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MBSW, May 23, 2012 Improving the Effectiveness of Comparative Effectiveness: Perspectives and Developments from the DIA Working Group Matt Rotelli Director – PK/PD Eli Lilly and Company Outline Overview of Comparative Effectiveness Research What is the Problem DIA CER Scientific Working Group What we are doing How we are approaching it Contact info – we need YOU Company Confidential Copyright © 2000 Eli Lilly and Company 2 Background Cost of healthcare increasing Increasing demand for understanding relative value of treatments and procedures Increasing awareness and decreasing tolerance for potential risks Increasing demand for personalized medicine Company Confidential Copyright © 2000 Eli Lilly and Company 3 Different lenses Regulators: Is it safe? Is there substantial evidence of efficacy? Payers: Is it worth it? Physicians: What will help this patient? Patients: What are my choices? What will happen to me with each? How much will it cost? For the last 3 consumers of health care information, these are relative questions Company Confidential Copyright © 2000 Eli Lilly and Company 4 CER or PCOR Comparative (clinical) Effectiveness Research or Patient Centered Outcomes Research aims to provide answers on the relative effectiveness of treatment options and paradigms American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 and Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010 establish bodies and sustained funding to prioritize and conduct CER (including exploring methodology and developing standards) NOTE: Cost-effectiveness is out of scope Company Confidential Copyright © 2000 Eli Lilly and Company 5 PCORI’s Proposed Research Budget Distribution PCORI’s National Priorities for Research and Research Agenda (PDF) – adopted by the PCORI Board of Governors on May 21, 2012 Company Confidential Copyright © 2000 Eli Lilly and Company 6 CER Landscape Identifying priority research areas Comparing delivery systems Hierarchies of evidence Observational studies vs. RCTs (+pragmatic trials) Internal validity vs. external validity Ways to improve internal validity of observational studies Company Confidential Copyright © 2000 Eli Lilly and Company 7 Observational Studies Increasing A version of this article appeared May 3, 2012, on page A1 in the U.S. edition of The Wall Street Journal, with the headline: Analytical Trend Troubles Scientists. Company Confidential Copyright © 2000 Eli Lilly and Company 8 Critical Fallacy “When I need to make a decision, some information is better than none.” Only true if the information is not • Misinformation • Noise Evidence needs to be assessed in light of the research operating characteristics Company Confidential Copyright © 2000 Eli Lilly and Company 9 Redefining the problem It is not where research falls in a hierarchy that determines it’s weight of evidence, but rather the reliability and validity of the research Both RCTs and Observational Studies are essential – we must understand the properties of each that can increase the reliability and validity We can seek to mimic or approximate properties that make one method reliable and valid in other types of research Company Confidential Copyright © 2000 Eli Lilly and Company 10 DIA CER Scientific Working Group Opportunity Statement: The use of Comparative Effectiveness Research (CER) is increasing and there is a need for continuing noncompetitive collaboration among staff from regulatory agencies, pharmaceutical and biotech companies, and academia to share ideas and advance the science of CER. Company Confidential Copyright © 2000 Eli Lilly and Company 11 DIA CER SWG Goal: To improve the fidelity (reliability and validity) of CER used for making health care decisions. Company Confidential Copyright © 2000 Eli Lilly and Company 12 DIA CER SWG Vision: Comparative Effectiveness Research is designed, analyzed, interpreted, and communicated appropriately for use in health care decisions. Company Confidential Copyright © 2000 Eli Lilly and Company 13 DIA CER SWG Mission: To facilitate the appropriate use of CER and contribute to progress in CER methodology by: • Creating a scientific forum for the discussion, evaluation, and development of methods and software for the design, analysis, and interpretation of CER. Company Confidential Copyright © 2000 Eli Lilly and Company 14 DIA CER SWG Mission: To facilitate the appropriate use of CER and contribute to progress in CER methodology by: • Providing education on and promoting the dissemination of methods and best practices in CER, setting expectations for high quality standards, and sharing experiences on case studies. Company Confidential Copyright © 2000 Eli Lilly and Company 15 DIA CER SWG Mission: To facilitate the appropriate use of CER and contribute to progress in CER methodology by: • Engaging in dialogue and advocacy efforts with