Policy and Funding for CER: Making Sense of a Confusing Landscape

21
Policy and Funding for CER: Making Sense of a Confusing Landscape Michael Steinman, MD Director of Comparative Effectiveness Research UCSF Clinical and Translational Science Institute

description

UCSF researcher, Michael Steinman, MD, Director of CTSI's Comparative Effectiveness Research initiative presents. View more related presentations and resources at http://accelerate.ucsf.edu/research/cer

Transcript of Policy and Funding for CER: Making Sense of a Confusing Landscape

Page 1: Policy and Funding for CER: Making Sense of a Confusing Landscape

Policy and Funding for CER: Making Sense of a Confusing Landscape

Michael Steinman, MDDirector of Comparative Effectiveness Research

UCSF Clinical and Translational Science Institute

Page 2: Policy and Funding for CER: Making Sense of a Confusing Landscape

Panel

• Sheldon Greenfield, MDDonald Bren Professor of Medicine Executive Co-Director, Health Policy Research InstituteUniversity of California, IrvineSenior Editor, Journal of Comparative Effectiveness Research

• Claire Brindis, DrPHProfessor of Pediatrics and Health PolicyDirector, Phillip R. Lee Institute for Health Policy StudiesUCSF

• Len Finocchio, DrPHAssociate DirectorCalifornia Department of Health Care Services

Page 3: Policy and Funding for CER: Making Sense of a Confusing Landscape

Disclosure

• No conflicts of interest

Page 4: Policy and Funding for CER: Making Sense of a Confusing Landscape

Outline

• What is PCORI?• PCOR vs. CER• PCORI funding opportunities • Other funding sources• So…what should I be doing?

Page 5: Policy and Funding for CER: Making Sense of a Confusing Landscape

What is PCORI?

• Prior to several years ago, no coordinated effort for CER

• 2009 stimulus package provided $1.1 billion for CER

• 2010 health reform legislation created Patient Centered Outcomes Research Institute

• Funded by tax on government and private insurers for each covered life (~$500 million per year)

Page 6: Policy and Funding for CER: Making Sense of a Confusing Landscape

What is PCORI?

• Quasi-governmental organization– AHRQ almost eliminated in 1990s after published guideline that

surgery for back pain was unnecessary– Provide political protection – PCORI funding does not depend on annual Congressional

appropriation

• No infrastructure for determining funding priorities, issuing grant opportunities, reviewing and administering grants– Outsourcing (NIH, AHRQ, CMS)

• Peer review, contract management• May receive $ from PCORI to originate grants

– PCORI will be its own entity

Page 7: Policy and Funding for CER: Making Sense of a Confusing Landscape

PCOR vs. CER

• Why PCORI, not CERI?• Political concerns that determining which treatments

better → “rationing” – Restrict patients’ ability to choose inferior treatment

• Compromise focus on patient-centered outcomes research

• Legislation barred PCORI from – Developing or using QALYs– Considering cost in making coverage recommendations– In practice, PCORI will not fund cost-effectiveness analyses

Page 8: Policy and Funding for CER: Making Sense of a Confusing Landscape

Patient-Centered Outcomes Research

• Not just a semantic difference

• Focus on PCOR essential role in shaping funding priorities and “rules of the game” for getting funding

• Can’t just replace placebo control with active comparison group, do everything else the same

• Distinct elements – Outcomes should be patient-centered– Effectiveness, not efficacy – Heterogeneity of treatment effects– Involvement of stakeholders

Page 9: Policy and Funding for CER: Making Sense of a Confusing Landscape

Patient-Centered Outcomes Research

• Outcomes should be patient-centered– “…outcomes that people notice and care about

such as survival, function, symptoms, and health-related quality of life”

– Not biomarkers (BP, serum cholesterol, etc.)

Page 10: Policy and Funding for CER: Making Sense of a Confusing Landscape

Patient-Centered Outcomes Research

• Effectiveness– Research done in clinically relevant populations– Representative of patients– Representative of settings

• Heterogeneity of treatment effects– “Given my personal characteristics, conditions and

preferences, what should I expect will happen to me?”– “What are my options and what are the benefits and

harms of those options?”

