The Comparative Health Outcomes, Policy, and Economics (CHOICE) Institute, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA.
Center for the Evaluation of Value and Risk in Health, Institute for Clinical Research and Health Policy Studies, Tufts Medical Center, Boston, MA, USA.
Med Decis Making. 2021 Apr;41(3):366-372. doi: 10.1177/0272989X20985821. Epub 2021 Jan 15.
Health state utility values (HSUVs) are among the most influential attributes of cost-effectiveness analyses (CEAs). Our objective was to evaluate whether industry-funded studies select systematically different HSUVs as compared with studies without industry funding.
Among 10 diseases with high disease burden in the United States, we further identified 31 progressive health states. We then searched the Tufts Medical Center's CEA Registry to identify studies that included HSUVs and were submitted to the registry between 2002 and 2019. Two reviewers mapped the free-text descriptions of health states onto the 31 predefined health states. We analyzed the effect of industry funding on the point estimates of these HSUVs with a beta regression. We also analyzed the difference between related health states within studies by funding source with a linear regression.
After identifying 26,222 HSUVs from 4198 CEAs, we matched 2573 HSUVs to the 31 predefined health states. We observed large variations within each health state: 12 of 31 health states included a range of HSUVs greater than 0.5. The point estimate model showed 1 statistically significant difference of 31 comparisons between studies with any industry funding and those without. The utility difference model found 3 significant differences out of 39 comparisons between CEAs with any industry funding and those without.
Inclusion of unpublished CEAs may have affected our conclusions about the effect of industry funding on selection of HSUVs. We also relied on free-text descriptions of health states available in the CEA Registry and did not include adjustment for multiple comparisons.
Limited evidence exists that industry-funded studies select different HSUVs compared to non-industry-funded studies for the health states we considered.
健康状态效用值(HSUVs)是成本效益分析(CEA)中最具影响力的属性之一。我们的目的是评估与没有行业资助的研究相比,行业资助的研究是否系统地选择了不同的 HSUVs。
在美国高疾病负担的 10 种疾病中,我们进一步确定了 31 个渐进式健康状态。然后,我们在塔夫茨医疗中心的 CEA 登记处搜索了包含 HSUVs 并在 2002 年至 2019 年期间提交给登记处的研究。两名审查员将健康状态的自由文本描述映射到 31 个预先定义的健康状态上。我们使用贝塔回归分析了行业资助对这些 HSUV 点估计值的影响。我们还通过线性回归分析了按资助来源对研究中相关健康状态之间的差异。
在从 4198 项 CEA 中确定了 26222 个 HSUVs 后,我们将 2573 个 HSUVs 与 31 个预先定义的健康状态匹配。我们观察到每个健康状态内的变化很大:31 个健康状态中有 12 个包含大于 0.5 的 HSUV 范围。点估计模型显示,在有任何行业资助和没有任何行业资助的研究之间,有 31 个比较中有 1 个具有统计学意义的差异。效用差异模型在有任何行业资助和没有任何行业资助的 CEA 之间的 39 个比较中发现了 3 个显著差异。
包括未发表的 CEA 可能影响了我们对行业资助对 HSUV 选择影响的结论。我们还依赖于 CEA 登记处提供的健康状态的自由文本描述,并且没有对多重比较进行调整。
对于我们考虑的健康状态,与非行业资助的研究相比,有限的证据表明,行业资助的研究选择了不同的 HSUVs。