危重病护理中与健康相关的生活质量和健康效用报告。

Vincent Issac Lau, Jeffrey A Johnson, Sean M Bagshaw, Oleksa G Rewa, John Basmaji, Kimberley A Lewis, M Elizabeth Wilcox, Kali Barrett, Francois Lamontagne, Francois Lauzier, Niall D Ferguson, Simon J W Oczkowski, Kirsten M Fiest, Daniel J Niven, Henry T Stelfox, Waleed Alhazzani, Margaret Herridge, Robert Fowler, Deborah J Cook, Bram Rochwerg, Feng Xie
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引用次数: 3

摘要

死亡率在重症监护研究中是一个公认的患者重要结果。相比之下,发病率的报告不太统一(考虑到各种危重病及其并发症),但可能对患者的功能能力和健康相关的生活质量(HRQoL)有共同的最终影响。生活质量差的生存可能是不可接受的,这取决于个体患者的价值观和偏好。因此,随着重症监护死亡率的下降,测量重症监护病房(ICU)幸存者HRQoL变得越来越重要。使用基于偏好的评分算法的HRQoL测量可以转换为固定在0(代表死亡)和1(代表完全健康)范围内的健康效用。它们可以与生存率相结合来计算质量调整生命年(QALY),这是将发病率和死亡率结合成复合结果的最广泛使用的方法之一。虽然QALYs已被用于卫生技术评估决策,但一个新兴的新角色将是告知患者、家属和医疗保健提供者在ICU护理期间和之后预期的HRQoL可能是什么。重症监护随机对照试验(RCTs)没有常规测量或报告HRQoL(直到最近),可能是由于一些患者无法参与患者报告的结果测量。HRQoL测量工具的进一步差异可能导致不可比较的值。为此,我们建议在重症监护中验证一种金标准HRQoL工具,特别是EQ-5D-5L。可以报告综合健康效用和死亡率(分类)和质量aly(汇总),通过分类可以确定哪些组成部分是质量aly结果的主要驱动因素。在危重病随机对照试验中增加HRQoL、health-utility和QALYs的使用有可能:(1)增加发现重要效应的可能性(如果它们存在的话);(2)提高科研效率;(3)除了传统的卫生技术评估外,还有助于为危重患者的最佳管理提供信息,从而制定他们的HRQoL决策。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Health-related quality-of-life and health-utility reporting in critical care.

Health-related quality-of-life and health-utility reporting in critical care.

Health-related quality-of-life and health-utility reporting in critical care.

Mortality is a well-established patient-important outcome in critical care studies. In contrast, morbidity is less uniformly reported (given the myriad of critical care illnesses and complications of each) but may have a common end-impact on a patient's functional capacity and health-related quality-of-life (HRQoL). Survival with a poor quality-of-life may not be acceptable depending on individual patient values and preferences. Hence, as mortality decreases within critical care, it becomes increasingly important to measure intensive care unit (ICU) survivor HRQoL. HRQoL measurements with a preference-based scoring algorithm can be converted into health utilities on a scale anchored at 0 (representing death) and 1 (representing full health). They can be combined with survival to calculate quality-adjusted life-years (QALY), which are one of the most widely used methods of combining morbidity and mortality into a composite outcome. Although QALYs have been use for health-technology assessment decision-making, an emerging and novel role would be to inform clinical decision-making for patients, families and healthcare providers about what expected HRQoL may be during and after ICU care. Critical care randomized control trials (RCTs) have not routinely measured or reported HRQoL (until more recently), likely due to incapacity of some patients to participate in patient-reported outcome measures. Further differences in HRQoL measurement tools can lead to non-comparable values. To this end, we propose the validation of a gold-standard HRQoL tool in critical care, specifically the EQ-5D-5L. Both combined health-utility and mortality (disaggregated) and QALYs (aggregated) can be reported, with disaggregation allowing for determination of which components are the main drivers of the QALY outcome. Increased use of HRQoL, health-utility, and QALYs in critical care RCTs has the potential to: (1) Increase the likelihood of finding important effects if they exist; (2) improve research efficiency; and (3) help inform optimal management of critically ill patients allowing for decision-making about their HRQoL, in additional to traditional health-technology assessments.

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