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Implementation of new technologies Dr Keith Cooper Southampton Health Technology Assessments Centre University of Southampton
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Implementation of new technologies Dr Keith Cooper Southampton Health Technology Assessments Centre University of Southampton.

Dec 14, 2015

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Page 1: Implementation of new technologies Dr Keith Cooper Southampton Health Technology Assessments Centre University of Southampton.

Implementation of new technologies

Dr Keith CooperSouthampton Health

Technology Assessments Centre

University of Southampton

Page 2: Implementation of new technologies Dr Keith Cooper Southampton Health Technology Assessments Centre University of Southampton.

Structure of talk

• Introduction• Background to evidence based

decision making for implementing new technologies

• Example: Machine perfusion preservation vs. cold storage in kidney transplantation

Page 3: Implementation of new technologies Dr Keith Cooper Southampton Health Technology Assessments Centre University of Southampton.

Introduction

• Within health care systems there is limited resources and increasing demand on services

• Choices need to be made in a fair and equitable manner

Choice B

Choice A

Page 4: Implementation of new technologies Dr Keith Cooper Southampton Health Technology Assessments Centre University of Southampton.

HTA modelling• Health Technology Assessment aims to

evaluate health technologies by investigating:– whether the technology works – for whom – at what cost – how it compares with the alternatives

• A health technology can be any intervention that improves health and includes – medications, devices, hospital procedures, health

promotion activities and diagnostic tests• Health Technology Assessment in the UK is

overseen by the NIHR HTA programme – Provides Technology Assessment Reports for NICE

Page 5: Implementation of new technologies Dr Keith Cooper Southampton Health Technology Assessments Centre University of Southampton.

NICE (National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence)

• Provides guidance to NHS on new technologies, promote clinical excellence and the effective use of resources within the NHS.

• Recommendations are based upon – Clinical evidence: systematic review, meta analyses– Economic evidence: cost effectiveness models

• Bases decision-making on Technology Assessment Reports (TARs) and manufacturer submissions

• TARs produced by university departments, such as Southampton Health Technology Assessments Centre (SHTAC)

• New technologies are most often more effective and more costly – is it good value for money to adopt?

Page 6: Implementation of new technologies Dr Keith Cooper Southampton Health Technology Assessments Centre University of Southampton.

NICE decision making – Cost effectiveness

• Costs and health benefits are estimated for patients on alternative treatments

• Health benefits are in term of Quality Adjusted Life Years– Life expectancy + Quality of life

• Compare new treatment with existing treatment(s)

• NICE is more likely to recommend a treatment if its cost effectiveness is lower than CE threshold (£30,000 per QALY)

Page 7: Implementation of new technologies Dr Keith Cooper Southampton Health Technology Assessments Centre University of Southampton.

Machine perfusion systems and cold static storage of kidneys from deceased donors

• NICE technology appraisal guidance [TA165] Published date: January 2009

• Assessment group report by PenTAG, university of Exeter– (Bond, Pitt, Akoh,

Moxham, Hoyle, Anderson)

Page 8: Implementation of new technologies Dr Keith Cooper Southampton Health Technology Assessments Centre University of Southampton.

What is the best method of preservation for kidneys for

transplantation?• Cold storage solutions

– the kidney is flushed through with a sterile preservation solution and is kept on ice in a box before transplantation

– Marshall's hypertonic citrate (Soltran, Baxter Healthcare) and Belzer UW (Viaspan, Bristol Myers Squibb)

• Machine perfusion systems– Machine perfusion systems continuously

pump cold preservation solution through the kidney

– The LifePortTM kidney transporter (Organ Recovery Systems), RM3 renal preservation system (Waters Medical Systems)

Page 9: Implementation of new technologies Dr Keith Cooper Southampton Health Technology Assessments Centre University of Southampton.

Clinical evidenceMachine Preservation Trial (Moers, 2008)

PPART study (Watson 2010)

Cold storage (Viaspan)N= 336

Machine perfusion (Lifeport)N = 336

Cold storageN = 45

Machine perfusion (Lifeport)N = 45

Proportion of delayed graft function following transplant

26.5% 20.8% 56% 58%

Proportion of primary non function

4.8% 2.1% 0% 2%

Graft survival at 1 year 90% 94% 98% 93.3%

Page 10: Implementation of new technologies Dr Keith Cooper Southampton Health Technology Assessments Centre University of Southampton.

Cost effectiveness model

Page 11: Implementation of new technologies Dr Keith Cooper Southampton Health Technology Assessments Centre University of Southampton.

Other model parameters (costs)

Parameter Value

Storage cost per Kidney:

Cold storage (ViaSpan) £262.33

Machine perfusion (LifePort) £736.55

Other costs

Transplant cost £16,413

Dialysis cost (per month) £2052

Post transplant cost (month 1-3) £2463

Post transplant cost (month 4-12)

£1385

Page 12: Implementation of new technologies Dr Keith Cooper Southampton Health Technology Assessments Centre University of Southampton.

Other model parameters (QALY)

• Quality of life values (age 50 years)

• Transplant state: 0.75• Dialysis state: 0.63

Page 13: Implementation of new technologies Dr Keith Cooper Southampton Health Technology Assessments Centre University of Southampton.

Cost effectiveness results

Results using MPT data (Moers 2008)

Costs per patient

Health benefits (QALYs)

Preferred technology

Cold storage (ViaSpan) £142,805 9.58

Machine perfusion (LifePort)

£139,110 9.79

Difference £-3695 0.22 Machine perfusionResults using PPART data

(Watson 2010)Costs per patient

Health benefits (QALYs)

Preferred technology

Cold storage (ViaSpan) £139,205 9.19

Machine perfusion (LifePort)

£141,319 9.13

Difference £2114 -0.06 Cold storage

Page 14: Implementation of new technologies Dr Keith Cooper Southampton Health Technology Assessments Centre University of Southampton.

NICE recommendations

• The overall costs and benefits associated with kidney transplantation using either machine perfusion or cold static storage were similar.

• The Committee recommended that the LifePort kidney transporter be considered as an alternative to cold static storage solutions.

• The choice of which to use would depend on clinical and logistical factors within both the retrieval team and transplant centres.

Page 15: Implementation of new technologies Dr Keith Cooper Southampton Health Technology Assessments Centre University of Southampton.

NICE – recommendations further research

• The Committee considered that it was important for transplant centres to collect standardised and comprehensive data that follow up the outcomes for kidneys stored using different methods.

Page 16: Implementation of new technologies Dr Keith Cooper Southampton Health Technology Assessments Centre University of Southampton.

Conclusions

• Unclear from current data (2009), whether machine perfusion preferable to cold storage– Depends upon trial data used

• Difficult to show difference in clinical outcomes– Large RCT is needed which may not be practical

• Other more recent studies have come to different conclusions

• Gomez et al 2012 – MP is cost effective• Groen et al 2012 – MP cost saving• Jochmans 2015 (Transplant International)

provides excellent overview of current evidence

Page 17: Implementation of new technologies Dr Keith Cooper Southampton Health Technology Assessments Centre University of Southampton.

Thank you!