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PACE Continuous Innovation Indicators—a novel tool to measure progress in cancer treatments

Concerns about rising health care costs and the often incremental nature of improvements in health outcomes continue to fuel intense debates about ‘progress’ and ‘value’ in cancer research. In times of tightening fiscal constraints, it is increasingly important for patients and their representatives...

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Autores principales: Paddock, Silvia, Brum, Lauren, Sorrow, Kathleen, Thomas, Samuel, Spence, Susan, Maulbecker-Armstrong, Catharina, Goodman, Clifford, Peake, Michael, McVie, Gordon, Geipel, Gary, Li, Rose
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cancer Intelligence 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4303618/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25624879
http://dx.doi.org/10.3332/ecancer.2015.498
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author Paddock, Silvia
Brum, Lauren
Sorrow, Kathleen
Thomas, Samuel
Spence, Susan
Maulbecker-Armstrong, Catharina
Goodman, Clifford
Peake, Michael
McVie, Gordon
Geipel, Gary
Li, Rose
author_facet Paddock, Silvia
Brum, Lauren
Sorrow, Kathleen
Thomas, Samuel
Spence, Susan
Maulbecker-Armstrong, Catharina
Goodman, Clifford
Peake, Michael
McVie, Gordon
Geipel, Gary
Li, Rose
author_sort Paddock, Silvia
collection PubMed
description Concerns about rising health care costs and the often incremental nature of improvements in health outcomes continue to fuel intense debates about ‘progress’ and ‘value’ in cancer research. In times of tightening fiscal constraints, it is increasingly important for patients and their representatives to define what constitutes ’value’ to them. It is clear that diverse stakeholders have different priorities. Harmonisation of values may be neither possible nor desirable. Stakeholders lack tools to visualise or otherwise express these differences and to track progress in cancer treatments based on variable sets of values. The Patient Access to Cancer care Excellence (PACE) Continuous Innovation Indicators are novel, scientifically rigorous progress trackers that employ a three-step process to quantify progress in cancer treatments: 1) mine the literature to determine the strength of the evidence supporting each treatment; 2) allow users to weight the analysis according to their priorities and values; and 3) calculate Evidence Scores (E-Scores), a novel measure to track progress, based on the strength of the evidence weighted by the assigned value. We herein introduce a novel, flexible value model, show how the values from the model can be used to weight the evidence from the scientific literature to obtain E-Scores, and illustrate how assigning different values to new treatments influences the E-Scores. The Indicators allow users to learn how differing values lead to differing assessments of progress in cancer research and to check whether current incentives for innovation are aligned with their value model. By comparing E-Scores generated by this tool, users are able to visualise the relative pace of innovation across areas of cancer research and how stepwise innovation can contribute to substantial progress against cancer over time. Learning from experience and mapping current unmet needs will help to support a broad audience of stakeholders in their efforts to accelerate and maximise progress against cancer.
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spelling pubmed-43036182015-01-26 PACE Continuous Innovation Indicators—a novel tool to measure progress in cancer treatments Paddock, Silvia Brum, Lauren Sorrow, Kathleen Thomas, Samuel Spence, Susan Maulbecker-Armstrong, Catharina Goodman, Clifford Peake, Michael McVie, Gordon Geipel, Gary Li, Rose Ecancermedicalscience Policy Concerns about rising health care costs and the often incremental nature of improvements in health outcomes continue to fuel intense debates about ‘progress’ and ‘value’ in cancer research. In times of tightening fiscal constraints, it is increasingly important for patients and their representatives to define what constitutes ’value’ to them. It is clear that diverse stakeholders have different priorities. Harmonisation of values may be neither possible nor desirable. Stakeholders lack tools to visualise or otherwise express these differences and to track progress in cancer treatments based on variable sets of values. The Patient Access to Cancer care Excellence (PACE) Continuous Innovation Indicators are novel, scientifically rigorous progress trackers that employ a three-step process to quantify progress in cancer treatments: 1) mine the literature to determine the strength of the evidence supporting each treatment; 2) allow users to weight the analysis according to their priorities and values; and 3) calculate Evidence Scores (E-Scores), a novel measure to track progress, based on the strength of the evidence weighted by the assigned value. We herein introduce a novel, flexible value model, show how the values from the model can be used to weight the evidence from the scientific literature to obtain E-Scores, and illustrate how assigning different values to new treatments influences the E-Scores. The Indicators allow users to learn how differing values lead to differing assessments of progress in cancer research and to check whether current incentives for innovation are aligned with their value model. By comparing E-Scores generated by this tool, users are able to visualise the relative pace of innovation across areas of cancer research and how stepwise innovation can contribute to substantial progress against cancer over time. Learning from experience and mapping current unmet needs will help to support a broad audience of stakeholders in their efforts to accelerate and maximise progress against cancer. Cancer Intelligence 2015-01-07 /pmc/articles/PMC4303618/ /pubmed/25624879 http://dx.doi.org/10.3332/ecancer.2015.498 Text en © the authors; licensee ecancermedicalscience. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Policy
Paddock, Silvia
Brum, Lauren
Sorrow, Kathleen
Thomas, Samuel
Spence, Susan
Maulbecker-Armstrong, Catharina
Goodman, Clifford
Peake, Michael
McVie, Gordon
Geipel, Gary
Li, Rose
PACE Continuous Innovation Indicators—a novel tool to measure progress in cancer treatments
title PACE Continuous Innovation Indicators—a novel tool to measure progress in cancer treatments
title_full PACE Continuous Innovation Indicators—a novel tool to measure progress in cancer treatments
title_fullStr PACE Continuous Innovation Indicators—a novel tool to measure progress in cancer treatments
title_full_unstemmed PACE Continuous Innovation Indicators—a novel tool to measure progress in cancer treatments
title_short PACE Continuous Innovation Indicators—a novel tool to measure progress in cancer treatments
title_sort pace continuous innovation indicators—a novel tool to measure progress in cancer treatments
topic Policy
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4303618/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25624879
http://dx.doi.org/10.3332/ecancer.2015.498
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