industry leaders, the scientific community, and regulators to develop a world-wide consensus position on when and how to consider the use of CER. Company Confidential Copyright © 2000 Eli Lilly and Company 16 DIA CER SWG Mission: To facilitate the appropriate use of CER and contribute to progress in CER methodology by: • Fostering diversity in membership and leadership across: – Geographical locations – Institutions (e.g. academia, government, industry) – Training or areas of specialty (e.g. statistics, medicine, epidemiology, econometrics) Company Confidential Copyright © 2000 Eli Lilly and Company 17 DIA CER SWG Subgroup: Best Practices Assess published examples in light of existing guidelines Identify gaps and develop recommendations Develop example-based workshop Company Confidential Copyright © 2000 Eli Lilly and Company 18 DIA CER SWG Subgroup: Framework for testing observational or post-hoc research methods Obtain realistic observational data – either publicly available, contributed, or simulated Identify or inject known relationships Assess operating characteristics of research approaches OMOP approach but focused on head-to-head comparisons Company Confidential Copyright © 2000 Eli Lilly and Company 19 DIA CER SWG Hopper projects: Workshop on measured and unmeasured confounding Workshop on Bayesian approaches for indirect comparisons and network meta-analysis Company Confidential Copyright © 2000 Eli Lilly and Company 20 DIA CER SWG We need YOU Please contact: Matt Rotelli [email protected] (317) 277-8584 Company Confidential Copyright © 2000 Eli Lilly and Company 21 Extras Demos Links PCORI info Challenges facing health care and drug development Company Confidential Copyright © 2000 Eli Lilly and Company 22 What you find… Company Confidential Copyright © 2000 Eli Lilly and Company 23 … can depend on what you look for Company Confidential Copyright © 2000 Eli Lilly and Company 24 Signals… don’t go away Company Confidential Copyright © 2000 Eli Lilly and Company 25 Links OMOP: http://omop.fnih.org/ OMOP presentations: http://omop.fnih.org/Presentations PCORI: http://www.pcori.org/ FDA: Advancing Regulatory Science Initiative: http://www.fda.gov/scienceresearch/specialtopics/regul atoryscience/default.htm Company Confidential Copyright © 2000 Eli Lilly and Company 26 Company Confidential Copyright © 2000 Eli Lilly and Company 27 Company Confidential Copyright © 2000 Eli Lilly and Company 28 Company Confidential Copyright © 2000 Eli Lilly and Company 29 Prescription Medicines Account for about 12% of National Health Care Spending Prescription Drugs 12% Hospitals and Nursing Homes 45% Other 18% Physician and Clinical Services 25% SOURCE: Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, National Health Expenditure Accounts 2006 Highlights Company Confidential Copyright © 2000 Eli Lilly and Company 30 Developing a new drug Average cost to discover and develop a new drug: $800 million to $1.2 billion Average length of time from discovery to patient: 10 to 15 years Patent: 20 years from first filing – clock is running during R&D Company Confidential Copyright © 2000 Eli Lilly and Company 31 Declining New Drug Approvals Increasing industry spending on research is not yielding a proportionate increase in numbers of new drugs. 50 25 New drugs approved by FDA # of new drugs 40 20 R&D spending in billions 30 15 20 10 10 5 0 0 1980 ’85 ’90 ’95 ‘00 Sources: Food and Drug Administration; PhRMA Recreated from Wall Street Journal, April 18, 2002 Company Confidential Copyright © 2000 Eli Lilly and Company 32 Attrition Rates Are High Even after a drug reaches human testing, attrition rates remain very high. Only 11% make it to approval. Can the pharmaceutical industry reduce attrition rates?, Ismail Kola & John Landis, Nature Reviews Drug Discovery 3, 711-716 (August 2004) Company Confidential Copyright © 2000 Eli Lilly and Company 33 Many patients do not respond Efficacy Rate (% ) Oncology Alzheimer's 25 30 Incontinence HCV Osteoporosis 40 47 48 Rheumatoid Arthritis 50 Migraine Diabetes 51 57 Schizophrenia 60 Cardiac Arrythmias Asthma Depression (SSRI) 60 60 62 Analgesics (Cox-2) 80 0 20 40 60 80 100 Spear et al. TRENDS in Molecular Medicine Vol. 7 No. 5 May 2001 Company Confidential Copyright © 2000 Eli Lilly and Company 34 Drug safety concerns are high Over 2.2 million people impacted annually by adverse drug reactions including medical errors Cause Of Death Number Of Deaths Heart Disease 652,091 Malignant Neoplasms 559,312 Cerebrovascular Disease 143,579 Lower Respitory Disease 130,933 Accidents 117,809 Adverse Drug Reactions 106,000 National Vital Statistics Reports, Vol. 56, No. 10, March 7, 2008, and Lazarou, Pomeranz, Corey. Incidence of adverse drug reactions in hospitalized patients: a meta-analysis of prospective studies. JAMA 1998; 279: 1200-1205 Company Confidential Copyright © 2000 Eli Lilly and Company 35