| Literature DB >> 34738210 |
Cate Bailey1, Kim Dalziel2, Paula Cronin3, Nancy Devlin2, Rosalie Viney3.
Abstract
Measuring and valuing health-related quality of life (HRQOL) in children can be challenging but is an important component for providing decision makers with accurate information to fund new interventions, including medicines and vaccines for public subsidy. We review funding submissions of medicines made to the Pharmaceutical Benefits Advisory Committee contained in public summary documents to examine the use of child-specific HRQOL measures in decision making in Australia. A sample frame of medicines used by children was derived from four sources. Public summary documents relating to these medicines were searched in the Pharmaceutical Benefits Advisory Committee web resources for whether they related to children (aged under 18 years) and contained HRQOL information and/or cost-utility analyses. Data about the use of utilities in decision making were extracted and analysed. Of the 1889 public summary documents available, 62 public summary documents (29 medicines) contained information pertaining to children and utilities. Of these, four public summary documents included child-specific HRQOL measures, 16 included adult HRQOL measures, 11 included direct elicitation and the HRQOL source was not defined in 31 documents. Excluding documents using child-specific HRQOL measures, we considered that in 85% of medicines, decision making uncertainty might have been reduced by using child-specific HRQOL measures. Despite the growing literature on economic analysis in paediatric populations, the use of child-specific HRQOL measures in submissions to the Pharmaceutical Benefits Advisory Committee was minimal. Submissions involved inconsistent approaches, use of adult measures and weights, and substantial gaps in evidence. We recommend the consistent use of child-specific measures to improve the evidence base for decisions about medicines for children in Australia.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34738210 PMCID: PMC8794990 DOI: 10.1007/s40273-021-01107-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmacoeconomics ISSN: 1170-7690 Impact factor: 4.981
Fig. 1Sampling frame and screening for the use of child-specific quality-of-life measures and utilities in (Pharmaceutical Benefits Advisory Committee [PBAC]) public summary documents (PSDs). HRQoL health-related quality of life, LSAC Longitudinal Study of Australian Children, WHO World Health Organization
Child-specific quality-of-life measures
| Medicine (indication) | Age range | Submission (date) | Utility instrument | Source | Use of CUA in decision making | Outcome | Utilities discussed in recommendation? |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rotateq rotavirus vaccine (prevention of rotavirus gastroenteritis) | Infants 2, 4, and 6 months | Initial (July 2006) | HUI2 | Literature | The submission was not recommended based on uncertain cost effectiveness, the calculation on the utilities and concern about using parent proxy for the HUI2 values | Not recommended | Yes (Quote 1) |
| Resubmission (November 2006) | HUI2 | As above | The vaccine was recommended for inclusion on the National Immunisation Schedule based on a price reduction that improved cost effectiveness. No changes were made to the calculation of utilities in this resubmission | Recommended | No (Quote 2) | ||
Lisdexamfetamine (treatment of attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder) | 6 years and over including adults | Initial (July 2013) | HUI2 | Literature | The CUA was not considered appropriate by the Committee to compare the two medicines, given that there was no clear additional benefit of the medicine over the comparator. The Committee recommended using a CMA. There were issues with transforming utilities to ‘responder’ and ‘non-responder’ health states, and disutilities were not included in the model | Not recommended | No |
| Resubmission (July 2014) | HUI2 | As above | The re-submission presented a cost-effectiveness analysis, CUA and CMA. The Committee suggested the CMA was the preferred option, and the CUA was not considered in the decision-making process. The submission was recommended based on the CMA, despite some concerns about the clinical claims and economic analyses | Recommended | No | ||
CMA cost-minimisation analysis, CUA cost-utility analysis, HUI2 Health Utility Instrument Mark-2
Adult HRQOL measures
