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1.
JAMA ; 2024 Jul 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38949829

ABSTRACT

Importance: The US leads the world in bringing new medical products to market, but the ability to generate evidence to inform clinical practice in postmarket settings needs improvement. Although a diverse group of stakeholders is working to improve postmarket evidence generation, the role of private payers has been underappreciated. Observations: Payers are crucial allies in improving evidence generation because better data would better inform coverage decisions, their policies and practices influence the conduct of care and research, and their claims data are a source of real-world evidence used in medical product evaluation. In addition, payers have a stake in improving evidence generation because the kinds of evidence needed to inform health care and coverage decisions are often not available when a product enters the market and may not be generated without their involvement. Here, we describe several key steps payers could take to improve evidence generation, including participating in efforts to reduce administrative and financial barriers to the conduct of clinical trials, directly incentivizing evidence generation on high-priority questions by funding potential cost-saving trials, increasing engagement with the medical products industry on evidentiary needs for coverage decisions, and improving usability of claims data by reducing data lags and routinely recording unique device identifiers. Broad payer engagement with US Food and Drug Administration recommendations regarding evidence generation will ensure that the opportunities to participate in clinical research are extended to all communities and that evidence needed to inform care is generated in trials and surveillance systems that reflect the clinical reality across the US. Conclusions and Relevance: Increasing payer involvement in evidence generation can benefit all participants in the medical innovation ecosystem. The importance of payers in these efforts will continue to grow in response to imperatives to increase integration of care and research, engage a diverse set of communities in clinical research, and move toward alternative payment models.

2.
JAMA ; 332(2): 153-162, 2024 07 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38829654

ABSTRACT

Importance: Optimal health care delivery, both now and in the future, requires a continuous loop of knowledge generation, dissemination, and uptake on how best to provide care, not just determining what interventions work but also how best to ensure they are provided to those who need them. The randomized clinical trial (RCT) is the most rigorous instrument to determine what works in health care. However, major issues with both the clinical trials enterprise and the lack of integration of clinical trials with health care delivery compromise medicine's ability to best serve society. Observations: In most resource-rich countries, the clinical trials and health care delivery enterprises function as separate entities, with siloed goals, infrastructure, and incentives. Consequently, RCTs are often poorly relevant and responsive to the needs of patients and those responsible for care delivery. At the same time, health care delivery systems are often disengaged from clinical trials and fail to rapidly incorporate knowledge generated from RCTs into practice. Though longstanding, these issues are more pressing given the lessons learned from the COVID-19 pandemic, heightened awareness of the disproportionate impact of poor access to optimal care on vulnerable populations, and the unprecedented opportunity for improvement offered by the digital revolution in health care. Four major areas must be improved. First, especially in the US, greater clarity is required to ensure appropriate regulation and oversight of implementation science, quality improvement, embedded clinical trials, and learning health systems. Second, greater adoption is required of study designs that improve statistical and logistical efficiency and lower the burden on participants and clinicians, allowing trials to be smarter, safer, and faster. Third, RCTs could be considerably more responsive and efficient if they were better integrated with electronic health records. However, this advance first requires greater adoption of standards and processes designed to ensure health data are adequately reliable and accurate and capable of being transferred responsibly and efficiently across platforms and organizations. Fourth, tackling the problems described above requires alignment of stakeholders in the clinical trials and health care delivery enterprises through financial and nonfinancial incentives, which could be enabled by new legislation. Solutions exist for each of these problems, and there are examples of success for each, but there is a failure to implement at adequate scale. Conclusions and Relevance: The gulf between current care and that which could be delivered has arguably never been wider. A key contributor is that the 2 limbs of knowledge generation and implementation-the clinical trials and health care delivery enterprises-operate as a house divided. Better integration of these 2 worlds is key to accelerated improvement in health care delivery.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Delivery of Health Care , Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic , Humans
3.
JAMA ; 332(2): 103-104, 2024 07 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38829729

ABSTRACT

This Viewpoint from the FDA discusses how pragmatic clinical research­assessment that uses real-world data, often in combination with research data, after initial marketing approval­can help in evaluation of new technologies, benefit research sites in underresourced settings, and better inform regulatory decisions and clinical practice.


Subject(s)
Pragmatic Clinical Trials as Topic , United States Food and Drug Administration , United States , Humans
5.
Diabetes Care ; 47(5): 899, 2024 May 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38518072
8.
JAMA ; 331(4): 283-284, 2024 01 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38180773

ABSTRACT

This Viewpoint discusses declining vaccination rates in the US, specifically against COVID-19, and the ways in which clinicians and the Food and Drug Administration can counter the current large volume of vaccine misinformation.


