Defining value of a treatment can be complicated, but at the center of it is the need to include both long-term and short-term effects, said Steven Pearson, MD, MSc, FRCP, founder and president of the Institute for Clinical and Economic Review.
Defining value of a treatment can be complicated, but at the center of it is the need to include both long-term and short-term effects, said Steven Pearson, MD, MSc, FRCP, founder and president of the Institute for Clinical and Economic Review (ICER).
Transcript (modified)
There has been a lot of discussion about what value means and the definition can change depending on the stakeholder. What is ICER’s definition of value?
Value is a combination and that’s the hard part: there is no one thing, no matter how you define value there are different perspectives and that shouldn’t be lost. But to a certain extent our view of value is rooted most strongly in the long-term added benefits that a drug brings to patients, and the long-term added costs, if any. So that’s the anchor.
Once you gather that as a key part of value, you also often want to look at other considerations. For instance, is it a very, very severe condition for which we’ve never had any kind of adequate treatment? That influences everyone’s perspective on value, not just patients but doctors, insurers, and everybody else. So that’s why value is always going to be multifaceted.
But you look at that long-term mixture of the clinical outcomes and the costs, and then we look at the potential budget impact for affordability because if something if a great long-term value we still have to at least think about the value in the short-term to the health system, and how we manage that. It might mean that we have to lower the price further, even if it’s a good long-term value, or it might mean that we need to go slow and not treat so many patients initially, or find extra resources from savings and other parts of the healthcare system, or from somewhere else.
All of that’s possible, but you can’t have a real comprehensive view of value, in our eyes, unless you integrate and merge considerations long term and short term.
Balancing Life and Myeloma: A Patient-Centered Approach
November 22nd 2024In this second part of our discussion with Don M. Benson, MD, PhD, from our recent Institute for Value-Based Medicine® event in Cleveland, Ohio, he explains how his ultimate goal for his patients is for them to live as long and as well as possible.
Read More
Community Investment, Engagement Are Essential to Fully Address Cardiovascular Health Disparities
November 19th 2024Community-based researchers can teach clinicians a lot about how to best approach underserved populations disproportionately impacted by cardiovascular health complications.
Read More