Health Economics Research Unit (HERU), University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, UK.
Pharmacoeconomics. 2013 Feb;31(2):163-71. doi: 10.1007/s40273-012-0012-7.
The generic health-related quality-of-life (HR-QOL) utility measures the EQ-5D and SF-6D are both commonly used to inform healthcare policy developments. However, their application to pharmacy practice is limited and the optimal method to inform policy developments is unknown.
Our objective was to test the sensitivity of the EQ-5D and SF-6D within pharmacy when measuring whether changes in health status or other co-variates at baseline affect the effectiveness of the intervention at follow-up. A further objective was to consider the implications of the findings for pharmacy research and policy.
The EQ-5D and SF-6D utility measures were employed within a randomized controlled trial (RCT) of community pharmacy-led medicines management for patients with coronary heart disease. The intervention covered a baseline visit with the potential for follow-up. Simultaneous quantile regression assessed the impact of the intervention on both EQ-5D and SF-6D measures at follow-up, controlling for baseline health, appropriateness of treatment, personal characteristics and self-reported satisfaction.
No statistically significant difference in HR-QOL across the intervention and control groups at follow-up was reported for either measure. Increased health gain was however associated with the baseline utility score (with the EQ-5D more sensitive for those in worse health) and the appropriateness of treatment, but not patient characteristics or self-reported satisfaction.
Neither generic measure detected a gain in HR-QOL as a result of the introduction of an innovative pharmacy-based service. This finding supports other work in the area of pharmacy, where health gains have not changed following interventions. Disease-specific utility measures should be investigated as an alternative to generic approaches such as the EQ-5D and SF-6D. Given that the RCT found an increase in self-reported satisfaction, broader measures of benefit that value patient experiences, such as contingent valuation and discrete-choice experiments, should also be considered in pharmacy.
通用健康相关生活质量(HR-QOL)效用量表包括 EQ-5D 和 SF-6D,均常用于为医疗保健政策制定提供信息。然而,它们在药房实践中的应用有限,且为政策制定提供信息的最佳方法尚不清楚。
我们的目的是在药房中测试 EQ-5D 和 SF-6D 的敏感性,以衡量基线时健康状况的变化或其他协变量是否会影响干预措施在随访时的效果。另一个目的是考虑这些发现对药房研究和政策的影响。
EQ-5D 和 SF-6D 效用量表在一项社区药房主导的冠心病患者药物管理的随机对照试验(RCT)中使用。该干预措施包括基线就诊,可能进行随访。同时进行分位数回归,以控制基线健康状况、治疗的适宜性、个人特征和自我报告的满意度,评估干预措施对随访时 EQ-5D 和 SF-6D 测量值的影响。
在随访时,两种测量方法在干预组和对照组之间均未报告 HR-QOL 存在统计学显著差异。然而,健康收益的增加与基线效用评分相关(EQ-5D 对健康状况较差的患者更敏感)以及治疗的适宜性相关,但与患者特征或自我报告的满意度无关。
由于引入了创新的基于药房的服务,两种通用衡量标准都未检测到 HR-QOL 的提高。这一发现支持了该领域的其他工作,即干预后健康收益没有变化。应将疾病特异性效用衡量标准作为 EQ-5D 和 SF-6D 等通用方法的替代方法进行研究。鉴于 RCT 发现自我报告满意度有所提高,应考虑使用更广泛的衡量受益的方法,例如条件价值评估和离散选择实验,这些方法重视患者的体验。