1 / 40

2008 Seminar Series Measuring and Analyzing Health Outcomes I-Chan Huang, PhD

2008 Seminar Series Measuring and Analyzing Health Outcomes I-Chan Huang, PhD Lecture 2 Measurement Instrument and Method for Health Outcomes Research Department of Epidemiology & Health Policy Research University of Florida College of Medicine September 29, 2008 Announcement / Q&A

paul2
Télécharger la présentation

2008 Seminar Series Measuring and Analyzing Health Outcomes I-Chan Huang, PhD

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 2008 Seminar Series Measuring and Analyzing Health Outcomes I-Chan Huang, PhD Lecture 2Measurement Instrument and Method for Health Outcomes Research Department of Epidemiology & Health Policy ResearchUniversity of Florida College of MedicineSeptember 29, 2008

  2. Announcement / Q&A • Syllabus, reading materials and PowerPoint • Course website: www.ehpr.ufl.edu/maho • Use your username and password • Q&A • How can I learn about data management and analysis (e.g., software and statistical code) from this seminar series? • How can this seminar series help me address the research questions I encountered?

  3. Outline • Important domains of HRQOL/QOL • Measurement Instrument • Measurement Method • Note: • Only some instruments will be introduced in today’s • seminar. Please contact ICH if you need information • about other instruments and measurement methods. • Will introduce “Measurement Theory” on Oct 25.

  4. Development of PRO/HRQOL instruments Fig 1: Generic instruments Fig 2: Condition-specific instruments McHorney CA, Annu Rev Public Health 1999, pp. 309

  5. Health outcomes Health Profile Health states and impact on daily functioning and well-being Health Utility A global value of health states Generic measure Disease- or condition-specific measure Direct measure Indirect measure SF-36 WHOQOL-100 MOS-HIV EORTC QLQ TTO SG EQ-5D HUI-3 Type of health outcomes instrument

  6. Domain of HRQOL/QOL outcomes • No consensus on • Specific domains to be measured • Consensus on • A multi-dimensional concept • Agreement on primary and additional domains [Berzon R. Qual Life Res 1993] • Experts’ recommendations from a conference • Primary domains: universally important to all diseases or conditions • Additional domains: important to specific diseases or conditions

  7. Primary domains of HRQOL/QOL • Physical functioning • Ability to perform daily physical activities • Psychological functioning • Level of emotional-welling, e.g., anxiety, depression, guilt and worry • Social functioning • Ability to interact with family, friends and the community • Perception of health status • Self-report of health, which may be different from health status rated by clinicians and significant other • Overall life satisfaction • Perception of overall sense of well-being

  8. Additional domains of HRQOL/QOL • Neuropsychological / cognitive functioning • Memory, recognition, spatial skills, motor coordination • Intimacy and sexual functioning • Type, frequency, satisfaction with sexual activity • Pain • Important for cancer patients or patients with chronic conditions • Symptoms • Severity, frequency, and extent to which impacts daily functioning • Sleep disturbance • Sleep patterns and restorativeness of sleep • Spirituality • Spiritual beliefs and religious values in everyday lives and the ways of coping • Personal productivity

  9. Health profileGeneric measurement

  10. Generic instrument – MOS SF-36v2 • Development • John E. Ware, Jr (MOS SF-36v1; 1992) • From 116 items of the RANDMedical Outcomes Study (MOS) • 8 domains (36 items: 35 +1) • Physical functioning (10 items) • Role limitations due to physical problems (4 items) • Bodily pain (2 items) • General health perceptions (5 items) • Vitality (4 items) • Social functioning (2 items) • Role limitations due to emotional problems (3 items) • Mental Health (5 items) • Other: health transition (1 item) – not used for scoring • Response category • Likert type: 3, 5, or 6 categories

  11. Generic instrument – MOS SF-36v2 (Cont’d 1) Ware JE. 1998, J CLin Epidemiol

  12. Generic instrument – MOS SF-36v2 (Cont’d 2) Ware JE. 1998, J CLin Epidemiol

  13. Generic instrument – MOS SF-36v2 (Cont’d 3) • Alternative forms • SF-12 and SF-8: allowing two summary scores only • RAND-36 and RAND-12: matter of scoring methods • National norm • Comparing the impact of different disease groups on HRQOL outcomes • International projects (IQOLA) • 103 language versions • For international comparison, recommend the use of factor loadings derived from US norm as a standard to calculate domain score of different cultural groups

