | X | X | X | X |
| Tax incentives/ Credits (4) | ✓ | X | ✓ | X | ✓ | ✓ | X | X | X | X | X |
| Pull Incentives | |||||||||||
| Conservation-based market exclusivity (4) | ✓ | X | ✓ | X | ✓ | X | X | X | ✓ | X | X |
| Diagnosis confirmation model (1) | ✓ | X | X | X | X | X | X | X | X | X | X |
| Fee on antibiotic use (3) | ✓ | X | X | X | ✓ | X | X | X | ✓ | X | X |
| Increase antibiotic prices (4) | ✓ | X | ✓ | X | ✓ | X | X | X | ✓ | X | X |
| MER (fully delinked) (6) | ✓ | X | ✓ | X | X | ✓ | ✓ | X | ✓ | X | ✓ |
| MER (partially delinked) (5) | ✓ | X | ✓ | X | X | ✓ | ✓ | X | X | X | ✓ |
| Value-based reimbursement (5) | ✓ | X | ✓ | X | X | ✓ | X | ✓ | X | ✓ | X |
| Hybrid Incentives | |||||||||||
| OMA (5) | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | X | X | X | X | X | X | ✓ | ✓ |
| ACE (5) | ✓ | X | ✓ | X | X | X | X | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | X |
Notes: Adapted with permission from Renwick M, Brogan DM, Mossialos E. A systematic review and critical assessment of incentive strategies for discovery and development of novel antibiotics. J Antibiot (Tokyo). 2016;69(2):73–88. Copyright 2016 Springer Nature.18Abbreviations: NPV, net present value; SME, small-medium enterprise; MER, market entry reward; OMA, options market award; ACE, antibiotic conservation and effectiveness.