Average rating: | Rated 2.5 of 5. |
Level of importance: | Rated 3 of 5. |
Level of validity: | Rated 3 of 5. |
Level of completeness: | Rated 2 of 5. |
Level of comprehensibility: | Rated 2 of 5. |
Competing interests: | I represent not for profit, solidarity based health insurers and therefore have reviewed the abstract from this angle. |
The article describes a business model that would presents to public health insurance funds the possibility to make savings on costs of drugs when engaging in clinical trials for repurposing of drugs. The abstract that describes models already applied in the US as well as in the Netherlands, does not further investigate the important legal hurdles as well as ethical concerns for solidarity based, not for profit health insurers to engage in such clinical trials let alone to recrute their insured to participate in them.
The abstract does refer to legal requirements and the public tasks of health insurers. The European health insurance funds are non commercial, financed either by contributions from employers/employees or from taxes or a mixture of both. Drug reimbursement is usually being organised by or in cooperation with state agencies. The case mentioned from the Netherlands represents not only health insurers, but is a cooperation of teaching hospitals, treating physicians, (hospital) pharmacists and government. They are supported in this process by a Scientific Advisory Board, Intervention Board and Financial Board. (see: https://treatmeds.nl/wat-we-doen/). Such a partnership including the cooperation with state agencies and a sound supervision on both the financial, as well as the ethical, pharmaceutical and impact on patients would be necessary in any other European country, if the legal framework regulating health insurance funds in the different European countries.
The abstract describes that there are no financial risks, however, the upfront costs would have to be paid by the health insurers without a security of the success of the clinical trial. The financial risk can only be judged after a successful trial.
The abstract should include reference to the need of a sound legal analysis to detect all legal, political as well as ethical hurdles as well as safeguards for the insured that such a model could represent in Europe.