Showing posts with label Approved. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Approved. Show all posts

Saturday, April 29, 2017

Avastin Lucentis Update 47 Should the UK’s NICE Consider Adding Avastin to It’s Approved Drugs


In a blog, appearing on the BMJ (British Medical Journal) Group Blogs, James Raftery, a health economist with several decades' experience with the National Health Service (NHS) and a professor of health technology assessment at Southampton University, regularly writes about NICE  (the UK’s National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence). He is a keen "NICE-watcher," and has provided economic input to technical assessment reports for NICE.

In this blog entry, he discusses the case to be made for including Avastin in the approved drug registry for treating AMD and DMO (or DME, as we know it).


Avastin, Lucentis, and NICE
By: James Raftery

28 Jun, 11 | BMJ Group Blogs

A useful update was provided at a meeting this week sponsored by the Royal National Institute for the Blind (RNIB) and Patients Involved in NICE (the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence). As the proceedings are to be written up and published, I focus here on the key points that emerged for me.

The stakes in the Avastin/Lucentis (bevacizumab/ranibizumab) contest have been raised as the target condition has enlarged from macular degeneration to include diabetic macular oedema (DMO). This matters hugely because NICE is currently appraising Lucentis for this condition and has had to rule out consideration of Avastin because it is unlicensed. The potential patient population for DMO is put at 3% of people with diabetes, or around 100,000 patients each year. By contrast the estimates for wet age-related macular degeneration (AMD) are 20,000-25,000. NICE's appraisal consultation does not recommend use of Lucentis for DMO. Avastin, it notes, is already being used off label to treat DMO in the NHS. This draft guidance, if it remains unchanged, will increase this use. By not recommending Lucentis for DMO, off-label Avastin will be the only option available. The draft guidance seems unlikely to change since the appraisal committee considered that "a model that relied on a combined set of plausible assumptions would be certain to produce ICERs [incremental cost-effectiveness ratios] that substantially exceed the range it could consider to represent an effective use of NHS resources" (para 4.26).

The meeting heard that Avastin is being widely used in the private sector to treat AMD. Some primary care trusts (PCTs) have offered patients the choice of immediate treatment in private clinics using Avastin or waiting for NHS treatment with Lucentis.

The reasons private clinics are using Avastin are unknown but plausibly relate to its price (£85 pre VAT per injection supplied by Moorfields pharmacy compared with £740 for Lucentis). Extraordinarily, it seems that some ophthalmologists may be using Avastin in private practice but, depending on the local PCT, they may be required to use Lucentis in their NHS practice. The extent to which NHS use is split between Avastin and Lucentis for AMD is unknown. However, a recent US study showed that 64% of all AMD Medicare patients received Avastin.

What is clear is that UK ophthalmologists are using Avastin off-label to treat AMD and DMO and that this use is likely to increase, particularly in DMO. Legally it was suggested that ophthalmologists are covered by their host NHS trusts via the NHS Litigation Authority. GPs, it was suggested, might not be so likely to do so, but GP commissioning groups might well be happy to contract for off-label use of Avastin by their providers.

In any legal challenge to off-label Avastin prescribing the guidance to doctors from the General Medical Council (GMC) would be hugely important. The meeting received an update on the GMC consultation on changing its 2008 guidance Good Practice in Prescribing Medicines. The consultation proposed to change the requirement that off-label prescribing be "better" to "as good as." The 2008 guidance specified that the prescriber had to "be satisfied that it would better serve the patient's needs than an appropriately licensed alternative." The 2011 update proposed off-label prescribing if: "There was no appropriately licensed alternative available or you are satisfied on the basis of authoritative clinical guidance that is as safe and effective as an appropriately licensed alternative."

The GMC, it appears, has been lobbied particularly by ophthalmologists on this issue and the consultation, the results of which are being analysed, seems likely to support change. Acceptance of the proposed change would require clarification of "authoritative clinical guidance". Authoritative clinical guidance cited elsewhere by the GMC included that from NICE, royal colleges, the US Food and Drugs Agency (FDA), British National Formulary (BNF), or local prescribing committees. The meeting considered the possibility that a guideline, particularly if issued by a competent authority such as NICE, might also count.

Could a NICE guideline include off-label use of Avastin? Someone from NICE explained that although NICE cannot consider unlicensed drugs (or off-label use of licensed drugs) within the remit for technology appraisals, it can and has included such uses in its clinical guidelines. Almost all guidelines to do with children have to include off label use of licensed drugs. Which sparks the thought of what would happen if a NICE clinical guideline for either AMD or DMO included Avastin.

Could off-label Avastin be referred by the secretary of state for health to the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) for "market approval"? Yes, is the answer, based on the precedent of such referrals of blood products and vaccines, which were noted at the meeting. NICE was asked if it could assess Avastin for AMD. The unsurprising answer was yes. "The next step is for the Department of Health to decide whether or not to refer bevacizumab (Avastin) to NICE for consideration as part of its technology appraisal process." That was NICE's view in December 2010.

I came away from the meeting thinking that the ophthalmologists are voting with their syringes and that some of the NHS is finding ways to follow their lead.



Tuesday, July 26, 2016

Tips On Selecting Reliable NCBTMB Approved Online CE Courses


By Daphne Bowen


In the job market, there is a lot of competition between job seekers and that requires every candidate to add value in his curriculum vitae. Competition is advantageous to the employers because it gives them a platform to hire highly trained individuals. Getting the right institution is mandatory. Therefore, you must know the tips for selecting a reliable NCBTMB approved online CE courses.

The moment you begin searching for a suitable institution, you will notice there is a variety of choices and yet you will be expected to pick one. This makes the whole process difficult because without having the right information you can make a regrettable choice. To reduce the difficulty in making an appropriate choice, it is prudent to use referrals and recommendations.

Every institute that gives the training to the interested members of the public has a status that outlines the kind of services one can obtain. However, it is possible to find some institutes that do not have a repute. This is common for institutions that are new entrants into the market. However, to be sure of making the right choice, you should hire an institute with the best reputation.

When you commence the search, you will realize that you will be relying on the information provided by other people. When you rely on their experiences and judgments in making such a crucial decision you might be misguided. This is because maybe your interests differ and you do not know what influenced their decisions. It is discreet to research and make your opinions and decisions.

The instructors manage the training programs and that can only be possible if they possess relevant knowledge at their disposal. With this insight, it is noble to know the level of education the instructor has attained. If his/her level of knowledge is small, the training will be of the inferior quality. Therefore, ensure you pick a school with trainers with a higher standard of education in massages.

The period the program has been carried out by the Institute has a greater influence on the choices you will be making. A school that has served interested students for the longest period is the best. This is because its management team had an opportunity to set strategies that are beneficial to the students and the school. This secures an opportunity for you to experience the best massage training.

The government is very keen when it comes to managing the education systems within the state. Without a proper system to manage the education sector, fraudsters can easily dupe the unsuspecting members of the public with fake training and certificates. To prevent such swindles from happening, the relevant authorities inspect the institutions and give licenses to those that pass the examination.

Before enrolling for any training, it is sensible that you check the amount of cash needed to settle the fees required. This will assist you in planning financially and preventing any possibility of falling into financial constraints. It is expected that you keep off from institutes that charge more than your financial capability. Spending more than what you have will push you to debts and financial problems.




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