  14. Generic instrument – WHOQOL-100 • Development • WHOQOL Group (1993) • Allowing the inclusion of national-specific items • 6 domains (24 facets and 100 items) • Physical health (3 facets; 12 items) • Psychologicalhealth (5 facets; 20 items) • Level of independence (4 facets; 16 items) • Social relationship (3 facets; 12 items) • Environment (8 facets; 32 items) • Spirituality, religiousness & personal beliefs (1 facet; 4 items) • Other: overall QOL and general health (4 items) • Response category • Likert type: 5 categories • Language versions: 42 • Alternative form: WHOQOL-BREF and WHOQOL-8

  15. Comparing domains across generic instruments

  16. Taking a closer look at “facets” of the WHOQOL-100

  17. Motivations Whether the same domain (e.g., physical functioning) in the SF-36 and WHOQOL-BREF measure the same construct or not? Methods Factor analysis Relative validity using different anchors: chronic conditions, health care utilization, and a global rating of QOL Conclusions The SF-36 and WHOQOL measures different construct The SF-36 measures the impact of disease / treatment on daily functioning The WHOQOL measures general satisfaction with life The same type of instrument may measure different construct[Huang IC, Qual Life Res 2006]

  18. * Using principal component method with eigenvalue >1.0. ** Communality: proportion of a variable’s variance explained by a factor structure The same type of instrument may measure different construct[Huang IC, Qual Life Res 2006] (Cont’d 1)

  19. The same type of instrument may measure different construct[Huang IC, Qual Life Res 2006] (Cont’d 2)

  20. The same type of instrument may measure different construct[Huang IC, Qual Life Res 2006] (Cont’d 3) † Adjusting for age, gender, educational background, and marriage status

  21. Motivations Does the same domain (e.g., physical functioning) in the SF-36 and the WHOQOL-BREF measure the same construct? Methods Factor analysis Relative validity using different anchors: chronic conditions, health care utilization and global rating of QOL Conclusions The SF-36 and WHOQOL-BREF measures different construct The SF-36 measures the impact of disease / treatment on daily functioning The WHOQOL-BREF measures general satisfaction with life The same type of instrument may measure different constructs[Huang IC, Qual Life Res 2006]

  22. Health profileDisease-specific measurement

  23. Adopted from the SF-20 HIV/AIDS -specific Disease-specific instrument – MOS-HIV • Development • Albert W. Wu (1993) • Parallel to the MOS SF-36v1 • 10 domains (35 items: 34 +1) • Physical functioning (6 items) • Pain (2 items) • Role functioning (2 items) • Social functioning (1 items) • General health perceptions (5 items) • Energy and fatigue (4 items) • Mental health (5 item) • Cognitive functioning (4 items) • Health distress (4 item) • Quality of life (1 items) • Other: Health transition (1 items) – not used for scoring • Response category • Likert type: 3, 5, or 6 categories

  24. Functioning scales Symptom scales Disease-specific instrument – EORTC QLQ • Development • Neil K. Aaronson (1993) • European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) for international clinical trials in oncology • EORTC-QLQ C30: Core questionnaire • Physical functioning (5 items) • Role functioning (2 items) • Social functioning (2 items) • Cognitive functioning (2 items) • Emotional functioning (4 items) • Fatigue (3 items) • Pain (2 items) • Nausea and vomiting (2 items) • Global health status / QOL (2 items) • 6 single items (dyspnoea, loss of appetite, insomnia, constipation, diarrhea and financial loss)

  25. + EORTC QLQ C-30 Disease-specific instrument – EORTC QLQ (Cont’d) • Response category • Likert type: 4 or 7 categories • Disease or treatment-specific “modules”, e.g., • EORTC QLQ-LC13 (Lung) • EORTC QLQ-BR23 (Breast) • EORTC QLQ-H&N35 (Head & Neck) • EORTC QLQ-OV28 (Ovarian) • EORTC QLQ-CX24 (Cervical) • EORTC QLQ-PR25 (Prostate) • Each module include specific scales, directly relevant to • Disease-related symptoms (e.g., any pain in arm or shoulder) • Morbidity / side effect as a result of specific therapy (e.g., loss of hair, a dry mouth)

  26. Pros/cons of generic vs. disease-specific approaches

  27. Criticism of disease-specific instruments • Over time, some domains may be not imperative due to the introduction of new treatments • For example, the introduction of HAART has changed the survival of HIV/AIDS (from acute to chronic disease) and led to new side effects • Measurement of cognitive (dis)functioning in the MOS-HIV (due to opportunistic infection or AIDS dementia) becomes less important if compared to 10 years ago • Other issue concerning about appearance (facial lipoatrophy due to side effect of treatment) should be included in the measurement

