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Price-Volume Agreements – prospects for Poland. Norbert Wilk n.wilk@aotm.gov.pl Agency for Health Technology Assessment in Poland. Price-Volume Agreement (PVA). One of drug policy measures A volume control tool
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Price-Volume Agreements– prospects for Poland Norbert Wilk n.wilk@aotm.gov.pl Agency for Health Technology Assessment in Poland
Price-Volume Agreement (PVA) • One of drug policy measures • A volume control tool • The price of a pharmaceutical is agreed between public authorities and a manufacturer on the basis of a forecast volume of sales. If the actual sales volume exceeds the forecast, the price of the pharmaceuticalis usually reviewed downwards [PPRI Glossary] • Particularly useful in situations where unit prices are higher than comparators and there is potential for high prescription volumes, or when there is significant uncertainty about the estimated volumes
PVA – what it is, what it is not • A penalty on success? • A penalty for inadequate market research and poor forecasting • A method of sharing risk between the manufacturer and the public payer, based on pre-agreed relation of price of the drug to the volume of sales • A method to put certain limits to sales forces („the armies of sales representatives”) • In PVA the sponsor of a particular drug agrees to a price reduction for any sales that exceed a pre-agreed sales volume • In rebate agreements the sponsor offers a rebate (of varying size) for the cost of increased expenditure over a set annual subsidisation cap / threshold
Rebate arrangements • Rebating a percentage of the price of each unit sold that is in excess of agreed annual set caps. • Example: The sponsor agrees to rebate x % of the cost of each unit sold for any sales in excess of $20 million in a year. • Estimating the potential use outside the PBS restriction and rebating a proportion of this use. • Example: The sponsor and the Department agree that up to y % of a particular drug’s sales may be for uses that are not subsidised by the PBS. The sponsor would thereby rebate y% of that drug’s total sales to the Government. • Agreeing to a common annual sales cap for all the drugs used to treat a particular condition and rebating any excess according to each sponsor’s market share. • Example: Four drugs are used to treat a particular condition and the agreed cap for their combined sales is $80 million per year. In a particular year, sales are $100 million, with the four sponsors having sold: $10 million, $20 million, $30 million and $40 million respectively. Sponsors rebate a total of $20 million to the government, paying: $2 million, $4 million, $6 million and $8 million, respectively, based on their market share. [PBS, Australia]
Rebate arrangements (2) • Absolute rebate based on the price of an alternative drug (where use of drug A above a certain level may be inconsistent with the cost-effectiveness recommendation of the PBAC). • Example: The sponsor agrees to supply drug A at the drug’s agreed price (say $100) for sales up to $15 million per year, but then supply the drug at the price of the cheaper alternative drug B (say $60) for any sales in excess of $15 million, rebating the difference in the prices to the Government. • For an additional indication to an already existing drug, limiting the total cost to the PBS for the current indication(s) plus no more than $10 million. This limits the cost to the PBS for the new indication, to $10 million per year and may remove the need for Cabinet consideration. • Example: The use of a drug already listed on the PBS, and costing $25 million per year, is extended to include treatment for another condition or indication. The sponsor agrees to pay back to the government any costs that exceed $35 million ($25 + $10) in a given year. This caps the cost to the PBS for the additional use to $10 million in any year. • Agreeing to rebate the full amount (100%) of any cost to the PBS for a particular drug that exceeds $10 million per year. This limits the cost to the PBS at $10 million per year and may remove the need for Cabinet consideration. [PBS, Australia]
PVA vs. Rebate arrangements • Semantics… • For a manufacturer it is easier to accept rebate idea than a reduction of price (although both may lead to the very same impact on turnover)
PVAs in Poland • Some attempts were made, but never came into action • Reported lack of adequate legal solutions • Fears of accusationas to inadequate protection of public interest • Credible epidemiological data coupled with sales of comparators to verify whether the sales forecasts applied for by the manufacturer to be included in PVA are not over the top • Continuation of PVAs: what if a manufacturer does not want to continue with arrangement? The payer would be put against the wall with a number of patients on that drug and nobody willing to share risk with him („free sample situation”) • Need for more pro-active approach from the MoH or the NHF
Price-Benefit arrangements • The risk is shared on the basis of clinical outcomes, not sales • payment for effect (bortezomib NICE, UK) • Risk sharing scheme (DMD in MS, UK) • Other ways to control costs • Claw-back • Pay-back