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Are Drug Novelty Characteristics Associated With Greater Health Benefits?
Applied Health Economics and Health Policy 2024 September 3
OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to examine the association between characteristics of novel drugs and incremental health gains relative to standard of care, in terms of quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs).
METHODS: This study's unit of analysis is the drug-indication pair. For pairs approved by the US FDA from 1999 to 2018, we quantified incremental health gains using QALYs from the published literature and characterized each pair's novelty in terms of a series of six binary (yes/no) characteristics of novel drugs given special consideration by Health Technology Assessment agencies: Novel mechanism of action, Indicated for a rare disease, Indicated for a pediatric population, Treats a serious condition, Offers meaningful improvement over available therapies, and Potential to address unmet clinical needs. We analyzed measures of bivariate association (Mann-Whitney U and Kolmogorov-Smirnov tests) and multivariable regression, accounting for the influence of multiple novelty characteristics simultaneously.
RESULTS: Our sample of 146 drugs represents 21% of drugs approved the FDA in the time period (1999-2018). Median and mean QALY gains for 'novel' drug-indication pairs exceeded corresponding QALY gains for non-novel drug-indication pairs. For most comparisons, the bivariate relationships between QALY gains and novelty characteristics were significant at p < 0.05 except for novel mechanism of action (Kolmogorov-Smirnov test) and pediatric indication (both bivariate tests). Multivariable models revealed an independent association between novelty characteristics and QALY gain except for unmet clinical need and indicated for a rare disease.
CONCLUSIONS: Drugs with novelty characteristics conferred larger health gains than drugs without these characteristics in bivariate analysis, multivariable models, or both. Future research should examine other aspects of drug novelty, such as patient and health system costs and equitable access.
METHODS: This study's unit of analysis is the drug-indication pair. For pairs approved by the US FDA from 1999 to 2018, we quantified incremental health gains using QALYs from the published literature and characterized each pair's novelty in terms of a series of six binary (yes/no) characteristics of novel drugs given special consideration by Health Technology Assessment agencies: Novel mechanism of action, Indicated for a rare disease, Indicated for a pediatric population, Treats a serious condition, Offers meaningful improvement over available therapies, and Potential to address unmet clinical needs. We analyzed measures of bivariate association (Mann-Whitney U and Kolmogorov-Smirnov tests) and multivariable regression, accounting for the influence of multiple novelty characteristics simultaneously.
RESULTS: Our sample of 146 drugs represents 21% of drugs approved the FDA in the time period (1999-2018). Median and mean QALY gains for 'novel' drug-indication pairs exceeded corresponding QALY gains for non-novel drug-indication pairs. For most comparisons, the bivariate relationships between QALY gains and novelty characteristics were significant at p < 0.05 except for novel mechanism of action (Kolmogorov-Smirnov test) and pediatric indication (both bivariate tests). Multivariable models revealed an independent association between novelty characteristics and QALY gain except for unmet clinical need and indicated for a rare disease.
CONCLUSIONS: Drugs with novelty characteristics conferred larger health gains than drugs without these characteristics in bivariate analysis, multivariable models, or both. Future research should examine other aspects of drug novelty, such as patient and health system costs and equitable access.
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