| Literature DB >> 33635522 |
Tim Raine1, Maria Angeliki Gkini2, Peter M Irving3,4, Arvind Kaul5, Eleanor Korendowych6, Philip Laws7, Amy C Foulkes8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Biologics are now key drugs in the management of immune-mediated inflammatory diseases. However, the increasingly complex biologics environment and growing cost pressures in the UK have led to variability in drug commissioning and inequity of patient access across regions.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33635522 PMCID: PMC7952361 DOI: 10.1007/s40259-020-00464-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BioDrugs ISSN: 1173-8804 Impact factor: 5.807
Factors that should be considered when deviating from a population pathway and that impact the choice of biologic prescription and influencing switching decisions, by consensus
| Factors | To consider when deviating from a population pathway | Impacting choice of biologic prescription and influencing switching decisions |
|---|---|---|
| Disease factors | ||
| Disease severity | 7/8 (87.5) | – |
| Disease phenotype and/or pattern of area affected | 6/8 (75) | 8/8 (100) |
| Patient factors | ||
| Disease impact on the individual patient | 8/8 (100) | 8/8 (100) |
| Response to previous treatments | 7/8 (87.5) | 8/8 (100) |
| Previous AEs or family history thereof | 6/8 (75) | 8/8 (100) |
| Comorbidities | 8/8 (100) | 8/8 (100) |
| Patient’s age | 6/8 (75) | 6/8 (75) |
| Patient’s race | 6/8 (75) | – |
| Patient’s preferences and beliefs | 8/8 (100) | 8/8 (100) |
| Patient’s adherence | 7/8 (87.5) | 8/8 (100) |
| Clinical biomarkers or appropriate predictors of clinical response | – | 6/8 (75) |
| Treatment factors | ||
| Efficacy | 6/8 (75) | 7/8 (87.5) |
| Safety and tolerability profile | 7/8 (87.5) | 7/8 (87.5) |
| Treatment convenience/acceptability | 7/8 (87.5) | 8/8 (100) |
| Cost effectiveness of treatment | – | 7/8 (87.5) |
| Value of treatment | – | 7/8 (87.5) |
Data are presented as n/N (%) unless otherwise indicated
AE adverse event
Factors encompassed in the concept of a drug’s value, by consensus
| Factors encompassed in the concept of a drug’s value |
Quality (6/8 [75]) Efficacy (8/8 [100]) Safety profile (8/8 [100]) Patient-centredness (6/8 [75]) Convenience (6/8 [75]) Unit cost (6/8 [75]) Potential to offset other healthcare costs (8/8 [100]) |
Data are presented as n/N [%] unless otherwise indicated
Fig. 1Process and resources for reaching a solution in the event of misalignment between clinical judgement as per NICE guidelines and a CCG pathway. BAD British Association of Dermatologists, BSG British Society of Gastroenterologists, BSR British Society for Rheumatology, CCG Clinical Commissioning Group, CD Crohn’s disease, IFR individual/independent funding request, NICE National Institute for Health and Care Excellence, TA treatment appraisal, UC ulcerative colitis
| Clinical freedom and consideration of patient choice and preference are vital for individualised care. The increasing availability of new biologics and biosimilars adds cost-based complexity to prescribing decisions for patients who may require these drugs. Clinical freedom should be exercised within a value framework that forms the backbone of rigorous, transparent evidence reports to include available evidence and clinical experience. |
| Although UK National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) clinical guidance theoretically allows a degree of clinical freedom, local variations in interpretation occur, with a resulting impact on equity of patient access to treatments. The clinical freedom within UK NICE clinical guidelines could therefore be harmonised across local services to ensure equity of patient access to treatments. |
| Communication and collaboration between clinicians and commissioners can foster optimal pathway development for better value, access and patient outcomes. |
Methods for improving physician–commissioner communication
Regular informal meetings, emails or phone calls between commissioners and clinicians to facilitate open, ongoing communication and reduce the overall burden at official commissioning meetings. Physician attendance at relevant commissioning meetings, particularly with presentation of case studies, highlighting patient impact to illustrate why pathways need to be adapted or developed. Patient focus groups to help practitioners and commissioners understand patient perspective. Patient organisations can help with focus groups by recruiting patients with different characteristics. Agreements to share cost savings (note that this will rely on transparent drug costings). Investment by commissioners in clinical services or projects that improve efficiency or allow savings (e.g. funding posts that facilitate switching to biosimilars). Consideration of management strategies beyond biologics. |
Real-life applicability of these recommendations for patients—statement from the National Rheumatoid Arthritis Society, Crohn’s & Colitis UK, and the Psoriasis Association
We welcome the exploration that value does not equal cost and echo the view that drug efficacy is important when considering drug value. Concordance is linked with efficacy, and the poorest-value drug is the one that is prescribed but not used. We appreciate that clinical guidelines increasingly acknowledge the additional value of novel biologics with different modes of action. However, the guidelines are not being filtered down into practice. When decisions reach a local level, it too often comes back to cost. Better understanding of biologics and therefore personalised medicine has come a long way; however, this is being greatly stifled by the need for prescribing the cheapest biologic and not always following NICE guidance but instead CCG pathways. We would therefore agree with the authors that there is an inequitable postcode lottery in terms of biologic availability to patients. As the patient is directly impacted, it is vital to include them in discussions at all stages of the care pathway. There should be an emphasis on shared decision making throughout, which requires the clinician to practice clinical freedom by aligning the patient’s needs and preferences with the available treatment choices. Yet, although shared decision making is listed in many principles of care, it often ends up as just rhetoric. It should involve a meaningful discussion between physician and patient, reflective of the patient’s educational level, preferences and their home and work situation, about the risks and benefits of treatment. This enables the physician and patient to reach a joint decision that will suit the patient as an individual in terms of their disease and their personal situation. In discussions around commissioning and care pathways, the patient’s perspective is also of value. This could include picture and video evidence from patients and their carers or families in debates with commissioners, or inclusion of expert patient organisations on decision boards. Patient organisations can help to provide context for commissioning decisions by recruiting patients with different characteristics for focus groups, highlighting the importance of health outcomes and patient satisfaction as clear goals in clinical pathways. |