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The Role of HTA in Health Care DecisionMaking

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Title: The Role of HTA in Health Care DecisionMaking


1
The Role of HTA in Health Care Decision-Making
  • Panos Kanavos Ulf Persson
  • 12 March 2008

2
HTA in assessing value of new technologies
  • A policy-makers perspective
  • 1. Scientific criteria assessment of
    therapeutic benefit
  • What is a novel therapy?
  • What type of criteria are used to assess
    therapeutic potential?
  • 2. Economic criteria
  • Budgets
  • Assessment of cost effectiveness
  • 3. Industrial policy (good citizenship approach)
  • RD
  • Employment
  • Exports

3
HTA currently used most frequently in assessing
value of medicines and less so of medical devices
and other health care technologies there is
significant potential in using HTA across all
health care technologies, including medical
devices, procedures and e-health technologies
4
How does HTA fit into the regulatory environment
for new medicines?
  • Regulatory approaches to pricing medicines
  • 1. Rate of Return (RoR) Regulation
  • 2. Price Setting
  • 3. Value-based pricing/Cost-effectiveness
    pricing/HTA
  • 4. Controlling use through price volume agreements

5
Value-based/cost effectiveness pricing/HTA in
EU/Switzerland, 2007
  • Under preparation or rising in influence
  • France
  • Greece
  • Poland
  • Spain
  • Hungary
  • Slovenia
  • Czech Republic
  • Slovakia
  • Current practice
  • Denmark
  • Switzerland
  • Sweden
  • Finland
  • The Netherlands
  • England Wales NICE
  • Portugal
  • Norway
  • Baltic states (Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania)
  • Italy

6
Using HTA/Value Based Pricing (VBP)
Heterogeneity of existing HTA bodies reflects the
differentiated environments of European health
care systems.
7
Current and future issues and challenges in HTA
across health care technologies - I
  • To determine (extent of) price premium
  • Explicit versus implicit
  • Ex ante versus ex post
  • What perspective?
  • What costs?
  • What data/outcomes?

8
Current and future issues and challenges in HTA
across health care technologies - II
  • The use of HTA has increased significantly in the
    past decade in most study countries and it is now
    an integral part of the formal decision-making
    process
  • Despite the potential applicability of HTA across
    a wide range of medical technologies, including
    drugs, devices and procedures, it is currently
    applied to drugs in most countries. Nevertheless,
    there are significant opportunities to expand the
    role of HTA to include new technologies, beyond
    drugs, but this is, among others, an issue of
    methods as well as priorities/funding at national
    level.

9
Current and future issues and challenges in HTA
across health care technologies - III
  • Stakeholders (patient groups, medical sector,
    industry) need to have the opportunity to
    actively participate in person in HTAs, submit
    evidence, as well as comment on draft reports and
    be able to access the rationale for the final
    decision this is not always the case
  • A products impact on health and the health care
    system emerge over time through exposure to the
    market consequently, manufacturers should be
    able to submit health outcomes information to the
    relevant government bodies throughout a products
    lifecycle. This evidence should receive
    appropriate attention from HTA authorities and
    although this is not occurring at the moment,
    there are signs in some countries that this is
    beginning to be the case.

10
Current and future issues and challenges in HTA
across health care technologies - IV
  • Few countries actively consider or promote HTAs
    of public health interventions, or, indeed,
    include the public health impact of different
    technologies when considering such technologies
    for coverage.
  • Currently, decision-makers consider mostly
    evidence available prior to the launch of new
    technologies (ex-ante) this poses the problem
    that effectiveness data is not available to
    decision-makers or manufacturers at the time of
    launch. As a result, post-launch assessments
    (ex-post) may be preferable due to greater
    availability of more robust data nevertheless,
    the precise specifications of such assessments
    need to be clear from the outset and may be
    dependent on or associated with the ethos of the
    health care system in which they take place.
  • Both old and new technologies should be assessed,
    whichever have a significant impact on cost,
    service delivery or patient outcome. This implies
    disinvestment of older and less efficacious
    technologies, but there is a feeling that direct
    disinvesment is still to come.

11
Current and future issues and challenges in HTA
across health care technologies - V
  • In certain cases classic RCTs may be unnecessary,
    unethical, inappropriate or impossible. Other
    alternative forms of assessment, including
    observational studies such as registry data,
    should therefore be accepted by HTA assessors.
    There is some resistance in accepting such data
    in some countries and this needs to be addressed.
  • While HTA in terms of using economic evidence-
    takes into account the static efficiency
    considerations from investing in innovation, it
    does not necessarily take into account the
    dynamic efficiency implications and the risk
    incurred by suppliers when undertaking investment
    under uncertainty in various forms of medical
    technology.
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