Page 11: Policy and Funding for CER: Making Sense of a Confusing Landscape

Patient-Centered Outcomes Research

• Stakeholders play a key role– Should be intimately involved in the study design

process to identify important outcomes• Trials of anti-seizure drugs in children• Traditional measure – seizure frequency• Patient-centered measure – parent want to know how

drug will affect school performance• Drug ↓ seizures but ↑ sedation may not be preferable

Page 12: Policy and Funding for CER: Making Sense of a Confusing Landscape

Patient-Centered Outcomes Research

• Decision-makers are stakeholders– Government payors and regulators; health plans; AMCs

– During study design, work with decision-makers to consider how results will shape policy and practice

– May be important to focus on effect size, not just superiority

– Bayesian approaches – need to account for prior probability• Value of information analysis

– Cost and cost-effectiveness • PCORI not allowed to evaluate cost in making coverage

recommendations, won’t fund “pure” CEA• Cost can be studied and used by decision-makers

Page 13: Policy and Funding for CER: Making Sense of a Confusing Landscape

Patient-Centered Outcomes Research

• Implications for research design– RCTs

• Pragmatic - real-world settings; large N’s to assess subgroups• Bayesian and adaptive approaches to design

– Observational studies• Causal inference modeling• Tension for studies using pure administrative data – powerful and

low-cost; lack high-quality patient-centric data

– Which research method is best suited to which question?• Translation table

Page 14: Policy and Funding for CER: Making Sense of a Confusing Landscape

PCORI Funding Opportunities

• Limited RFAs / RFPs to date– Developmental– RFPs (Sept 2011)

• ~$30-$100K each• Methods for setting research priorities

– Pilot Projects Grant Program (Dec 2011)• $13 million in year 1 for ~40 projects• Develop research priorities and methods• Develop ways of bringing stakeholders together• Develop measurement tools for novel patient-centered outcomes

Page 15: Policy and Funding for CER: Making Sense of a Confusing Landscape

PCORI Funding Opportunities

• $500 million/year• ?????– Likely NOT be “traditional” research– Patient-centered outcomes

• Including developing methods

– Real-world populations– Heterogeneity of treatment effects– Involvement of stakeholders

Page 16: Policy and Funding for CER: Making Sense of a Confusing Landscape

Other Funding Opportunities

• Existence of PCORI does not preclude government agencies or foundations from funding CER

• AHRQ has Effective Healthcare Program – Large evidence-synthesis and dissemination projects– EBPCs, DEcIDE network, CERTS– Does not support investigator-initiated projects

• Areas of CER explicitly outside PCORI’s mandate– CER with “traditional” outcomes – Cost-effectiveness analyses

• Remains to be seen

Page 17: Policy and Funding for CER: Making Sense of a Confusing Landscape

So…what should I be doing?

• Still many unknowns– It’s not just you who doesn’t understand

• Maintain a diverse portfolio and be flexible

• Triangulate between funding agencies

• Pay close attention to unique priorities and “rules of the road” established by PCORI– Require substantial changes to the way we traditionally do

research

Page 18: Policy and Funding for CER: Making Sense of a Confusing Landscape

Extra slides on following pages

Page 19: Policy and Funding for CER: Making Sense of a Confusing Landscape

PCORI Definition of PCOR

PCOR questions

1. “Given my personal characteristics, conditions and preferences, what should I expect will happen to me?”

2. “What are my options and what are the benefits and harms of those options?”

3. “What can I do to improve the outcomes that are most important to me?”

4. “How can the health care system improve my chances of achieving the outcomes I prefer?”

Page 20: Policy and Funding for CER: Making Sense of a Confusing Landscape

PCORI Definition of PCORCharacteristics of PCOR that will facilitate answering these questions

• Assesses the benefits and harms of preventive, diagnostic, therapeutic, or health delivery system interventions to inform decision making, highlighting comparisons and outcomes that matter to people;

• Is inclusive of an individual’s preferences, autonomy and needs, focusing on outcomes that people notice and care about such as survival, function, symptoms, and health-related quality of life;– Incorporates a wide variety of settings and diversity of participants to address

individual differences and barriers to implementation and dissemination; and• Investigates (or may investigate) optimizing outcomes while addressing

burden to individuals, resources, and other stakeholder perspectives

Page 21: Policy and Funding for CER: Making Sense of a Confusing Landscape

What is CER?

• Comparative effectiveness research is the conduct and synthesis of systematic research comparing different interventions and strategies to prevent, diagnose, treat and monitor health conditions. The purpose of this research is to inform patients, providers, and decision-makers, responding to their expressed needs, about which interventions are most effective for which patients under specific circumstances. To provide this information, comparative effectiveness research must assess a comprehensive array of health-related outcomes for diverse patient populations…– Federal Coordinating Council for Comparative Effectiveness

Research, definition; [cited 28 July 2010].