Subject(s)
Health Communication , Vaccination , Communication , Health Communication/methods , United States
11.
JAMA ; 329(14): 1226, 2023 04 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37039793

Subject(s)
Hearing Aids
12.
N Engl J Med ; 388(12): 1151, 2023 Mar 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36856582
13.
Diabetes Care ; 46(2): 252-254, 2023 02 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36701600
14.
Clin Trials ; 20(1): 3-12, 2023 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36647919

ABSTRACT

Despite enormous advances in biomedical science, corresponding improvements in health outcomes lag significantly. This is particularly true in the United States, where life expectancy trails far behind that of other high-income countries. In addition, substantial disparities in life expectancy and other health outcomes exist as a function of race, ethnicity, wealth, education, and geographic location. A major reformation of our national system for generating medical evidence-the clinical research enterprise-is needed to facilitate the translation of biomedical research into useful products and interventions. Currently, premarket systems for generating and evaluating evidence work reasonably well, but the postmarket phase is disaggregated and often fails to answer essential questions that must be addressed to provide optimal clinical care and public health interventions for all Americans. Solving these problems will require a focus on three key domains: (1) improving the integration of and access to high-quality data from traditional clinical trials, electronic health records, and personal devices and wearable sensors; (2) restructuring clinical research operations to support and incentivize the involvement of patients and frontline clinicians; and (3) articulating ethical constructs that enable responsible data sharing to support improved implementation. Finally, we must also address the systemic tendency to optimize individual components of the clinical research enterprise without considering the effects on the system as a whole. Overcoming suboptimization by creating incentives for integration and sharing will be essential to achieve more timely and equitable improvement in health outcomes.


Subject(s)
Biomedical Research , Humans , United States , Ethnicity
15.
Sci Transl Med ; 15(680): eadg2970, 2023 01 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36696486

ABSTRACT

Adequate and well-controlled clinical trials remain critical tools for helping to bring benefit to patients in medical need.


Subject(s)
Biological Therapy , Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic , Humans
16.
JAMA ; 329(3): 203-204, 2023 01 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36580350

ABSTRACT

This Viewpoint from leadership at the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) proposes the creation of a comprehensive "care package" framework of resources to help maximize cessation of tobacco use, including components focused on strategies at the individual, health system, and population levels.


Subject(s)
Smoking Cessation , Smoking Cessation/methods , Smoking Prevention , Tobacco Use Cessation Devices
17.
JAMA ; 328(23): 2299-2300, 2022 12 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36459164

ABSTRACT

In this Viewpoint from officials at NIH and FDA, the authors discuss research collaborations between federal agencies and the private sector, using new regulations for over-the-counter hearing aids as an illustration.


Subject(s)
Health Policy , Hearing Aids , United States , Medical Device Legislation
18.
JAMA Intern Med ; 182(12): 1243-1244, 2022 12 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36279126

ABSTRACT

This Viewpoint discusses the benefits of streamlined point-of-care trial designs in clinical research, using lessons learned from the UK RECOVERY study of dexamethasone dosing for patients with COVID-19 and hypoxia.


Subject(s)
Clinical Trials as Topic , Point-of-Care Systems , Humans , United Kingdom , Research Design
19.
J Affect Disord ; 317: 287-297, 2022 11 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36031002

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The General Anxiety Disorder-7 (GAD-7) questionnaire is a standard tool used for screening and follow-up of patients with Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD). Although it is generally accepted that anxiety correlates with clinical and psychosocial stressors, precise quantitative data is limited on the relations among GAD-7, traditional biomarkers, and other measures of health. Further research is needed about how GAD-7 relates to race, ethnicity, and socioeconomic status (SES) as an assembly. We determined how multiple demographic and socioeconomic data correlate with the participants' GAD-7 results when compared with laboratory, physical function, clinical, and other biological markers. METHODS: The Project Baseline Health Study (BHS) is a prospective cohort of adults representing several populations in the USA. We analyzed a deeply phenotyped group of 2502 participants from that study. Measures of interest included: clinical markers or history of medical diagnoses; physical function markers including gait, grip strength, balance time, daily steps, and echocardiographic parameters; psychometric measurements; activities of daily living; socioeconomic characteristics; and laboratory results. RESULTS: Higher GAD-7 scores were associated with female sex, younger age, and Hispanic ethnicity. Measures of low SES were also associated with higher scores, including unemployment, income ≤$25,000, and ≤12 years of education. After adjustment for 158 demographic, clinical, laboratory, and symptom characteristics, unemployment and overall higher SES risk scores were highly correlated with anxiety scores. Protective factors included Black race and older age. LIMITATIONS: Correlations identified in this cross-sectional study cannot be used to infer causal relationships; further, we were not able to account for possible use of anxiety treatments by study participants. CONCLUSIONS: These findings highlight the importance of understanding anxiety as a biopsychosocial entity. Clinicians and provider organizations need to consider both the physical manifestations of the disorder and their patients' social determinants of health when considering treatment pathways and designing interventions.


Subject(s)
Activities of Daily Living , Patient Health Questionnaire , Adult , Anxiety , Anxiety Disorders/diagnosis , Anxiety Disorders/epidemiology , Anxiety Disorders/psychology , Biomarkers , Cross-Sectional Studies , Female , Humans , Prospective Studies , Social Class
20.
JAMA ; 328(11): 1043-1044, 2022 09 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35994272
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