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Published in: PharmacoEconomics 9/2015

01-09-2015 | Review Article

Disinvestment and Value-Based Purchasing Strategies for Pharmaceuticals: An International Review

Authors: Bonny Parkinson, Catherine Sermet, Fiona Clement, Steffan Crausaz, Brian Godman, Sarah Garner, Moni Choudhury, Sallie-Anne Pearson, Rosalie Viney, Ruth Lopert, Adam G. Elshaug

Published in: PharmacoEconomics | Issue 9/2015

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Abstract

Pharmaceutical expenditure has increased rapidly across many Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) countries over the past three decades. This growth is an increasing concern for governments and other third-party payers seeking to provide equitable and comprehensive healthcare within sustainable budgets. In order to create headroom for increasing utilisation, and to fund new high-cost therapies, there is an active push to ‘disinvest’ from low-value drugs. The aim of this article is to review how reimbursement policy decision makers have sought to partially or completely disinvest from drugs in a range of OECD countries (UK, France, Canada, Australia and New Zealand) where they are publicly funded or subsidised. We employed a systematic literature search strategy and the incorporation of grey literature known to the authorship team. We canvass key policy instruments from each country to outline key approaches to the identification of candidate drugs for disinvestment assessment (passive approaches vs. more active approaches); methods of disinvestment and value-based purchasing (de-listing, restricting treatment, price or reimbursement rate reductions, encouraging generic prescribing); lessons learnt from the various approaches; the potential role of coverage with evidence development; and the need for careful stakeholder management. Dedicated sections are provided with detailed coverage of policy approaches (with drug examples) from each country. Historically, countries have relied on ‘passive disinvestment’; however, due to (1) the availability of new cost-effectiveness evidence, or (2) ‘leakage’ in drug utilisation, or (3) market failure in terms of price competition, there is an increasing focus towards ‘active disinvestment’. Isolating low-value drugs that would create headroom for innovative new products to enter the market is also motivating disinvestment efforts by multiple parties, including industry. Historically, disinvestment has mainly taken the form of price reductions, especially when market failures are perceived to exist, and restricting treatment to subpopulations, particularly when a drug is no longer considered value for money. There is considerable experimentation internationally in mechanisms for disinvestment and the opportunity for countries to learn from each other. Ongoing evaluation of disinvestment strategies is essential, and ought to be reported in the peer-reviewed literature.
Appendix
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Footnotes
1
Now the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE).
 
2
For example, funding of diabetes nurses to teach diabetes patients how to self-administer insulin or use an insulin pump.
 
3
If the SMR is ‘major or considerable’, ‘moderate’ or ‘low but nevertheless justifying reimbursement’ it can be included in the list of reimbursable drugs, while drugs rated as ‘insufficient’ or ‘of low medical benefit’ are not covered.
 
4
The ASMR is rated in comparison with the other drugs already available in the same therapeutic area on a scale from I to V, with ASMR-I being given to a drug providing a major improvement and ASMR-V to drugs providing no or inadequate improvement.
 
5
Before 1999, INN prescribing was not allowed.
 
6
When the first generic enters the market, the price of the originator drops by 20 % and the price of the generic is fixed 60 % lower than the initial price of the originator. 18 months after, the price of the originator decreases again by 12.5 % and the price of the generics drops by 7 %. TFR is introduced if the substitution rate by pharmacists is lower than 80 %.
 
7
The life-saving drugs programme is a programme separate to the PBS which subsidises expensive life-saving drugs for very rare life-threatening conditions.
 
8
The current restriction for dabigatran is that the patient must have one or more of the following risk factors for developing stroke or systemic embolism: (i) prior stroke (ischaemic or unknown type), transient ischaemic attack or non-central nervous system systemic embolism; (ii) age 75 years or older; (iii) hypertension; (iv) diabetes mellitus; or (v) heart failure and/or left ventricular ejection fraction 35 % or less.
 
9
The arrangements for secondary care are left to individual institutions, with usage and purchasing negotiated by the healthcare professionals employed by that organisation.
 
10
Now the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence.
 
11
In 1984, the Canada Health Act outlined the basic tenancy of the healthcare system, establishing the underlying foundational principles of comprehensiveness, universality, portability, accessibility and public administration. Comprehensiveness establishes that all basic medical needs must be covered, while universality and portability ensure that all citizens are covered in all provinces regardless of their home province. Accessibility ensures that all citizens have reasonable access to the system and the tenet of public administration reconfirms Canada’s commitment to a public healthcare system.
 
12
(1) The health needs of all eligible people within New Zealand; (2) the particular health needs of Maori and Pacific peoples; (3) the availability and suitability of existing drugs, therapeutic medical devices and related products and related things; (4) the clinical benefits and risks of pharmaceuticals; (5) the cost effectiveness of meeting health needs by funding pharmaceuticals rather than using other publicly funded health and disability support services; (5) the budgetary impact of any changes to the Pharmaceutical Schedule; (6) the direct cost to health service users; (7) the Government’s priorities for health funding, as set out in any objectives notified by the Crown to PHARMAC, or in PHARMAC’s Funding Agreement, or elsewhere; and (8) such other criteria as PHARMAC thinks fit.
 
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Metadata
Title
Disinvestment and Value-Based Purchasing Strategies for Pharmaceuticals: An International Review
Authors
Bonny Parkinson
Catherine Sermet
Fiona Clement
Steffan Crausaz
Brian Godman
Sarah Garner
Moni Choudhury
Sallie-Anne Pearson
Rosalie Viney
Ruth Lopert
Adam G. Elshaug
Publication date
01-09-2015
Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Published in
PharmacoEconomics / Issue 9/2015
Print ISSN: 1170-7690
Electronic ISSN: 1179-2027
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s40273-015-0293-8

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