| Medicine (indication) | Age range | Submission (date) | Utility instrument | Source | Use of CUA in decision making | Outcome | Children’s utilities discussed? | Reduced uncertainty if child-specific HRQOL used? |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Influenza quadrivalent vaccine (vaccine against influenza) | 6 months to 5 years | Initial (July 2019) | EQ-5D-5L | Literature | Recommended based on likely cost effectiveness. Model sensitive to utility weights | Recommended | No | Yes: population of children and model sensitive to utility weights |
| Sapropterin dihydrochloride (hyperphenylalaninaemia due to phenylketonuria) | Neonates and children | Seeking section 100 listing (November 2011) | EQ-5D | Utility values sourced from independent study commissioned by sponsor | Model sensitive to utility weighs. Cost effectiveness high and uncertain EQ-5D not considered suitable for children. (Following this, the July 2012 submission was based only on cost per life-year gained, no CUA was presented, outcome deferred to discuss price) | Not recommended | Yes (Quote 3) | Yes: population of children, utility values lacked face validity |
| Resubmission (March 2018) | EQ-5D | Literature | Utility values lacked face validity. Same utilities used for children as adults: not suitable as higher impact on children | Deferred | Yes (Quote 4) | |||
| Minor resubmission (November 2018) | Assume EQ-5D as per previous | As above | As above, but utilities have been age weighted. Price reduction | Recommended with restrictions | No | |||
| Infliximab (treatment of ulcerative colitis) | 6 years and above | Initial [acute severe] (March 2013) | AQoL-8D EQ-5D-5L | Literature | Unsuitable comparator and insufficient evidence. Utility values questioned | Not recommended | No | Yes: model sensitive to utility weights, children included in population |
| Initial moderate/severe (March 2014) | EQ-5D | Trial | Model was sensitive to utility values | Recommended for adults and children with written authority | No | |||
| Minor resubmission (July 2014) | AQoL; EQ-5D | Literature | Recommendation not changed; written authority remained | Recommended, unchanged | No | |||
| Ivacaftor (cystic fibrosis) | 6 years and above | Initial (July 2013) | EQ-5D | Trial | EQ-5D may be insensitive in this context. Deferred because of very high ICER for the sponsor to consider the price | Deferred | No | Yes: EQ-5D is not suitable for children and problematic in this study, strongly child-centred disease |
| Initial [population with different gene] (November 2013) | EQ-5D | Trial | EQ-5D did not perform well | Addendum recommended with caveats | No | |||
| Major (March 2014) | EQ-5D (assumed as per previous) | Trial | Not further discussed | “Pay-for-performance” approach (Doc, p. 7) | No | |||
| Meningococcal polysaccharide conjugate vaccine (prevention of invasive meningococcal disease) | Adolescents | Initial [previously considered for infants] (March 2018) | AQoL (adult version) | Literature | Utilities not mentioned. Cost minimisation used for decision. The Committee wanted a price reduction to lower the ICER to under $15,000 | Recommended contingent on price | No | No: utilities not mentioned as an issue, cost minimisation used |
| Miglustat (progressive neurological manifestations in adult and paediatric patients with Niemann–Pick disease Type C) | Children (all ages) and adults | Initial (July 2010) | SF-36 | Trial | Economic analysis specific to children not included. Quality of life not different between groups. High and uncertain cost effectiveness | Not recommended | No | Potentially: the use of child utility measures, could have helped decision making |
| Omalizumab (treatment of uncontrolled severe allergic asthma) | 12 years and above | Initial (November 2009) | EQ-5D and AQLQ mapped to AQL-5D (age range 12–73 years; no sub-sample analysis by age) | Trial | AQL-5D not preferred, use of dis-utilities may have resulted in double counting. High and unacceptable cost effectiveness. Model sensitive to utility values | Not recommended | No | Potentially: model sensitive to utility values, issues with mapping utilities, part of population is children |
| Resubmission (November 2010) | As above | Trial | Issues with mapping utilities, the committed would prefer use of EQ-5D, utilities and price key concerns | Deferred because of price | No | |||
| Changes to listing (November 2015) | EQ-5D | Trial | EQ-5D used instead of the mapped AQLQ, but no difference between groups for utilities | Recommended under special arrangements | No | |||
| Pneumococcal polysaccharide conjugate (vaccine, 13-valent prevention of pneumococcal disease) | 5 years or less, over 65 years, indigenous 25 years or more | Initial (November 2018) | AQoL | Literature | High and uncertain cost effectiveness, utilities not discussed (no recorded submissions post this date) | Not recommended | No | Potentially: no subsequent submission |
