Economic evaluations in the Canadian Common Drug Review

Laupacis A. Economic evaluations in the Canadian Common Drug Review. Pharmacoeconomics.  2006; 24 (11): 1157-1162.

The Canadian Common Drug Review (CDR) was established in 2003 to provide a single process for making formulary recommendations to most Canadian, publicly funded drug plans.  This paper considers the most common challenges faced by the CDR:

 

a) Determining the effectiveness of a drug (particularly interpreting the importance of surrogate markers and changes in quality of life measures);

b) The massive rise in the cost of new drugs, which, in general, does not seem to be accompanied by a massive increase in effectiveness;

c) Interpreting complex pharmacoeconomic evaluations, which often do not provide straightforward answers about the cost effectiveness of a drug;

d) Prescription creep (the tendency for drugs in the "real world" to be used in patients who were not studied in clinical trials, thus raising concerns about a drug's real-world cost effectiveness); and,

e) Ethical and societal issues, particularly the reimbursement of expensive drugs for rare diseases.