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This paper uses MCDA to obtain preferences on decision criteria across three stakeholder groups (patients, clinicians and payers) in Italy and then uses these preferences to assess the value of obinutuzumab for rituximab-refractory iNHL. Recently published is a paper that…
This paper uses MCDA to obtain preferences on decision criteria across three stakeholder groups (patients, clinicians and payers) in Italy and then uses these preferences to assess the value of obinutuzumab for rituximab-refractory iNHL.
Recently published is a paper that derives the views and preferences of three stakeholder groups (patients, clinicians and payers) across decision criteria in Italy and uses these to assess the value of obinutuzumab for rituximab-refractory indolent non-Hodgkin lymphoma (iNHL). The study was funded by Roche S.P.A.
This is the first time that a multi criteria decision analysis (MCDA) approach has been used to inform reimbursement decisions in Italy at the national level.
The study shows that MCDA can be used to elicit the views of different stakeholder groups. It can help health technology assessment (HTA) bodies and decision makers understand what matters most to patients and other stakeholders; it can help stakeholders involved in the process know to what extent and how their input affects final decisions.
An MCDA framework (EVIDEM V3.0) was used to elicit stakeholders’ preferences about the relative importance of decision criteria (weights) and to assess the degree of achievement of obinutuzumab for rituximab-refractory iNHL in each criteria (scores) via an online survey and structured meetings with each stakeholder group.
The patients and clinicians both expressed a preference for interventions targeting severe conditions and ranked the economic criteria among the five least important criteria.
Payers expressed preference for treatments targeting populations in which there is currently little or no effective treatment, which are less expensive than the comparator, and which are underpinned by high quality evidence.
Obinutuzumab received high scores for the criteria “disease severity” and “type of therapeutic benefit” by all three groups. Against the economic-related criteria (“comparative cost consequences – cost of intervention” and “comparative cost consequences – other medical costs”) obinutuzumab obtained a negative score relative to its comparator bendamustine, whose patent has recently expired, according to all stakeholder groups.
Access the full report here.
Related publications include:
For more information please contact Martina Garau at OHE.
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