AQL-5D Asthma Quality of Life Questionnaire Five Dimensions (preference-based), AQLQ Asthma Quality of Life Questionnaire (non-preference-based), AQoL Assessment of Quality of Life (preference-based), CUA cost-utility analysis, EQ-5D EuroQol-5 dimension (preference-based), HRQOL health-related quality of life, ICER incremental cost-effectiveness ratio, SF-6D Short Form Survey, 6 Dimensions (preference-based), SF-36 36 Item Short Form Survey (non-preference-based)
Direct elicitation techniques
| Medicine (indication) | Age range | Submission (date) | Elicitation technique | Source | Who is being asked to complete task? | Use of CUA in decision making | Outcome | Children’s utilities discussed? | Reduced uncertainty if child-specific HRQOL used |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Diphtheria, tetanus, acellular pertussis vaccine (vaccination) | Vaccine at 18 months | Initial (November 2014) | Time trade-off | Literature | Adults and parents of adolescents with confirmed pertussis disease (referenced from Lee et al. [ | Lack of information on effectiveness, which was then assumed. Many sensitivity analyses showing a stable model, with ICERs all under $20,000 per QALY. Use of utilities was not queried | Recommended | No | No: model stable and utilities not questioned |
| Infliximab (treatment of refractory moderate-to-severe Crohn’s disease in paediatric patients) | 6–17 years (specific to paediatric patients) | Initial (July 2007) | Unclear | Unclear | Clinicians | Utility values derived from a small survey of clinicians in Australia and lacked face validity. The PBAC was advised that the paediatric version of the Crohn’s Disease Activity Index would have been preferable. Unclear whether clinicians were asked to complete a survey or estimate a utility | Recommended | No | Yes: utility values lacked face value, population specifically children |
| Leuprorelin (central precocious puberty) | Children (when presenting) | Initial (November 2014) | Time trade-off | Time trade-off conducted for the cost-effectiveness analysis, not in trial or literature | Vignettes were retrospective, covering puberty and post-puberty attributes of the condition | Time trade-off study considered to be appropriate (utilities not available from trial). ICER was driven by the utility values. Model also sensitive to age of medicine initiation | Recommended | No | Potentially: mainly children, model sensitive to the utility values, though the time trade-off deemed appropriate |
| Pneumococcal polysaccharide conjugate vaccine (protection against pneumococcal infection) | < 3 years | Listing for catch-up dose (November 2010) | Time trade-off Willingness to pay | Literature | Parents asked to trade off their own lives (Prosser 2004) | Concerns about the appropriateness of the source of the utility values. Cost effectiveness deemed reasonable | Recommended | No | Yes: child population, utility values questioned |
| Rotarix rotavirus vaccine (prevention of rotavirus gastroenteritis) | Infants 2 and 4 months | Initial (July 2006) | Standard gamble and discrete choice experiment | Unclear | Members of the general public (assumed adults). Issues with framing of questions | Thorough economic analysis, used CUA, CEA and CBA. Concerns were noted by the PBAC about the elicitation questions. (Rotateq was also reviewed at this meeting and not recommended. Subsequent submission for Rotateq was recommended) | Not recommended | No | Yes: child population and concern with elicitation questions |
| Atomoxetine (ADHD) | 6 years or more | Third submission (November 2005) | Time trade-off | Unclear | Parents and non-parents (adults) of children with ADHD | Utility valuations of the health states by parents of children with ADHD were all higher than the valuations by those who did not have children with ADHD. Concerns about extrapolating from a child health state to an adult health state | Not recommended | Yes, but in relation to being used for adults | Yes: concerns raised about utility valuations and who rates them, predominantly child population |
| Fourth submission (July 2006) | As above | As above | As above | Concerns about adults being asked to trade off life: in standard time-trade off, the adult would trade their own life, here they are asked to trade the child’s life. Issues with utilities for children and with the comparator remained | Not recommended | Yes (Quote 5) | |||
| Resubmission (November 2006) | As above | As above | As above | Concern with the use of the time trade-off method remained. Recommended following price reduction | Recommended | No | |||
