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The contribution of French patient and consumer groups to health technology assessments over a 2-year period: an observational retrospective study

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 March 2021

Cedric Gesbert
Affiliation:
Paris Descartes – Ethics Research Translations, University of Paris, ParisFR 75006, France
Joëlle André-Vert*
Affiliation:
Public Involvement Department, French National Authority for Health, La Plaine Saint-DenisFR 93210, France
Marc Guerrier
Affiliation:
Public Involvement Department, French National Authority for Health, La Plaine Saint-DenisFR 93210, France
Margaret Galbraith
Affiliation:
Public Involvement Department, French National Authority for Health, La Plaine Saint-DenisFR 93210, France
Christine Devaud
Affiliation:
Public Involvement Department, French National Authority for Health, La Plaine Saint-DenisFR 93210, France
Jean-Claude K. Dupont
Affiliation:
Department of Hospinnomics, Greater Paris University Hospitals (GPUH – AP-HP) and Paris School of Economics (PSE), ParisF-75015, France Centre de Recherche des Cordeliers, Sorbonne Université, Université de Paris, Inserm, Laboratoire ETREs, ParisF-75006, France
Marie-France Mamzer
Affiliation:
Centre de Recherche des Cordeliers, Sorbonne Université, Université de Paris, Inserm, Laboratoire ETREs, ParisF-75006, France Unité Fonctionnelle d'Ethique Médicale, Hôpital Necker-Enfants Malades, APHP, 149 Rue de Sèvres, ParisF-75015, France
*
Author for correspondence: Joëlle André-Vert, E-mail: [email protected]

Abstract

Background

In 2017, The French National Authority for Health (HAS) created an open, online, systematic contribution process to enable patient and consumer groups (PCGs) to contribute to health technology assessment (HTA) carried out to aid public authorities in reimbursement and pricing decision making.

Objectives

This retrospective study analyzes how French PCGs contributed to the HTA process within the HAS for the first 2 years of this new mechanism.

Methods

PCG contributions received between 01 January 2017 and 31 December 2018 and the recording of deliberations leading to reports of the corresponding HTAs were included. Analysis grids were designed by the investigators with 5 rounds of refinement tests on 10 random PCG contributions and the reports. Systematic data extraction was then performed separately by two investigators. PCG answers to the open-question templates and the related final HTA report published by the HAS were analyzed.

Results

Seventy-nine contributions from 44 PCGs were received and analyzed by the HAS for 78 out of the 592 HTAs performed for drugs or medical devices during the 2-year period. Twenty-five percent of the HTAs performed for drugs received at least one contribution. The contributions covered quality-of-life aspects, access to care, and personal and family impact. Membership and budget of the contributing PCGs varied greatly.

Conclusions

The experience gained in the first 2 years demonstrates the feasibility of the process and the fact that PCG contribution actually provides relevant input on the patient perspective for HTAs used for reimbursement decisions. The challenges identified on the side of PCGs were time constraints and human resources.

Type
Assessment
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press

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