Fremanezumab Cost Effective for Both Types of Migraine, Researchers Say
May 27th 2019A computer simulated cost-effectiveness model of fremanezumab for migraine found that it was cost effective versus no treatment. Researchers presented a poster about its cost-effectiveness for the prevention of chronic and episodic migraine at ISPOR 2019.
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New Therapies Offer Possible Cures but Pose Affordability Challenges
May 23rd 2019The upfront prices of potentially curative therapies are terrifying to commercial payers and government payers alike. A panel on the last day of ISPOR 2019 discussed these issues in a session called, “Is Affordability Driving a Need to Revolutionize Drug Pricing?”
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Dr Eleanor Perfetto Outlines Criticisms of the QALY
May 23rd 2019Eleanor M. Perfetto, PhD, MS, senior vice president of Strategic Initiatives for the National Health Council, discusses criticisms of the quality-adjusted life year (QALY) and what factors the measure does not take into account.
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Dr Nicholas Robert Explains the Benefits, Challenges of Using RWE for Measuring Clinical End Points
May 23rd 2019Nicholas Robert, MD, medical director of Data, Evidence & Insights, McKesson Life Sciences, discusses the benefits of real-world evidence (RWE) for measuring end points, as well as the challenges posed by variability in clinical practice.
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Panelists Debate the Role of ICER: Useful Overseer of Prices, or Oppressor of Choice?
May 22nd 2019Representatives from different parts of the healthcare system, as well as an outside observer, weighed in on whether the reports issued by the Institute for Clinical and Economic Review (ICER) are taking away patient choice.
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Paul Melmeyer: Value Assessments Need to Take Into Account Unique Characteristics of a Disease
May 22nd 2019It is incredibly important for these assessments to consider the context of the therapy, rather than just the clinical benefit that it brings, explained Paul Melmeyer, director of Federal Policy, National Organization for Rare Disorders.
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Dr Jon Campbell Discusses the Need for More Creative Methods of Value Assessment
May 21st 2019Jonathan Campbell, PhD, associate professor, Department of Clinical Pharmacy, Pharmaceutical Outcomes Research, Skaggs School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences at the University of Colorado, discusses the need for more creative methods for value assessment, as well as how one-time, high-cost therapies make it harder to determine value.
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Panelists Discuss the Potential and Pitfalls of Disruption in Healthcare
May 21st 2019Medical futurist Daniel Kraft, MD, implored his audience of healthcare stakeholders attending the ISPOR 2019 annual conference to consider the different ways that technology disruption can improve care away from what he called “sick care,” while moderator Clifford Goodman, PhD, of The Lewin Group, moderated a panel that followed about the potential and pitfalls of disruption in healthcare.
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Dr Harlan Krumholz on Barriers Preventing Healthcare From Using Data to Improve Care
August 1st 2018The free flow of data needs to be an intrinsic part of the way we think about healthcare in this country, said Harlan Krumholz, MD, SM, the Harold H. Hines Jr professor, Medicine and Epidemiology and Public Health, Yale School of Medicine, and director, Center for Outcomes Research and Evaluation, Yale-New Haven Hospital.
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Dr Clifford Goodman Discusses How Healthcare Should Address Social Determinants of Health
July 20th 2018If we’re truly serious about being outcomes oriented in healthcare, we can’t come near accomplishing what we’d like to accomplish without direct intervention with regard to social determinants, explained Clifford Goodman, PhD, senior vice president and director, Center for Comparative Effectiveness Research, The Lewin Group.
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Sally Okun on How Informed Patients Feel When Starting Treatment After a New Diagnosis
July 9th 2018The most common question patients ask when they start a new treatment after a new diagnosis is "what will this do to me?" explained Sally Okun, RN, MMHS, vice president, Policy and Ethics, PatientsLikeMe.
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Dr Clifford Goodman on Progress With the Move to Value-Based Payments
July 9th 2018Different value-based payment approaches are evolving for different sorts of conditions, different sorts of financial circumstances, and other factors, explained Clifford Goodman, PhD, senior vice president and director, Center for Comparative Effectiveness Research, The Lewin Group.
