Future Role of Health Technology Assessment for Genomic Medicine in Oncology: A Canadian Laboratory Perspective
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Evaluation and Implementation of Genome-Based Testing in Canada
1.2. Evaluative Frameworks of Genome-Based Tests for Clinical Use
1.3. Health Technology Management through a Learning Health System (LHS)
1.4. Key Features of a Pan-Canadian Health Technology Assessment Process
1.4.1. Overall Process Developed through Multi-Stakeholder Deliberation
1.4.2. Pan-Canadian/Linked to Provinces and Provincial Lab Programs
1.4.3. Pre-Defined Scoping That Considers the Use of Biomarker Tests
1.4.4. Horizon Scanning and a Single Point of Entry to Consider New Biomarkers
1.4.5. Rapid Priority Setting and Triage
1.4.6. Rapid Review and Real-World Assessment
1.4.7. Province-Led Contextualization
1.4.8. Centralized Evaluation of the Measurement Process
1.4.9. Generate Standardized Life-Cycle Evidence
1.4.10. Meeting End-User and Societal Needs
2. Concluding Remarks
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Province | Size (M) | Health Technology Assessment Process (Organization(s) Responsible) | Program/Authority Responsible for Planning and Implementation |
---|---|---|---|
Alberta | 4.2 | Alberta Precision Laboratories Test Formulary Committee | Alberta Precision Laboratories/ Alberta Health Services |
British Columbia | 5.0 | Provincial Laboratory Medicine Services Test Review Process | Provincial Health Services Authority |
Manitoba | 1.3 | - | Winnipeg Regional Health Authority |
New Brunswick | 0.8 | - | Horizon Health |
Newfoundland and Labrador | 0.5 | - | Eastern Health |
Nova Scotia | 1.0 | - | Nova Scotia Health Authority |
Ontario | 14.2 | Provincial Genetics Advisory Committee/Ontario Genetic Advisory Committee/Program in Evidence-Based Care | Provincial Genetics Program/ Ontario Health |
Prince Edward Island | 0.2 | - | Health PEI |
Quebec | 8.5 | Institut national d’excellence en santé et en services sociaux | Direction de la biovigilance et de la biologie médicale (Ministry) |
Saskatchewan | 1.1 | - | Saskatoon Health Region |
Goal | Good Practices in HTA, from [26] | Subdomain | Proposed Feature(s) | Rationale |
---|---|---|---|---|
Adequate level of support for decision making by asking appropriate questions and providing timely recommendations | Defining the HTA process | Structure and governance | Process developed through multi-stakeholder deliberation | To enhance perceived legitimacy of the process |
Pan-Canadian/linked to provinces and provincial lab programs | Promoting consistent decision making across provinces | |||
Framing and scoping | Pre-defined scoping that considers use of biomarker | Different biomarker uses require different evaluative approaches | ||
Horizon scanning and a single point of entry | Testing requires ample lead-time for implementation | |||
Rapid priority setting | To ensure timely access to life-saving tests or tests with urgent patient needs | |||
Provide consistency in evaluating costs and benefits of testing | Assessment | Rapid review and real-world assessment | To ensure timely access to life-saving tests or tests with urgent patient needs | |
Provide high-value and equitable testing | Contextualization | Province-led contextualization of implementation | To ensure testing and its potential value is fit for purpose | |
Reduce duplication, improve timeliness, and adapt to changing innovation. | Implementation and monitoring | Centralized evaluation of the measurement process | To remove burden on individual clinical labs to fund optimization studies | |
Generate standardized life-cycle evidence | To improve value while adapting to constantly changing landscape of innovation |
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Husereau, D.; Bombard, Y.; Stockley, T.; Carter, M.; Davey, S.; Lemaire, D.; Nohr, E.; Park, P.; Spatz, A.; Williams, C.; et al. Future Role of Health Technology Assessment for Genomic Medicine in Oncology: A Canadian Laboratory Perspective. Curr. Oncol. 2023, 30, 9660-9669. https://doi.org/10.3390/curroncol30110700
Husereau D, Bombard Y, Stockley T, Carter M, Davey S, Lemaire D, Nohr E, Park P, Spatz A, Williams C, et al. Future Role of Health Technology Assessment for Genomic Medicine in Oncology: A Canadian Laboratory Perspective. Current Oncology. 2023; 30(11):9660-9669. https://doi.org/10.3390/curroncol30110700
Chicago/Turabian StyleHusereau, Don, Yvonne Bombard, Tracy Stockley, Michael Carter, Scott Davey, Diana Lemaire, Erik Nohr, Paul Park, Alan Spatz, Christine Williams, and et al. 2023. "Future Role of Health Technology Assessment for Genomic Medicine in Oncology: A Canadian Laboratory Perspective" Current Oncology 30, no. 11: 9660-9669. https://doi.org/10.3390/curroncol30110700
APA StyleHusereau, D., Bombard, Y., Stockley, T., Carter, M., Davey, S., Lemaire, D., Nohr, E., Park, P., Spatz, A., Williams, C., Pollett, A., Lo, B., Yip, S., El Hallani, S., & Feilotter, H. (2023). Future Role of Health Technology Assessment for Genomic Medicine in Oncology: A Canadian Laboratory Perspective. Current Oncology, 30(11), 9660-9669. https://doi.org/10.3390/curroncol30110700