  28. Motivations Should we use generic and / or disease-specific instruments for HRQOL measurement? Methods Diabetes HRQOL using the SF-36 and the D-39 Validating measurement using a variety of clinical measures 1) Lab measure: HbA1c and 2-h postorandial plasma glucose 2) Complication: retinopathy, nephropathy, neuropathy, diabetic foot disorder, cardiovascular and cerebrovascular disorders Findings The SF-36 and D-39 were superior to each other in different regards The SF-36 has superior discriminative validity for complications The D-39 has superior discriminative validity for lab measures Combined use of disease-specific and generic instruments[Huang IC, Value Health 2008]

  29. Direct and indirect health utility measurement • A single index • Value: 0 (worst health) through 1 (best health) • Direct approach (1 stage) • Asking respondents to directly indicate their preference for the health state as one value • Time trade-off (TTO), standard gamble (SG), rating scale (GS) • Indirect approach (2 stages) • Using HRQOL instruments to response their health state and then converting to one utility value using societal preference weights • EQ-5D, Health Utility Index (HUI), SF-6D, Quality of Well-being (QWB)

  30. Health utility Direct measurement

  31. Perfect health 1.0 Impaired health ? Utility 0 0 Today X Death t (1 yr) Death Time Direct health utility measurement – Time Trade-off • Purpose • Eliciting utility by comparing the value of different health states vs. length of survival • Method • Choices (A): living in a “impaired health state” for time t (e.g., 1 year) • Choice (B): living in a “perfect health state” for time x • Varying time x or t in a systematic fashion to identify the point where subject is indifferent in preference between two scenarios • Health utility = x / t

  32. Perfect health Prob. p Choice (A) Prob. (1-p) Dead Choice (B) Current health state (e.g., cancer) Direct health utility measurement – Standard Gamble • Purpose • Eliciting utility by comparing different choices that account for uncertainty, including risk of death or other outcomes • Method • Choice (A): currently in a specific health state (with symptoms) • Choice (B): a treatment with p% of being perfect health (removing symptoms) and (1-p)% of dead • Varying the probabilities in a systematic fashion to identify the point where subject is indifferent in preference between Choice (A) and (B) • Health utility = p

  33. Health utility Indirect measurement

  34. Indirect health utility measurement – EQ-5D • Development • EuroQol Group (1990) • 5 domains (5 items) • Mobility (1 item) • Usual activities (1 item) • Self-care (1 item) • Pain/discomfort (1 item) • Anxiety/depression (1 item) • Other: one visual analogue scale (0: worst health state; 100: best health state) • Level of health state • 3 levels (no problems, some problems, and severe problems) • Possible health states • 243 (= 3x3x3x3x3)

  35. Indirect health utility measurement – EQ-5D (Cont’d) • Valuation of health states (preference weights) • Protocol: Measurement and Valuation of Health (MVH) • Population: General population in UK [Paul Dolan, Med Care 1997] and in US [Shaw JW, Med Care 2005] • Utility elicitation: using TTO approach for 45 health states and then extrapolating to 243 health states • Scoring system (US): • Health utility for an individual subject (e.g., health state 11223): 1-0-0-0.14-0.173-0.45-(-0.28)-0.011-0-0 = 0.506

  36. Indirect health utility measurement – HUI-3 • Development • George W. Torrance and David Feeny (1990) • Focusing on “within the skin” abilities rather than role performance and social interaction • 8 “attributes” (8 items) • Vision (1 item) • Hearing (1 item) • Speech (1 item) • Ambulation (1 item) • Dexterity (1 item) • Emotion (1 item) • Cognition (1 item) • Pain (1 item) • Level of health states • 5 levels: Speech, emotion, and pain • 6 levels: Vision, hearing, ambulation, dexterity, and cognition

  37. Indirect health utility measurement – HUI-3 (Cont’d) • Possible health states • 972,000 (= 5x5x5x6x6x6x6x6) • Valuation of health states (preference weights) • Population: General population in Canada [Feeny D, Med Care 2002] • Utility elicitation: using RS approach for 73 health states and then extrapolating to 972,000 health states • Scoring system (Canada): • Health utility for an individual subject : 1.371 * (b1 * b2 * b3 * b4 * b5 * b6 * b7 * b8) - 0.371

  38. Pros / cons of direct vs. indirect approaches

  39. Crosswalk between health profile and health utility[Huang IC, Health Serv Res 2007] • Motivations • Can we predict health utility using health profiles? • Methods • Using MOS-HIV to predict utility score derived from the EQ-5D

  40. Take home points • How to select instruments? • Conceptual framework of the HRQO/QOL • Characteristics of the population • Purpose of the study (e.g., decision-making at clinical or policy level) • Domains of different instruments with the same label (e.g., physical functioning) may measure different HRQOL/QOL concept • Using qualitative and psychometric approaches (esp., head-to-head comparisons) to elicit instruments genuine properties • Combining generic and disease-specific measures to better capture comprehensive impact of diseases on HRQOL/QOL outcomes

More Related