Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byMyra Wiggins Modified over 9 years ago
1
1 Value of Information in relation to risk management Prof. Dr. Jan J.V. Busschbach
2
Change in policy Now: evaluate all new medication Future: only when risk are high When is an economic evaluation useful? When there is doubt about cost effectiveness Low on information about cost effectivenesss 2
3
The 3 meanings of doubt 1. The cost effectiveness might be invalid Methodologically unsound The CFH judges the validity using guidelines 2. The cost effectiveness might be to high To high = bad The ACP values the height of cost effectiveness The CFH has no judgment 3. The cost effectiveness might be uncertain Much error variance Unclear who is dealing with this….ACP? CFH? Room for more risk management 3
4
Uncertainty is linked to CE-ratio 4
5
Interested in both costs and effect Less effectiveMore effective Low costs (savings) High costs Not cost effective cost effective 5
6
Sensitivity analysis Less effectiveMore effective Low costs (savings) High costs Superb! Forget it! Difficult… 6 Good Better
7
Cost-effectiveness plane 7 Not cost effective Cost effective
8
Cost Effectiveness Acceptability Curve (CEAC) 8
9
Risk management We can judge if we are in need of more information Value of Information analysis 9
10
Value of Information (VoI) 10 Low VoI High VoI Low VoI Low reduction of risk High reduction of risk
11
11 Risk management Make prototype cost effectiveness analysis Do a value of information analysis Triage: Unconditional reimbursement: If CE-ratio is far much below threshold Value of information is (most likely) low Conditional reimbursement If CE-ratio is close to threshold Value of information is high Unconditional reject of reimbursement Value of information is low
12
Arguments not to do so… We should reimburse all effective drugs We should evaluate all (new) effective drug Assumes that we have the resources to do so We do not have a threshold We can not make acceptable prototypes 12
13
We have an indication of a threshold… 13 Wetenschappelijke Raad voor het Regeringsbeleid, 2006
14
Example prototype model: Lucentis evaluated in the ACP 14
15
Patel et al, 2010 15
16
Avastin versus Lucentis 16
17
Conclusion 17 Risk management relates to value of information Conditional reimbursement can be done on prototype cost effectiveness analysis Only invest in (cost-) effectiveness, if Risks are high Value of Information is high
18
CFH procedure Standard procedure Test of the validity of the cost effectiveness analysis Using the guidelines Orphan and expensive hospital drugs Conditional reimbursement Approval of a four year data collection To arrive ad a valid cost effectiveness analysis After 4 years Test of the validly of the cost effectiveness analysis Using guidelines Valuing cost effectiveness = other committee Advies Commissie Pakket (ACP) 18
19
Uncertainty relates to threshold If: CE-ratio = € 15.000 per QALY Threshold = € 25.000 per QALY Then intervention is cost effective But what if CE-ratio is an interval: Threshold = € 25.000 per QALY CE-ratio = € 10.000 till € 30.000 per QALY Then intervention might be cost effective If: Threshold = € 11.000 Then intervention most likely not cost effective If: Threshold = € 29.000 Then intervention is most likely cost effective 19
20
20 65 Citations in PubMed
21
Why is evidence valuable? 21 How things could turn out Net Health BenefitBest we could do if we knew Treatment ATreatment BBest choice Possibility 1812B Possibility 2168A Possibility 3914B Possibility 41210A12 Possibility 51016B Average111214 How much evidence? What’s the best we can do now?Could we do better? Maximum value of more evidence is 2 QALYs per patient Choose B Expect 12 QALYs, gain 1 QALY But uncertain Wrong decision 2/5 times If we knew Expect 14 QALYs
22
Methods 22 Treatment A QALYCost Clinical effect Disease Progression QALY Costs Random sampling AsymptomaticProgressive Dead Treatment A AsymptomaticProgressive Dead Treatment B Model Structure Treatment B QALYCost 1 £10,000 2 £30,000 0 £ 5,000 3 £20,000 2 £15,000 4 £40,000 1 £10,000 3 £30,000
23
Is the evidence sufficient? 23 How things could turn out Net Health BenefitBest we could do if we knew Treatment ATreatment BBest choice Possibility 1912B Possibility 21210A12 Possibility 31417B Possibility 41110A11 Possibility 51416B Average121313.6 Would more evidence improve health? What’s the best we can do now?Could we do better? Choose B, expect additional net benefit of 1 QALYGet an extra 0.6 QALY Maximum benefit of more evidence is 0.6 QALYs or £12,000 per patient Right decision 3/5 times (p = 0.6) Wrong decision 2/5 times (1-p = 0.4)
24
How uncertain is the decision? 24 B A C Choose AChoose B ICER = £25,000 per QALY
25
Do we need more evidence? 25 Choose AChoose B Cost of research
26
26 Alan Williams
27
27
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.