| Literature DB >> 33749172 |
Rachel R J Kalf1,2, Rick A Vreman1,2, Diana M J Delnoij1,3, Marcel L Bouvy2, Wim G Goettsch1,2.
Abstract
Standard outcome sets developed by the International Consortium for Health Outcomes Measurement (ICHOM) facilitate value-based health care in healthcare practice and have gained traction from regulators and Health Technology Assessment (HTA) agencies that regularly assess the value of new medicines. We aimed to assess the extent to which the outcomes used by regulators and HTA agencies are patient-relevant, by comparing these to ICHOM standard sets. We conducted a cross-sectional comparative analysis of ICHOM standard sets, and publicly available regulatory and HTA assessment guidelines. We focused on oncology due to many new medicines being developed, which are accompanied by substantial uncertainty regarding the relevance of these treatments for patients. A comparison of regulatory and HTA assessment guidelines, and ICHOM standard sets showed that both ICHOM and regulators stress the importance of disease-specific outcomes. On the other hand, HTA agencies have a stronger focus on generic outcomes in order to allow comparisons across disease areas. Overall, similar outcomes are relevant for market access, reimbursement, and in ICHOM standard sets. However, some differences are apparent, such as the acceptability of intermediate outcomes. These are recommended in ICHOM standard sets, but regulators are more likely to accept intermediate outcomes than HTA agencies. A greater level of alignment in outcomes accepted may enhance the efficiency of regulatory and HTA processes, and increase timely access to new medicines. ICHOM standard sets may help align these outcomes. However, some differences in outcomes used may remain due to the different purposes of regulatory and HTA decision-making.Entities:
Keywords: HTA; ICHOM; PROM; health technology assessment; patient relevant; patient-reported outcome measures; pharmaceuticals; regulatory
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33749172 PMCID: PMC7982865 DOI: 10.1002/prp2.742
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmacol Res Perspect ISSN: 2052-1707
FIGURE 1Flowchart of guideline identification, and in‐ and exclusion
Acceptability of outcomes in regulatory and HTA decision‐making of innovative medicines as compared to ICHOM standard sets
| Outcomes | HTA | Regulatory | ICHOM | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Reimbursement | Market approval | Value‐based health care | ||
| REA | CEA | |||
| Mortality | X | X | X | X |
| Morbidity | X | X | X | X |
| Safety | X | X | X | X |
| Intermediate outcomes | X | X | X | X |
| Progression | ||||
| PFS | X | X | X | X |
| DFS | X | ‐ | X | ‐ |
| EFS | ‐ | X | X | ‐ |
| TTP | ‐ | ‐ | X | ‐ |
| RFS | ‐ | ‐ | ‐ | X |
| Tumor response | ‐ | ‐ | X | X |
| PROMs | X | X | X | X |
| Symptom reduction | X | ‐ | X | X |
| HRQoL | X | X | X | X |
| QALY | ‐ | X | ‐ | ‐ |
| Composite outcomes | X | X | X | ‐ |
| Biomarkers | X | ‐ | X | ‐ |
Abbreviations: ‐, this outcome was not discussed or mentioned in the guideline or standard set; CEA, cost‐effectiveness assessment; DFS, disease‐free survival; EFS, event‐free survival; HRQoL, health‐related quality of life; HTA, Health Technology Assessment; ICHOM, International Consortium for Health Outcomes Measurement; PFS, progression‐free survival; PROMs, patient‐reported outcome measures; QALY, quality‐adjusted life‐year; REA, relative effectiveness assessment; RFS, regression‐free survival; TTP, time to progression; X, this outcome was mentioned in the guideline or standard set.
The FDA allows this outcome to be included in the assessment for accelerated approval and regular approval.
Acceptability of outcomes specific for lung cancer, breast cancer, and prostate cancer as published by FDA and EMA, in addition to their general guidelines, and ICHOM
| Outcome | FDA | EMA | ICHOM |
|---|---|---|---|
| Market approval | Market approval | Value‐based health care | |
|
| |||
| Overall survival | X | X | X |
| Progression | |||
| PFS | X | X | ‐ |
| DFS | X | ‐ | ‐ |
| TTP | X | ‐ | ‐ |
| Tumor response | X | X | |
| PROMs | X | X | X |
| HRQoL | ‐ | X | X |
| Reduction symptoms | X | ‐ | ‐ |
| Safety | ‐ | ‐ | X |
|
| |||
| Overall survival | X | X | X |
| Progression | |||
| PFS | ‐ | X | ‐ |
| DFS | X | X | ‐ |
| EFS | X | X | ‐ |
| RFS | ‐ | ‐ | X |
| Tumor response | X | X | ‐ |
| PROMs | ‐ | ‐ | X |
| HRQoL | ‐ | ‐ | X |
| Safety | ‐ | X | X |
|
| |||
| Overall survival | N/A | X | X |
| Progression | X | ||
| PFS | X | ‐ | |
| DFS | X | ‐ | |
| Distant metastasis‐free survival | X | ‐ | |
| PROMs | N/A | X | X |
| HRQoL | ‐ | X | |
| Safety | N/A | ‐ | X |
| Other | |||
| Use of pain medication | ‐ | X | |
| Symptomatic skeletal event | ‐ | X | |
Abbreviations: DFS, disease‐free survival; EFS, event‐free survival; EMA, European Medicines Agency; FDA, Food and Drug Administration; HRQoL, health‐related quality of life; ICHOM, International Consortium for Health Outcomes Measurement; N/A, not applicable; PFS, progression‐free survival; PROMs, patient‐reported outcome measures; RFS, regression‐free survival; TTP, time to progression.
