Appraisal of Novel Oncological Therapies by the Scottish Medicines Consortium and the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence: A Comparative Study of Six Years of Data

Cureus. 2023 Dec 15;15(12):e50560. doi: 10.7759/cureus.50560. eCollection 2023 Dec.

Abstract

Background and aims Pharmacoeconomic assessment of novel oncological therapies is an increasingly important factor in determining patient access to therapies. Organisations such as the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) in England and the Scottish Medicines Consortium (SMC) in Scotland assess medications for their cost-effectiveness through health technology assessments (HTA) and provide guidance on whether the public health service should fund a therapy. We assessed six years of data to determine if there were any differences in timescales and decisions between NICE and SMC for new oncological therapies. Methods and results Time (days) from marketing authorisation (MA) to publication of final HTA guidance was calculated for single technology appraisals published by NICE and SMC between January 1, 2017, and December 31, 2022, for oncological therapies. We assessed 161 HTAs by NICE and 148 HTAs by SMC published in the study period. The median time from MA to publication of HTA guidance was 291 days (IQR 222-406) for SMC and 257 days (IQR 167-448) for NICE (p=0.054). For solid organ cancer therapies, NICE was significantly faster in publishing guidance, with a median of 231.5 days (IQR 148-392.25), compared to SMC, which took 273 days (IQR 202-378) (p=0.039). Overall recommendation of technologies was similar between the SMC and NICE (90.5% and 89.4%, respectively), with discordance in a minority of cases (12.6%). Conclusions Recommendation rates for single HTAs are similar between NICE and SMC for oncological therapies with discordance in a minority of cases. The time from MA to publication of HTA guidance was similar overall, but NICE was faster in publishing HTA guidance for solid organ cancer indications. Differences in methodology and process between the two organisations, in particular the presence of the Cancer Drugs Fund in England, may explain this difference in publication times.

Keywords: health policy and economics; health technology assessment; new drug approval; oncology; pharmacoeconomics; the national institute for health and care excellence (nice).