Facilitators and Barriers of Incremental Innovation by Fixed Dose Combinations in Cardiovascular Diseases

Author:

Inotai András12ORCID,Kaló Zoltán12ORCID,Petykó Zsuzsanna12ORCID,Gyöngyösi Kristóf12ORCID,O’Keeffe Derek T.3ORCID,Czech Marcin4ORCID,Ágh Tamás25ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Center for Health Technology Assessment, Semmelweis University, 1091 Budapest, Hungary

2. Syreon Research Institute, 1142 Budapest, Hungary

3. School of Medicine, University of Galway, H91TK33 Galway, Ireland

4. Department of Pharmacoeconomics, Institute of Mother and Child, 01-211 Warsaw, Poland

5. Medication Adherence Research Group, Center for Health Technology Assessment and Pharmacoeconomic Research, University of Pécs, 7623 Pécs, Hungary

Abstract

Despite the availability of affordable pharmaceuticals treating cardiovascular diseases (CVDs), many of the risk factors remain poorly controlled. Fixed-dose combinations (FDCs), a form of incremental innovation, have already demonstrated improvements over combinations of single medicines in adherence and hard clinical endpoints. Nevertheless, there are many barriers related to the wider use of FDCs in CVDs. Our aim was to identify these barriers and explore system-level facilitators from a multi-stakeholder perspective. Identified barriers include (i) hurdles in evidence generation for manufacturers, (ii) limited acceptance of adherence as an endpoint by clinical guideline developers and policymakers, (iii) limited options for a price premium for incremental innovation for healthcare payers, (iv) limited availability of real-world evidence, and (v) methodological issues to measure improved adherence. Initiatives to standardize and link healthcare databases in European countries, movements towards improved patient centricity in healthcare, and extended value assessment provide opportunities to capture the benefits of FDCs. Still, there is an emerging need to facilitate the generalizability of sporadic clinical evidence across different FDCs and to improve adherence measures. Finally, healthcare payers need to be convinced to pay a fair premium price for the added value of FDCs to incentivize incremental innovation in CVD treatment.

Funder

Egis Pharmaceuticals PLC

Publisher

MDPI AG

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