| Etanercept (severe chronic plaque psoriasis) | Children, adolescents and adults | Listing changes (July 2008) | Vertical rating scale, standard gamble and time trade-off | Literature | Patients with psoriasis (assume adults) | Model sensitive to the utility values, no differences in quality of life between groups Also included EQ-5D values (no difference between groups) for efficacy, whist the direct elicitation was used for the utilities | Not recommended | No | Potentially: population includes children and adolescents as well as adults, and the model is sensitive to the utility values |
| Insulin glargine (treatment of type 1 and type 2 diabetes mellitus) | Children under 18 years and adults | Fifth submission glargine (March 2006) | Time trade-off | Trial | General population with type 1 | Time trade-off study did not capture chronic nature of the disease. The PBAC considered a survey by the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation may be from a biased population. Deferred to address issues with the economic analysis regarding the reduction in hypoglycaemic events (appears to be no follow-up submission) | Deferred | No | Potentially: a significant proportion of population would be children, the time-trade off study not seen as effective |
| Treatment of adults | Submission for unrestricted listing (July 2015) | Time trade-off and EQ-5D | Unclear | Unclear (may be the same as March 2006) | Intended for use by adults only, but the PBAC concerned the children will also be recipients. Main concern was the sensitivity of the model to disutilities. Recommendation made based on a cost-minimisation analysis | Recommended | No | No: intended population was adults and recommended based on cost minimisation | |
| Tobramycin (treatment of | 6 years or more | Initial for dry powder (March 2013) | Time trade-off | Unclear | Unable to find time trade-off study mentioned | The PBAC found that the time trade-off methodology was inappropriate, as mainly focussed on the mode of administration. CUA approach not appropriate | Not recommended | No | Yes: children a large part of this population, time trade-off method not appropriate |
ADHD attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder, CBA cost-benefit analysis, CEA cost-effectiveness analysis, CUA cost-utility analysis, HRQOL health-related quality of life, ICER incremental cost-effectiveness ratio, PBAC Pharmaceutical Benefits Advisory Committee, QALY quality-adjusted life-year
Source of utilities not reported or discussed
| Medicine (indication) | Age range | Submission date | Source | Use of CUA in decision making | Outcome | Children’s utilities discussed? | Reduced uncertainty if child-specific HRQOL used |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Human papillomavirus vaccine [Gardasil] (prevention of cervical cancer) | Girls aged 12 years, including a catch-up programme for all girls and women aged 13–26 years | Initial (November 2006) | Unclear | Utilities for cancer health states used in the economic analysis considered to be overestimated. Recommended after price negotiations on high but acceptable cost effectiveness | Recommended | No | Potentially: population specific to children, utilities relate to cancer in adult population and considered uncertain |
Boys aged 12–13 years and a catch-up programme over 2 years for Year 9 boys | Extension (March 2011) | Unclear | Utilities apparently presented in pre-PBAC submission but not described in document. Model described as complex and non-transparent. Not recommended on the basis of high an uncertain cost effectiveness, despite lowered price | Not recommended | No | ||
Resubmission (November 2011) | Unclear | No further discussion on utilities, price weighted based on uptake | Recommended | No | |||
| Aged 12–13 years; girls and boys | Listing for boys (July 2017) | Trial | Submission used adult female data, deemed appropriate given that the effect is found in adulthood. Cost model uncertain because of inclusion of single utilities for each type of cancer | Recommended | No | ||
| Human papillomavirus vaccine (Cervarix) | Girls aged 12–13 years, plus catch up programme for girls aged 13–26 years | Initial (July 2007) | Unclear | Concerns about clinical differences between Cervarix and Gardasil. Claim of cost minimisation not accepted. Minimal information on calculation of ICERs with QALYs | Not recommended | No | Potentially: concerns about cost minimisation and calculation of QALYs foregone is unclear |
