A Quality-Adjusted Price Index for Colorectal Cancer Drugs

The average price of treating a colorectal cancer patient with chemotherapy increased from about $100 in 1993 to $36,000 in 2005, due largely to the approval and widespread use of five new drugs between 1996 and 2004. We examine whether the substantial increase in spending has been worth it. Using discrete choice methods to estimate demand, we construct a price index for colorectal cancer drugs for each quarter between 1993 and 2005 that takes into consideration the quality (i.e., the efficacy and side effects in randomized clinical trials) of each drug on the market and the value that oncologists place on drug quality. A naive price index, which makes no adjustments for the changing attributes of drugs on the market, greatly overstates the true price increase. By contrast, a hedonic price index and two quality-adjusted price indices show that prices have actually remained fairly constant over this 13-year period, with slight increases or decreases depending on a model's assumptions.

[1]  Angela Mariotto,et al.  Cost of care for elderly cancer patients in the United States. , 2008, Journal of the National Cancer Institute.

[2]  Zvi Griliches,et al.  HEDONIC PRICE INDEXES FOR AUTOMOBILES: AN ECONOMETRIC ANALYSIS OF QUALITY CHANGE' , 2008 .

[3]  Steven Berry,et al.  The Pure Characteristics Demand Model , 2007 .

[4]  Minjae Song,et al.  Measuring consumerwelfareinthe CPU market: anapplication of the pure‐characteristics demand model , 2007 .

[5]  S. Dewilde,et al.  Health state utilities for metastatic breast cancer , 2006, British Journal of Cancer.

[6]  Kevin M. Murphy,et al.  The Value of Health and Longevity , 2005, Journal of Political Economy.

[7]  M. Jacobson The Effect of Medicare reimbursement Policies on Cancer Chemotherapy Treatment , 2006 .

[8]  Amy N. Finkelstein The Aggregate Effects of Health Insurance: Evidence from the Introduction of Medicare , 2007 .

[9]  Hedonics and the Consumer Price Index , 2005 .

[10]  David M. Cutler,et al.  Your Money or Your Life: Strong Medicine for America's Health Care System , 2004 .

[11]  Subrata Sen,et al.  Evaluating Innovation in the Pharmaceutical Industry , 2004 .

[12]  Ariel Pakes,et al.  A Reconsideration of Hedonic Price Indexes with an Application to Pc's , 2002 .

[13]  Amil Petrin Quantifying the Benefits of New Products: The Case of the Minivan , 2001, Journal of Political Economy.

[14]  S. Normand,et al.  The Medical Treatment of Depression, 1991-1996: Productive Inefficiency, Expected Outcome Variations, and Price Indexes , 2000, Journal of health economics.

[15]  Aviv Nevo A Practitioner's Guide to Estimation of Random‐Coefficients Logit Models of Demand , 2000 .

[16]  Z. Griliches,et al.  Medical Care Prices and Output , 2000 .

[17]  J. Hutton,et al.  Cost-utility model comparing docetaxel and paclitaxel in advanced breast cancer patients. , 1998, Anti-cancer drugs.

[18]  Joseph P. Newhouse,et al.  Are Medical Prices Declining? Evidence from Heart Attack Treatments , 1998 .

[19]  T. Bresnahan,et al.  Market Segmentation and the Sources of Rents from Innovation: Personal Computers in the Late 1980s , 1997 .

[20]  Manuel Trajtenberg,et al.  Market Segmentation and the Sources of Rents from Innovation: Personal Computers in the Late 1980&Apos;S , 1996 .

[21]  Steven T. Berry,et al.  Automobile Prices in Market Equilibrium , 1995 .

[22]  Steven T. Berry Estimating Discrete-Choice Models of Product Differentiation , 1994 .

[23]  J. Newhouse,et al.  Medical care costs: how much welfare loss? , 1992, The journal of economic perspectives : a journal of the American Economic Association.

[24]  Manuel Trajtenberg,et al.  Product Innovations, Price Indices and the (Mis)Measurement of Economic Performance , 1990 .

[25]  K. Small,et al.  Applied Welfare Economics with Discrete Choice Models , 1979 .