FDA may use PFS, TTP, and tumor response rates for lung cancer to support both regular and accelerated approvals, and specifically allows tumor response rates for breast cancer to support accelerated approval.
EMA may accept tumor response rates as outcome in exploratory studies for early evaluation approvals.
ICHOM recommends the collection of the following outcomes for prostate cancer regarding progression: development of metastasis (advanced and localized prostate cancer), development of castration‐resistant disease (advanced prostate cancer), biochemical recurrence (localized prostate cancer), procedures needed for local progression (advanced prostate cancer).
Hierarchy of outcomes accepted by regulatory bodies, HTA agencies, and ICHOM
| Institute | Primary outcomes | Secondary outcomes |
|---|---|---|
|
| Non‐definitive outcomes (eg, morbidity, function, HRQoL), ADRs | |
| Life‐threatening disease | Long‐term and definitive outcomes (eg, mortality or survival), ADRs, PFS | Morbidity, HRQoL |
| Non–life‐threatening disease | Mortality or survival | Not mentioned |
| First assessment | Morbidity, PROMs, HRQoL | Not mentioned |
| Re‐assessment | Definitive clinical outcomes (eg, mortality and survival) | Not mentioned |
| Economic evaluation |
Definitive clinical outcomes on morbidity and mortality (eg, stroke, fracture) Life‐years gained, QALYs | Not mentioned |
|
| ||
| Regular approval | Survival improvement, OS, PROMs, intermediate outcomes, PFS, improvement in physical functioning or tumor‐related symptoms, time to progression of cancer symptoms, toxicity, improvement in DFS | Tumor measurement and response, PROMs, HRQoL, biomarkers |
| Accelerated approval | Intermediate outcomes, DFS, PFS, TTP, ORR, CR | Not mentioned |
|
| Efficacy (eg, survival), safety (eg, tolerability and severe or life‐threatening ADRs), TTP | HRQoL, symptom deterioration, PROMs |
| Single agents and combination therapies | Cure rate, OS, PFS, DFS, event rate | ORR, rate of tumor stability, symptomatic tumor progression, HRQoL, PROMs |
| Treatment with curative intent | PFS | Not mentioned |
| Treatment intended to achieve long‐term disease control | PFS | Not mentioned |
| Palliative therapy | Prolonged OS, improved symptomatic control, HRQoL | Not mentioned |
| Adjuvant therapy | Increased cure rate, OS, DFS | CR |
| Neoadjuvant therapy | OS, PFS, DFS, enabling surgery, and organ preservation | Not mentioned |
|
| OS, PROMs, complications | Not mentioned |
Abbreviations: ADRs, adverse drug reactions; CR, complete response; DFS, disease‐free survival; EFS, event‐free survival; EMA, European Medicines Agency; EUnetHTA, European network for Health Technology Assessment; FDA, Food and Drug Administration; HRQoL, health‐related quality of life; HTA, Health Technology Assessment; IQWiG, the Institute for Quality and Efficiency in Health Care; NICE, the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence; ORR, objective response rate; OS, overall survival; PFS, progression‐free survival; PR, partial response; PROMs, patient‐reported outcome measures; QALY, quality‐adjusted life‐year; TTP, time to progression; ZIN, the Dutch National Health Care Institute.
When reduced or similar toxicity is expected.
When increased toxicity is expected.
When a major increase in toxicity is expected.
By exception, this outcome may be used as primary outcome. This may be related to a specific patient population or treatment, for example, for patients with solid tumors, in small populations, in the adjuvant setting, or in late line therapy.
When improved cure rate is the objective.
When the majority of deaths is unrelated to cancer.
HRQoL may be used as a primary outcome when the questionnaire was developed with the objective to capture the specific impact of a given pathology.
This outcome may by exception be used as primary outcome.
ICHOM recommends to assess these for a specific group of patients, for example, patients with advanced disease or patients with curative intent.
ICHOM recommends this outcome for a selection of indications: reoperation due to positive margins for breast cancer; time from diagnosis to treatment, treatment‐related mortality for lung cancer; stoma status, PFS, PCR, or CR, margin status, preference for place of death, hospital admission at the end of life for colorectal cancer; use of pain medicine, procedures for local progression, symptomatic skeletal event, development of metastasis, development of castration‐resistant disease for advanced prostate cancer; biochemical recurrence and development of metastasis for localized prostate cancer; cause‐specific survival for advanced and localized prostate cancer; RFS for breast cancer and colorectal cancer; place of death for colorectal cancer and lung cancer; cause of death for breast cancer, colorectal cancer, and lung cancer.