Suitability of Preference Methods Across the Medical Product Lifecycle: A Multicriteria Decision Analysis

Abstract

Objectives

This study aimed to understand the importance of criteria describing methods (eg, duration, costs, validity, and outcomes) according to decision makers for each decision point in the medical product lifecycle (MPLC) and to determine the suitability of a discrete choice experiment, swing weighting, probabilistic threshold technique, and best-worst scale cases 1 and 2 at each decision point in the MPLC.

Methods

Applying multicriteria decision analysis, an online survey was sent to MPLC decision makers (ie, industry, regulatory, and health technology assessment representatives). They ranked and weighted 19 methods criteria from an existing performance matrix about their respective decisions across the MPLC. All criteria were given a relative weight based on the ranking and rating in the survey after which an overall suitability score was calculated for each preference elicitation method per decision point. Sensitivity analyses were conducted to reflect uncertainty in the performance matrix.

Results

Fifty-nine industry, 29 regulatory, and 5 health technology assessment representatives completed the surveys. Overall, “estimating trade-offs between treatment characteristics” and “estimating weights for treatment characteristics” were highly important criteria throughout all MPLC decision points, whereas other criteria were most important only for specific MPLC stages. Swing weighting and probabilistic threshold technique received significantly higher suitability scores across decision points than other methods. Sensitivity analyses showed substantial impact of uncertainty in the performance matrix.

Conclusion

Although discrete choice experiment is the most applied preference elicitation method, other methods should also be considered to address the needs of decision makers. Development of evidence-based guidance documents for designing, conducting, and analyzing such methods could enhance their use.

Authors

Jorien Veldwijk Esther de Bekker-Grob Juhaeri Juhaeri Eline van Overbeeke Stephanie Tcherny-Lessenot Cathy Anne Pinto Rachael L. DiSantostefano Catharina G.M. Groothuis-Oudshoorn

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