Abstract

To compare the responsiveness to clinical change of five widely used preference-based health-related quality-of-life indexes in two longitudinal cohorts. Five generic instruments were simultaneously administered to 376 adults undergoing cataract surgery and 160 adults in heart failure management programs. Patients were assessed at baseline and reevaluated after 1 and 6 months. The measures were the Short Form (SF)-6D (based on responses scored from SF-36v2), Self-Administered Quality of Well-being Scale (QWB-SA), the EuroQol-5D developed by the EuroQol Group, the Health Utilities Indexes Mark 2 (HUI2) and Mark 3 (HUI3). Cataract patients completed the National Eye Institute Visual Functioning Questionnaire-25, and heart failure patients completed the Minnesota Living with Heart Failure Questionnaire. Responsiveness was estimated by the standardized response mean. For cataract patients, mean changes between baseline and 1-month follow-up for the generic indices ranged from 0.00 (SF-6D) to 0.052 (HUI3) and were statistically significant for all indexes except the SF-6D. For heart failure patients, only the SF-6D showed significant change from baseline to 1 month, whereas only the QWB-SA change was significant between 1 and 6 months. Preference-based methods for measuring health outcomes are not equally responsive to change.

Keywords

PreferenceHeart failureMedicineInternal medicineCardiologyStatisticsMathematics

MeSH Terms

AdultAgedAged80 and overCataract ExtractionFemaleHealth StatusHeart FailureHumansMaleMiddle AgedOutcome AssessmentHealth CarePatient SelectionPsychometricsQuality of LifeQuality-Adjusted Life YearsSickness Impact ProfileSurveys and Questionnaires

Affiliated Institutions

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Publication Info

Year
2010
Type
article
Volume
64
Issue
5
Pages
497-506
Citations
55
Access
Closed

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Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

55
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2
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42
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Cite This

Robert M. Kaplan, Steven R. Tally, Ron D. Hays et al. (2010). Five preference-based indexes in cataract and heart failure patients were not equally responsive to change. Journal of Clinical Epidemiology , 64 (5) , 497-506. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jclinepi.2010.04.010

Identifiers

DOI
10.1016/j.jclinepi.2010.04.010
PMID
20685077
PMCID
PMC3973151

Data Quality

Data completeness: 86%