Seeking value: Experience from the UK's National Institute for Health and Care Excellence - Tommy...
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Transcript of Seeking value: Experience from the UK's National Institute for Health and Care Excellence - Tommy...
Seeking value: Experience from the UK’s National
Institute for Health and Care Excellence
Tommy Wilkinson
Advisor, NICE International
Copyright NICE International 2014
17th February 2015
4th Joint OECD Network on Fiscal
Sustainability of Health Systems
The vision: 5th July 1948
A National Health Service that: • meets the needs of everyone • is free at the point of delivery • is based on clinical need, not ability to pay
• Doctors adopting new health technologies without adequate
evidence of their clinical and/or cost effectiveness
• Out of date technologies and services being used even though they
had been superseded by newer developments
• Lack of national clinical guidelines and many of the existing clinical
guidelines not updated and of poor quality.
• Postcode lottery inappropriate variation in access to care and care
standards
• (later) Prospect of significant reinvestment in the NHS: plan to grow
from about 6.5% to about 9% of GDP
Roll forward to the 90s…
The role of NICE
To improve outcomes for people using the NHS and other public health and social care services by...
Producing evidence-based guidance and advice for health, public health and social care practitioners.
Developing quality standards and performance metrics for those providing and commissioning health, public health and social care services
Providing a range of information services for commissioners, practitioners and managers across the spectrum of health and social care.
The NICE portfolio in 2014
“You have the right to drugs and treatments that
have been recommended by NICE for use in the
NHS, if your doctor says they are clinically
appropriate for you.” Jan 2009
What is a NICE Technology Appraisal?
• A review of clinical and economic evidence leading to recommendations on the appropriate use of new and existing technologies for the NHS
• A positive recommendation requires providers to make the recommendation available within three months
• Opportunity to challenge decision
(formal appeal process)
Under controlled conditions and compared to placebo: • Is the drug safe? • Does the drug do more good than
harm?
In routine clinical practice and compared with existing treatments: • Do the additional clinical benefits
justify the expected additional cost?
Drug development
Regulatory approval
Technology Appraisal
Use in healthcare system
Incorporating the consideration of relevant social value judgements
Determining value: Incremental Cost-Effectiveness Ratio (ICER)
At NICE, health gain is expressed as quality adjusted life years
(QALYs) which allows us to calculate the cost per QALY for
any technology under consideration
costnew – costcurrent
health gainnew – health gaincurrent
Determining value:
Social Value Judgements
“Those developing clinical guidelines, technology appraisals or
public health guidance must take into account the relative costs and
benefits of interventions (their ‘cost effectiveness’) when deciding
whether or not to recommend them.” (Principle 2)
BUT
“Decisions about whether to recommend interventions should not
be based on evidence of their relative costs and benefits alone.
NICE must consider other factors when developing its guidance,
including the need to distribute health resources in the fairest way
within society as a whole.” (Principle 3)
NICE Social Value Judgements 2nd Edition 2008 http://www.nice.org.uk/media/C18/30/SVJ2PUBLICATION2008.pdf
Appraisal decision making P
rob
abili
ty o
f re
ject
ion
Cost per QALY
1
£10K £20K £30K £40K £50K
0
• Uncertainty ↑
• Features of condition • Equity judgments ↕ • Availability of treatments
• Innovation ↓ • Uncaptured health gain
The Committee will want to be increasingly certain of the cost-effectiveness of a
technology as the impact of the adoption of the technology on NHS resources increases (Para 6.2.14 Guide to Methods of Technology Appraisal, NICE 2013)
Therapeutic areas in technology appraisal topics Blood & immune
Cancer
Cardiovascular Central nervous system
Digestive system
Ear & nose
Endocrine, nutritional &
metabolic
Eye
Gynaecology, pregnancy & birth
Infectious diseases
Injuries, accidents & wounds
Mental health & behavioural conditions
Mouth & dental
Musculoskeletal
Respiratory Skin Urogenital
Most credible ICER for technologies appraised by NICE 2007 – Sept 2013
£0
£20,000
£40,000
£60,000
£80,000
£100,000
£120,000
£140,000
£160,000
Recommended/ optimised Not recommended Recommended under EoL
TA114 TA296 →
Decision outcomes
Decision Recommendations
Recommended in line with marketing authorization
333 62%
Optimised 97 18%
Only in research 26 5%
Not recommended 82 15%
Total 535 100%
Breakdown of all decisions contained in published NICE Technology Appraisals 1–321 (January 2000 to October 2014). Note 6 withdrawn recommendations and 18 non-submissions are not included
80% of NICE
guidance is positive
Scientific Rigour
Inclusiveness
Social values
Transparency
Independence Challenge
Review
Support for implementation
Timeliness
Accountability
for
reasonableness
NICE’s procedural principles for
guidance development