Immuno-oncologics (IOs) differ from chemotherapies as they prime the patient's immune system to attack the tumor, rather than directly destroying cancer cells. The IO mechanism of action leads to durable responses and prolonged survival in some patients. However, providing robust evidence of the long-term benefits of IOs at health technology assessment (HTA) submission presents several challenges for manufacturers. The aim of this article was to identify, analyze, categorize, and further explore the key challenges that regulators, HTA agencies, and payers commonly encounter when assessing the long-term benefits of IO therapies. Insights were obtained from an international, multi-stakeholder steering committee (SC) and expert panels comprising of payers, economists, and clinicians. The selected individuals were tasked with developing a summary of challenges specific to IOs in demonstrating their long-term benefits at HTA submission. The SC and expert panels agreed that standard methods used to assess the long-term benefit of anticancer drugs may have limitations for IO therapies. Three key areas of challenges were identified: (1) lack of a disease model that fully captures the mechanism of action and subsequent patient responses; (2) estimation of longer-term outcomes, including a lack of agreement on ideal methods of survival analyses and extrapolation of survival curves; and (3) data limitations at the time of HTA submission, for which surrogate survival end points and real-world evidence could prove useful. A summary of the key challenges facing manufacturers when submitting evidence at HTA submission was developed, along with further recommendations for manufacturers in what evidence to produce. Despite almost a decade of use, there remain significant challenges around how best to demonstrate the long-term benefit of checkpoint inhibitor-based IOs to HTA agencies, clinicians, and payers. Manufacturers can potentially meet or mitigate these challenges with a focus on strengthening survival analysis methodology. Approaches to doing this include identifying reliable biomarkers, intermediate and surrogate end points, and the use of real-world data to inform and validate long-term survival projections. Wider education across all stakeholders-manufacturers, payers, and clinicians-in considering the long-term survival benefit with IOs is also important.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/jitc-2020-000648 | DOI Listing |
Front Antibiot
June 2024
Department of Public Health Policy, School of Public Health, University of West Attica, Athens, Greece.
Clinical Microbiology has developed during the last 100 years, simultaneous with the discovery of microorganisms as causes of infections. Globalization and One Health determine present needs whereas molecular biology, automation, artificial intelligence, and bioinformatics are new tools that characterize the new developments in the field.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPharmacoepidemiol Drug Saf
January 2025
Department of Clinical Epidemiology, Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden, The Netherlands.
Purpose: Real-world evidence (RWE) is increasingly considered in regulatory and health technology assessment (HTA) decision-making, though perspectives on its relevance may vary. Expanding on a recent review regarding regulatory decisions, this study aimed to identify factors influencing the need for RWE in HTA decision-making, confirm and enrich factors with stakeholder views, and evaluate similarities and differences between regulatory and HTA needs.
Methods: Previous scoping review methodology was used to identify factors influencing the need for RWE in HTA decision-making.
Eur J Health Econ
December 2024
Department of Health Policy, London School of Economics and Political Science, Houghton street, London, WC2A 2AE, UK.
Patient organisations are increasingly involved in HTA. Given this, it is important to understand what these organisations contribute and how their voices are accounted for in the decision-making process. This study characterises inputs from patient organisations and/or their nominated patient experts in technology appraisals for ultra-rare diseases in England and Wales and seeks to understand how these are considered in NICE final recommendations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFValue Health
December 2024
Adelaide Health Technology Assessment, School of Public Health, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, SA, Australia. Electronic address:
Objectives: To assess the impact of a parallel regulatory and reimbursement process on (1) direction of funding decisions, (2) time lag until funding recommendation, and (3) type of evidence submitted, for cancer medicines.
Methods: Public regulatory and reimbursement decision documents were reviewed for cancer medicines considered by the Pharmaceutical Benefits Advisory Committee since the introduction of parallel processing. Medicine-indication pairs were identified from these documents and data extracted on the type and quality of evidence submitted, funding decisions, and timelines, by type of review process.
Int J Technol Assess Health Care
December 2024
F Hoffmann-La Roche AG, Basel, Switzerland.
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