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31 May 2015

ESMO announces a scale to stratify the magnitude of clinical benefit of anti-cancer medicines

ESMO, the European Society for Medical Oncology, has announced today the publication of the ESMO Magnitude of Clinical Benefit Scale (ESMO-MCBS)(1), a tool to assist oncology clinicians in evaluating the most effective anti-cancer medicines for their patients. 
“While it is known that the value of any new treatment is determined by the magnitude of its clinical benefit against its cost, to date there has not been a standard tool for grading such magnitude,” says Nathan Cherny, Director of the Cancer Pain and Palliative Medicine Service, Department of Medical Oncology, Shaare Zedek Medical Center, Israel, who formulated the idea some years ago.
The ESMO-MCBS offers a rational, structured and consistent approach to ‘stratify’ a drug’s clinically meaningful benefit.
A manuscript describing the project and reporting the main results from a field testing of the scale conducted on 77 cancer medicines across 10 cancer types was published today in Annals of Oncology(2).
The ESMO-MCBS project is being presented today at the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) annual meeting in Chicago in an ASCO/ESMO joint session on ‘Global Perspective on Value’(3), and will show how the Scale can provide useful information when used in conjunction with the preliminary results of the European snapshot perception survey on anti-cancer medicine availability conducted last year.
“As the international organisation committed to the interest of the oncology community at large, we are concerned about some anti-cancer medicines approved by the European Medicines Agency (EMA) not being available or affordable to patients when prescribed,” says Rolf A. Stahel, ESMO President. “With the ESMO-MCBS, we aim to signal the drugs with a large magnitude of clinical benefit which should be endorsed across Europe for rapid patient access, especially when these medicines are recommended through evidence-based standards set forth in the internationally recognised ESMO Clinical Practice Guidelines.”
ESMO intends to apply the scale prospectively to new anti-cancer drugs that will be approved by the EMA. Drugs obtaining the highest scores on the Scale will be highlighted in the ESMO Clinical Practice Guidelines, with the hope that they will be rapidly made available by health authorities across the European Union.
The ESMO-MCBS can be used in a range of settings, e.g. in public policy decision-making, to develop and/or improve clinical guidelines, in day-to-day clinical situations.
The ESMO-MCBS incorporates a structured, rational and valid approach to data interpretation and analysis that reduces the tendency to have judgments affected by bias, uninformed and/or idiosyncratic data interpretation.
“In the absence of a standardised approach for grading the magnitude of clinical benefit, conclusions and recommendations derived from studies are often hotly disputed and very modest incremental advances have often been presented, discussed and promoted as major advances or ‘breakthroughs’,” says Elisabeth G.E. de Vries, Department of Medical Oncology, University Medical Center Groningen, University of Groningen, The Netherlands, Co-Chair of the ESMO-MCBS Task Force.

“Application of the Scale will reduce the likelihood that statements of clinical benefit will be distorted by either overestimation or overstatement on one extreme or nihilism at the other,” de Vries continues.

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