| Resubmission (November 2007) | Trial | Concern about comparability between the two vaccines. Price reduction lowered the ICER | Recommended | No | |||
| Girls aged 12–14 years | Amendment for dosage change [from 3 to 2 doses] (November 2015) | Trial | Recommended possibility of cost saving of 2 doses compared to current 3 doses | Recommended | No | ||
| Infliximab (treatment of refractory moderate-to-severe Crohn’s disease in paediatric patients) | Aged 6–17 years (specific to paediatric patients) | Initial (July 2007) | Clinicians | Utility values derived from small survey of clinicians in Australia and lacked face validity. The PBAC advised that the paediatric version of the Crohn’s Disease Activity Index would have been preferable. Unclear whether clinicians were asked to complete a survey or estimate a utility | Recommended | No | Yes: utility values lacked face value, population specifically children |
| Measles, mumps, rubella and varicella vaccine | Early childhood | Adjustment to schedule (November 2007) | Unclear | Cost-effectiveness model not recommended because of clinical and economic uncertainty. Recommended, but not on the basis of the cost-effectiveness model | Recommended | No | Yes: early childhood population and uncertain model |
| Meningococcal vaccine (protection against meningococcal disease) | Adolescents aged around 15 years (year 9/10 students) | Initial (July 2018, August 2018 addendum) | Unclear | Economic analysis not based on utilities, but QALYs used indirectly to quantify a clinically important difference. Recommended on cost minimisation | Recommended | No | Potentially: adolescent population, but decision made on cost minimisation |
| Methylphenidate hydrochloride (attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder in children and adolescents) | Aged 6–18 years | Initial (March 2006) | Unclear | Uncertain clinical benefit and cost effectiveness. Almost no information | Not recommended | No | Yes: population children, uncertain cost effectiveness |
| Resubmission (November 2006) | Unclear | No new information | Recommended | No | |||
| Multi-component meningococcal group B vaccine (immunisation against disease caused by | 2 months and older (adolescents) | Initial (November 2013) | Literature | Utilities provided prior to meeting; price reduction was not enough to secure recommendation | Not recommended | No | Yes: population aged under 18 years, uncertain cost effectiveness |
| Resubmission (July 2014) | As above | Minor update to previous model including updated discount rate. Not recommended on the basis of clinical and cost-effectiveness uncertainty | Not recommended | No | |||
| Minor resubmission (July 2015) | As above | No new information. Price reduction | Not recommended | No | |||
| Resubmission (November 2019) | Unclear | Included a societal perspective, not seen as appropriate. Not cost effective for general population. Issues with discounting rate | Recommended for indigenous population | No | |||
| Tiotropium (treatment of severe asthma) | Aged 6–17 years | Initial (March 2018) | Unclear | Insufficient data for a full CUA. Used QALY loss per symptomatic exacerbation. No information on utility values; efficiency results extrapolated from adults for children accepted by the PBAC | Not recommended | No | Yes: population was children, results were extrapolated from adults |
| Second submission (November 2018) | Unclear | Model unchanged except for updated costs. Issues with previous model remain; QALY loss seen as implausible. Data driven by trials on adults. Cost effectiveness would be acceptable at an equivalent price to adults | Recommended | No | |||
| Botulinum toxin (treatment of severe hyperhidrosis of the axillae) | Adolescents and adults | Submission for extension (November 2009) | Trial | Not stated which trial was used for quality-of-life data. Low number of adolescents expected in the subsidy pool. Model sensitive to the number of treatments. Not recommended on the basis of high and uncertain cost effectiveness | Not recommended | No | No: medicine more likely to be used for adults |
| Resubmission for extension (March 2010) | No further information | No further information. Recommended on the basis of a price reduction | Recommended | No | |||
| Deferasirox (treatment of chronic iron overload due to blood transfusions/sickle cell disease and transfusional haemosiderosis) | Aged 6 years or more | Initial (July 2006) | Trial | Recommended despite uncertain cost effectiveness because of high clinical need. ICER sensitive to starting age and utility gain | Recommended | No | No: recommended because of high clinical need |
