A Review of Current Approaches to Evaluating and Reimbursing New Medicines in a Subset of OECD Countries

A Review of Current Approaches to Evaluating and Reimbursing New Medicines in a Subset of OECD Countries

Year: 2024

Published: Applied Health Economics and Health Policy

Abstract:

Objectives: The aim of this study was to review the current evaluation and funding processes for new drugs in diferent developed countries, to provide a comparative framework with detailed, homogeneous, and up-to-date information.

Methods: Scientifc publications, reports and websites were reviewed between July and December 2021 using PubMed, Google Scholar, and grey literature sources. The main items searched were actors and processes, including timelines, characteristics of clinical and economic evaluations, participation of stakeholders, elements of price and reimbursement decisions, cost-efectiveness thresholds and specifc funds. The analysed 13 countries were Australia, Canada, England, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, Portugal, Scotland, South Korea, Spain and Sweden.

Results: Eight countries perform the assessment process separated from the pricing decision. Countries measure each drug’s added therapeutic value through multi-attribute value scales, algorithms, non-prescriptive lists of criteria, or quality-adjusted life years (QALYs). Health technology assessment (HTA) methodologies difer in their outcome measures, elicitation techniques, comparators, and perspectives. The criteria used for pricing and reimbursement include humanistic, clinical, and economic aspects. Only Scotland, England, the Netherlands, Canada and Portugal use explicit efciency thresholds. Health care professionals participate in all assessment committees, and patients are becoming increasingly involved in most countries. The ofcial time from marketing authorisation to the completion of the evaluation and pricing processes varied from 126 to 540 days.

Conclusions: Most analysed countries show a trend towards value-based approaches that consider value for money to society, but also
other economic, clinical, and humanistic criteria. Good practices included robustness, transparency, independence, and participation.

How to cite: Zozaya, N., Villaseca, J., Fernández, I. et al. A Review of Current Approaches to Evaluating and Reimbursing New Medicines in a Subset of OECD Countries. Appl Health Econ Health Policy (2024). https://doi.org/10.1007/s40258-023-00867-9