Global & Regional Health Technology Assessment (May 2024)

Determining value in the treatment of activated PI3Kδ syndrome in Spain: a multicriteria decision analysis from the perspective of key stakeholders

  • Alicia Gil,
  • María Reyes Abad,
  • Carmen Alerany,
  • Laia Alsina,
  • Eduardo López Granados,
  • Olaf Neth,
  • José Luis Poveda,
  • Jacques G. Rivière,
  • Carlos Rodríguez-Gallego,
  • Joanne B. Tutein Nolthenius,
  • Raquel Figueiredo ,
  • Silvia Subías Labazuy

DOI
https://doi.org/10.33393/grhta.2024.3041
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1

Abstract

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Introduction: Activated phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K)δ syndrome (APDS) is an ultra-rare inborn error of immunity (IEI) combining immunodeficiency and immune dysregulation. This study determined what represents value in APDS in Spain from a multidisciplinary perspective applying multicriteria decision analysis (MCDA) methodology. Methods: A multidisciplinary committee of nine experts scored the evidence matrix. A specific framework for orphan drug evaluation in Spain and the weights assigned by a panel of 98 evaluators and decision-makers was used. Re-evaluation of scores was performed. Results: APDS is considered a very severe disease with important unmet needs, including misdiagnosis and diagnostic delay. Current management is limited to treatment of symptoms with off-label use of therapies supported by limited evidence. Therapeutic benefit is partial, resulting in limited disease control. Haematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT), the only potential curative alternative, is restricted to a reduced patient population and without evidence of long-term efficacy or safety. All options present a limited safety profile. Data on patients’ quality of life are lacking. APDS is associated with high pharmacological, medical and indirect costs. Conclusions: APDS is considered a severe disease, with limited understanding by key stakeholders of how treatment success is assessed in clinical practice, the serious impact that has on patients and the associated high economic burden. This study brings to light how MCDA methodology could represent a useful tool to complement current clinical and decision-making methods used by APDS experts and evaluators.

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