Pharmacoeconomic evaluation of new treatments: efficacy versus effectiveness studies?
Open Access
- 1 November 1999
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Elsevier in Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases
- Vol. 58 (9) , I82-I85
- https://doi.org/10.1136/ard.58.2008.i82
Abstract
The juxtaposition of economic and clinical evaluation raises new issues in the design of clinical trials. Recent pharmacoeconomic guidelines provide some direction, but do not deal with the appropriate timing of economic evaluations in the drug developmental process. Ideally, pharmacoeconomic data should be available at the time of the regulatory and formulary decision making. Current pivotal phase III trials do not provide these data; they are designed to test safety and efficacy (does the drug work under optimal circumstances?) and not to answer questions about the effectiveness of a drug, the more relevant question for economic analysis (does the drug work in usual care?). The use of more "naturalistic" designs for some phase III randomised trials has been suggested. These so called "effectiveness trials" more closely reflect routine clinical practice. They use a more flexible dosage regimen, and a "usual care" instead of a placebo comparator. Patients randomised are more representative of actual practice and outcomes include quality of life and utility measures. They are more suited to provide the data needed to estimate the real benefit of the treatment in actual care. When costs are applied and compared with these benefits, you can estimate the efficiency of allocating resources to this new drug. Increasing the use of effectiveness trials in phase III would decrease the need for economic modelling.Keywords
This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- Recommendations of the Panel on Cost-Effectiveness in Health and MedicineJAMA, 1996
- The Role of Cost-effectiveness Analysis in Health and MedicineJAMA, 1996
- Guidelines for authors and peer reviewers of economic submissions to the BMJBMJ, 1996
- Manufacturing Consensus, Marketing Truth: Guidelines for Economic EvaluationAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1995
- Reporting guidelines for economic studiesHealth Economics, 1995
- Costs, effects and C/E‐ratios alongside a clinical trialHealth Economics, 1994
- Cost utility analysis: What should be measured?Social Science & Medicine, 1994
- Valuing future benefitsHealth Economics, 1994
- In Search of Power and Significance: Issues in the Design and Analysis of Stochastic Cost-Effectiveness Studies in Health CareMedical Care, 1994
- QALYs, HYEs, and the Loss of InnocenceMedical Decision Making, 1993