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Dr Adrian F. Hernandez: Mapping Human Health Through Project Baseline
July 3rd 2018The purpose of Project Baseline is to map human health so we can convert from a reactive healthcare system to a proactive healthcare system, explained Adrian F. Hernandez, MD, MHS, vice dean, clinical research, Duke University School of Medicine
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Dr Harlan Krumholz: How Healthcare Can Better Implement New Technologies
June 29th 2018We need to collaborate and test these innovations in controlled circumstances so that we can evaluate their effect and understand what needs to be iterated to continue to improve them, explained Harlan Krumholz, MD, SM, the Harold H. Hines Jr professor, Medicine and Epidemiology and Public Health, Yale School of Medicine, and director, Center for Outcomes Research and Evaluation, Yale-New Haven Hospital.
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Dr Ejim Mark: Challenges With and Protecting the Increasing Amount of Health Data
June 27th 2018Not all health data is collected in a similar manner, so analyzing such data can be challenging for researchers, explained Ejim E. Mark, MD, MPH, MBA, CEO and founder of Access Healthcare Foundation.
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Dr Adrian F. Hernandez on the Future of Real-World Evidence
June 20th 2018Adrian F. Hernandez, MD, MHS, vice dean, clinical research, Duke University School of Medicine discusses how technology can be used to improve the way we gather and use real-world evidence, the promise that real-world evidence holds, and how he thinks real-world evidence will be used in the coming years.
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Dr Harlan Krumholz on Using New Technologies, Data Generation to Prevent or Address Epidemics
June 18th 2018If we’ve got data moving, and if we’re analyzing it in smart ways in real time, we should be able to detect problems within our healthcare system much more rapidly than we have been able to in the past, explained Harlan Krumholz, MD, SM, the Harold H. Hines Jr professor, Medicine and Epidemiology and Public Health, Yale School of Medicine, and director, Center for Outcomes Research and Evaluation, Yale-New Haven Hospital.
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Sally Okun: Using Digital Health Improvements to Include the Patient Voice in Healthcare
June 14th 2018Sally Okun, RN, MMHS, vice president, Policy and Ethics, PatientsLikeMe, discusses how digital health improvements help include the patient voice in healthcare and how the United States' use of real-world evidence compares with how it's used in other countries.
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Valuation Challenges and Ethical Implications of Cures
May 24th 2018As new treatments come to market that have a substantial impact on diseases, or even cure them, the healthcare system is facing the challenge of how to value these treatments. A panel of experts highlighted what evidence there needs to be, methods of valuing therapies, and the ethical implications of having cures.
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Value Assessments in the Age of Personalized Medicine May Require a Cultural Shift, Panel Says
May 23rd 2018On the closing day of the International Society for Pharmacoeconomics and Outcomes Research 23rd Annual International Meeting, in Baltimore, Maryland, stakeholders gathered to grapple with the role of value assessments in a healthcare landscape that is increasingly focused on the use of precision medicine in treating disease.
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Dr Steven Pearson Highlights the Challenge of Evaluating New Interventions That Cure Diseases
May 23rd 2018In order to start evaluating the economics of new cures, the scope of the evaluation needs to be as broad as possible and be able to wrestle with uncertainty, said Steven Pearson, MD, MSc, founder and president of the Institute for Clinical and Economic Review.
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Panelists Give Payer, Patient, and Economist Perspectives on High-Cost Drugs for Rare Diseases
May 23rd 2018Advances in medicine have produced breakthroughs in the treatment of a number of rare diseases, but these advances often come at a high cost. A multi-stakeholder panel at the International Society for Pharmacoeconomics and Outcomes Research 23rd Annual International Meeting, in Baltimore, Maryland, addressed the question of how to define value in the always evolving and ever more expensive treatment landscape.
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Dr Adrian Hernandez Highlights the Use of Real-World Evidence and Current Barriers
May 23rd 2018In some ways, the United States is progressive in its use of real-world evidence, but there are still areas where other countries do a better job of incorporating such evidence into the health system, explained Adrian F. Hernandez, MD, MHS, vice dean, clinical research, Duke University School of Medicine.
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