School of Health and Related Research, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, South Yorkshire, UK.
Department of Psychology, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, South Yorkshire, UK.
Med Decis Making. 2020 Jan;40(1):90-105. doi: 10.1177/0272989X19889897. Epub 2019 Dec 2.
There is limited evidence on the long-term effectiveness of behavioral weight-management interventions, and thus, when conducting health economic modeling, assumptions are made about weight trajectories. The aims of this review were to examine these assumptions made about weight trajectories, the evidence sources used to justify them, and the impact of assumptions on estimated cost-effectiveness. Given the evidence that some psychosocial variables are associated with weight-loss trajectories, we also aimed to examine the extent to which psychosocial variables have been used to estimate weight trajectories and whether psychosocial variables were measured within cited evidence sources. A search of databases (Medline, PubMed, Cochrane, NHS Economic Evaluation, Embase, PSYCinfo, CINAHL, EconLit) was conducted using keywords related to overweight, weight-management, and economic evaluation. Economic evaluations of weight-management interventions that included modeling beyond trial data were included. Within the 38 eligible articles, 6 types of assumptions were reported (weight loss maintained, weight loss regained immediately, linear weight regain, subgroup-specific trajectories, exponential decay of effect, maintenance followed by regain). Fifteen articles cited at least 1 evidence source to support the assumption reported. The assumption used affected the assessment of cost-effectiveness in 9 of the 19 studies that tested this in sensitivity analyses. None of the articles reported using psychosocial factors to estimate weight trajectories. However, psychosocial factors were measured in evidence sources cited by 11 health economic models. . Given the range of weight trajectories reported and the potential impact on funding decisions, further research is warranted to investigate how psychosocial variables measured in trials can be used within health economic models to simulate heterogeneous weight trajectories and potentially improve the accuracy of cost-effectiveness estimates.
关于行为体重管理干预措施的长期效果的证据有限,因此,在进行健康经济建模时,会对体重轨迹做出假设。本综述的目的是检查这些关于体重轨迹的假设、用于证明这些假设的证据来源,以及这些假设对估计成本效益的影响。鉴于一些心理社会变量与体重减轻轨迹相关的证据,我们还旨在检查心理社会变量在多大程度上被用于估计体重轨迹,以及心理社会变量是否在引用的证据来源中进行了测量。 使用与超重、体重管理和经济评估相关的关键词,对数据库(Medline、PubMed、Cochrane、NHS 经济评估、Embase、PSYCinfo、CINAHL、EconLit)进行了搜索。纳入了包含试验数据以外建模的体重管理干预措施的经济评估。 在 38 篇合格文章中,报告了 6 种类型的假设(体重持续减轻、体重立即恢复减轻、线性体重恢复、特定亚组轨迹、效果指数衰减、维持后恢复)。15 篇文章至少引用了 1 个证据来源来支持报告的假设。在 19 项进行敏感性分析以检验成本效益的研究中,有 9 项研究发现所使用的假设影响了成本效益评估。没有一篇文章报告使用心理社会因素来估计体重轨迹。然而,11 个健康经济模型引用的证据来源中测量了心理社会因素。 鉴于报告的体重轨迹范围广泛,以及对资金决策的潜在影响,有必要进一步研究如何在健康经济模型中使用试验中测量的心理社会变量来模拟异质体重轨迹,并有可能提高成本效益估计的准确性。