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Comparative Effectiveness Research: Key Issues and Controversies

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Not enough evidence for decisions ... Stark bill. Baucus bill ... Reinvestment Act (ARRA) stimulus bill funding for Comparative Effectiveness Research (CER) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Comparative Effectiveness Research: Key Issues and Controversies


1
  • Comparative Effectiveness ResearchKey Issues
    and Controversies
  • Consumer-Purchaser Disclosure Project Discussion
    Forum
  • May 5, 2009

Steven D. Pearson, MD, MSc, FRCP
2
Background
  • Policy givens
  • Unsustainable cost increases
  • Unexplainable variation in practice patterns
  • Not enough evidence for decisions about new
    treatments
  • International efforts (health technology
    assessment)
  • NICE in England
  • Comparative Effectiveness
  • Stark bill
  • Baucus bill
  • American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA)
    stimulus bill funding for Comparative
    Effectiveness Research (CER)

3
10-Year Impact on Spendingof a Center for
Comparative Effectiveness
Dollars in billions
SAVINGS COSTS
Source Based on estimates by The Lewin Group for
The Commonwealth Fund, 2007.
4
Chief remaining questions on CER
  • Stimulus spending
  • Priorities for spending at AHRQ and NIH
  • Secretary of HHS 400 million
  • Inclusion of cost and/or cost-effectiveness
  • CER 2.0
  • Structure
  • Governance
  • Funding
  • Priority Setting
  • Research Methods (cost-effectiveness)
  • Implementation

5
Stimulus spending
  • Priorities for spending at AHRQ and NIH
  • Mix of systematic reviews and prospective studies
  • Framing of topics as drug vs. drug or broader
    pathways of care
  • Studies of health plan policies such as prior
    authorization
  • Secretary of HHS 400 million
  • Inclusion of cost-effectiveness

6
Weighing up costs and effects
Cost ()
Effectiveness
7
Why Costs?
  • Not to consider costs is delusional
  • Costs should be considered transparently and
    always in the context of clinical effectiveness
  • Without consideration of cost
  • No societal support for explicit cost
    considerations in clinical decisions and medical
    policies
  • All explicit health plan efforts will be suspect
  • Continued difficulty negotiating prices in
    relation to evidence of incremental benefit
  • Marginal benefit at high price will continue to
    be a dominant market signal for manufacturers

8
How to do Costs?
  • Carve-out
  • Commissioned by individual payers, including
    Medicare
  • Arms length
  • Funded as part of CER stream but function
    delegated to an allied yet separate organization
  • Carve-in
  • Distrust of clinical effectiveness judgments if
    mixed with costs
  • More efficient to nest within same effort to
    generate a systematic review of the clinical
    evidence
  • Benefits from the objectivity and transparency of
    a federal comparative effectiveness initiative to
    gain broad acceptance

9
Legislation for CER 2.0
  • Structure
  • Inside or attached to government vs. independent?
  • Governance
  • Stakeholders on the Governing Board or only on
    Advisory Committees?
  • Funding
  • How much from private health plans and
    purchasers?
  • Priority Setting
  • Who and how?
  • Research Methods
  • Cost-effectiveness yea or nea?
  • Implementation

10
  • http//www.politico.com/singletitlevideo.html?bcpi
    d1155201977bctid21157881001

11
How will CE information be used?
  • Concerns
  • Limit access to life-saving treatments just
    because of cost
  • One-size-fits-all methodologies and
    applications to coverage policies
  • Cost-effectiveness applied as a strict cut-off
    for coverage
  • Cost-effectiveness devalues older, sicker
    patients
  • Put governmental bureaucrats between you and your
    doctor
  • Stifle innovation

12
How CER should be used
  • Too cold
  • Dissemination of information to patients and
    clinicians
  • Too hot
  • Direct mandates for all-or-nothing coverage
    decisions
  • Just right
  • Providing guidance to patients, clinicians, and
    payers
  • Application by payers to create value-based tools
    and policies in support of optimal care and to
    ensure best use of every health care dollar
  • Patient-clinician decision support
  • Reimbursement policy
  • Value-based insurance design
  • Physician group compensation (P4P)

13
Application of Cost-effectiveness
  • Help identify the least costly alternative among
    equivalent treatment options
  • Provide some context for the additional cost paid
    for very marginal clinical benefits
  • Help anchor initial pricing for new technologies
    in evidence of their marginal (if any) benefit
  • Tools
  • Patient-clinician decision tools
  • Reimbursement policy
  • Value-based insurance design
  • Physician group compensation (P4P) to align
    incentives

14
  • For further information
  • spearson_at_icer-review.org
  • www.icer-review.org
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