Assessment of the Quality of the Clinical Evidence in Submissions to the Australian Pharmaceutical Benefits Advisory Committee- Fit for Purpose?

Jun 1, 2015, 00:00 AM
10.1016/j.jval.2015.02.011
https://www.valueinhealthjournal.com/article/S1098-3015(15)00056-X/fulltext
Section Title : Health Policy Analysis
Section Order : 14
First Page : 467

Background

Assessments of the comparative clinical (and cost) effectiveness of new medicines are increasingly being used to inform decisions on their reimbursement. Assessments of added clinical benefit are invariably based on evidence generated to support registration.

Objective

Our objective was to identify and characterize significant problems relating to the quality of the clinical evidence in submissions to the Australian Pharmaceutical Benefits Advisory Committee (PBAC) seeking subsidy on the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme and thus determine whether the evidence presented to the committee was “fit for purpose.”

Methods

We conducted a retrospective analysis of submissions considered by the PBAC between 2005 and 2012 using a published evaluation framework. We developed an additional framework to categorize significant problems in more detail. Significant problems related to the choice of comparator, the unavailability of randomized clinical trial evidence, poor-quality data, a claim of clinical superiority, and a claim of clinical noninferiority.

Results

We identified 261 significant problems in 479 major submissions. There was a significant problem with the sponsor’s choice of comparator in 11% of the submissions. The most common significant problem (29%) was the determination of a medicine’s comparative performance in the target patient population.

Conclusions

The supporting clinical evidence is the foundation of a PBAC submission. We found a poor fit for purpose; on average, one in every two major submissions had a significant problem with the supporting evidence. The findings from our study, if confirmed in other jurisdictions, raise important questions regarding what clinical evidence should be generated to support the reimbursement of new medicines.

https://www.valueinhealthjournal.com/action/showCitFormats?pii=S1098-3015(15)00056-X&doi=10.1016/j.jval.2015.02.011
HEOR Topics :
  • Health Policy & Regulatory
  • Health Technology Assessment
  • Reimbursement & Access Policy
  • Value Frameworks & Dossier Format
Tags :
  • decision making
  • evidence
  • quality
  • reimbursement
Regions :
  • Asia Pacific (including Oceania)