| Listing change (July 2015) | Literature | Child utilities used for adults. Three different utility scores discussed | Initially not recommended. Recommended based on new price offer | No | |||
| Eculizumab (treatment of atypical haemolytic uraemic syndrome) | Children and adults (more common in children) | Initial (March 2013) | Trial | Utilities considered inappropriate and costs not adequately estimated | Not recommended | No | Yes: more common in children, utilities considered inappropriate |
| Resubmission (March 2014) | Unclear | CUA model not appropriate as missed some of the population, high clinical need and low prevalence. Concern about what was included in the model rather than the utility values | Add new item: restriction to be finalised | No | |||
| Insulin (treatment of diabetes mellitus) | Children and adults | Fourth submission, glargine (July 2005) | Literature | Model driven by disutility; utility values poorly justified | Not recommended | No | Potentially: utility values poorly justified, population includes children |
| Minor resubmission detemir [biosimilar brand] (March 2006) | Literature | ICERs unacceptably high and uncertain | Deferred | No | |||
| Mannitol (treatment of patients with cystic fibrosis) | 6 years and above | Initial (March 2011) | Literature | Not recommended on efficacy. (Search of the literature cited indicated that the CFQ-R was completed by children and by parent/guardian if aged under 14 years) | Not recommended | No | Yes: population largely children, utilities did not adequately reflect quality of life |
| Resubmission (July 2017) | Literature | QALY values stated, but reference not included, ESC did not consider the utilities adequately reflected the relationship between forced expiratory volume and health-related quality of life. Cost effectiveness unreliable, pragmatic decision | Recommended | No | |||
| Oseltamivir (treatment of infections due to influenza A and B viruses) | Aged 12 months or more | Initial (March 2019) | Unclear | Clinical benefit and economic model uncertain. Very little information | Not recommended | No | Potentially: broad population, uncertain economic model |
| Ribavirin (treatment of chronic hepatitis C) | Extension to children and adolescents over 27 kg | Extension to include under 18-year-olds (July 2011) | Unclear | High clinical need. Cost effectiveness uncertain, but acceptable | Recommended | No | Yes, this extension was specific to children, cost effectiveness uncertain |
| Somatropin (treatment for the improvement of body composition and short stature associated with PWS) | Children with PWS | Extension (March 2008) | Unclear | High but acceptable cost effectiveness. No information on utility values | Recommended for children aged under 18 years with PWS | No | Potentially: population of children, utility values not specified |
CFQ-R Cystic Fibrosis Questionnaire Revised, CUA cost-utility analysis, ESC Economics Sub-Committee, HRQOL health-related quality of life, ICER incremental cost-effectiveness ratio, PBAC Pharmaceutical Benefits Advisory Committee, PWS Prader-Willi syndrome, QALYs quality-adjusted life-years
Summary table of whether there would have been reduced uncertainty if child-specific health-related quality-of-life measures had been used (n = 34)
| Reduced uncertainty ( | Potentially reduced uncertainty ( | Not reduced uncertainty ( | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No. | Medicine | No. | Medicine | No. | Medicine | |
| Table | 4 | Influenza quadrivalent vaccine Sapropterin dihydrochloride Infliximab Vacaftor | 3 | Miglustat Omalizumab Pneumococcal polysaccharide conjugate | 1 | Meningococcal polysaccharide conjugate Vaccine |
| Table | 5 | Infliximab Pneumococcal polysaccharide conjugate vaccine Rotarix Atomoxetine Tobramycin | 3 | Leuprorelin Etanercept Insulin glargine | 2 | Diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis vaccine Insulin glargine |
| Table | 8 | Infliximab Measles, mumps, rubella and varicella vaccine Methylphenidate hydrochloride Multi-component meningococcal group B vaccine Tiotropium Eculizumab Mannitol Ribavirin | 6 | Gardasil Cervarix Meningococcal vaccine Insulin (glargine, detemir) Oseltamivir Somatropin | 2 | Botulinum toxin Deferasirox |
| We investigated the use of child-specific utility measures in decision making in Australia through a review of Pharmaceutical Benefits Advisory Committee public summary documents. |
| The use of child-specific utilities in Pharmaceutical Benefits Advisory Committee recommendations was minimal. |
| Consistent use of child-specific utility measures would improve the evidence base for decisions about medicines for children in Australia. |