晚期庞贝病患者的生活质量:英国的定性访谈和一般公共事业评估。

IF 2.3 Q2 ECONOMICS
Journal of Health Economics and Outcomes Research Pub Date : 2023-03-03 eCollection Date: 2023-01-01 DOI:10.36469/001c.68157
Lena Hubig, Anna-Katrine Sussex, Alasdair MacCulloch, Derralynn Hughes, Ryan Graham, Liz Morris, Syed Raza, Andrew J Lloyd, Amanda Sowinski, Katy Gallop
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:迟发性庞贝病(LOPD)是一种罕见的进行性神经肌肉疾病,其特征是骨骼肌无力,包括呼吸和膈肌功能障碍。LOPD患者通常最终需要移动性和/或通气支持。目的:本研究旨在开发英国LOPD的健康状态小插曲并估计健康状态效用值。方法:为LOPD的7种健康状态开发Vignette,并根据移动性和/或通气支持来定义状态。Vignette是根据患者报告的3期PROPEL试验(NCT03729362)的结果数据起草的,并辅以文献综述。对LOPD患者和临床专家进行了定性访谈,以探讨LOPD对健康相关生活质量(HRQoL)的影响,并审查小插曲草案。Vignette是在对LOPD患者进行第二轮采访后最终确定的,并用于对英国人群的健康状况评估。参与者使用EQ-5D-5L、视觉模拟量表和时间权衡访谈对健康状态进行评分。结果:对12名LOPD患者和2名临床专家进行了访谈。在访谈之后,增加了4项关于依赖他人、膀胱控制问题、平衡问题/对跌倒的恐惧和沮丧的新陈述。对一个具有代表性的英国人口样本进行了100次访谈。平均时间权衡效用范围为0.754(SD = 0.31)(无支持)至0.132(SD = 0.50)(取决于有创通气和移动性支持)。同样,EQ-5D-5L公用设施的范围为0.608(SD = 0.12)至-0.078(SD = 0.22)。讨论:研究中获得的效用与文献中报道的效用一致(0.670-0.853表示不支持状态)。渐晕内容基于可靠的定量和定性证据,并捕捉到LOPD对HRQoL的主要影响。随着疾病进展的加剧,公众对健康状况的评价一直较低。严重州的效用估计存在更大的不确定性,这表明参与者发现更难对其进行评级。结论:本研究提供了LOPD的效用估计,可用于LOPD治疗的经济建模。我们的研究结果突出了LOPD的高疾病负担,并强化了减缓疾病进展的社会价值。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Quality of Life with Late-Onset Pompe Disease: Qualitative Interviews and General Public Utility Estimation in the United Kingdom.

Quality of Life with Late-Onset Pompe Disease: Qualitative Interviews and General Public Utility Estimation in the United Kingdom.

Quality of Life with Late-Onset Pompe Disease: Qualitative Interviews and General Public Utility Estimation in the United Kingdom.

Background: Late-onset Pompe disease (LOPD) is a rare, progressive neuromuscular condition typically characterized by weakness of skeletal muscles, including those involved in respiration and diaphragmatic dysfunction. Individuals with LOPD typically eventually require mobility and/or ventilatory support. Objectives: This study aimed to develop health state vignettes and estimate health state utility values for LOPD in the United Kingdom. Methods: Vignettes were developed for 7 health states of LOPD with states defined in terms of mobility and/or ventilatory support. Vignettes were drafted based on patient-reported outcome data from the Phase 3 PROPEL trial (NCT03729362) and supplemented by a literature review. Qualitative interviews with individuals living with LOPD and clinical experts were conducted to explore the health-related quality-of-life (HRQoL) impact of LOPD and to review the draft vignettes. Vignettes were finalized following a second round of interviews with individuals living with LOPD and used in health state valuation exercises with people of the UK population. Participants rated the health states using the EQ-5D-5L, visual analogue scale, and time trade-off interviews. Results: Twelve individuals living with LOPD and 2 clinical experts were interviewed. Following the interviews, 4 new statements were added regarding dependence on others, bladder control problems, balance issues/fear of falling, and frustration. One hundred interviews with a representative UK population sample were completed. Mean time trade-off utilities ranged from 0.754 (SD = 0.31) (no support) to 0.132 (SD = 0.50) (invasive ventilatory and mobility support-dependent). Similarly, EQ-5D-5L utilities ranged from 0.608 (SD = 0.12) to -0.078 (SD = 0.22). Discussion: The utilities obtained in the study are consistent with utilities reported in the literature (0.670-0.853 for nonsupport state). The vignette content was based on robust quantitative and qualitative evidence and captured the main HRQoL impacts of LOPD. The general public rated the health states consistently lower with increasing disease progression. There was greater uncertainty around utility estimates for the severe states, suggesting that participants found it harder to rate them. Conclusion: This study provides utility estimates for LOPD that can be used in economic modeling of treatments for LOPD. Our findings highlight the high disease burden of LOPD and reinforce the societal value of slowing disease progression.

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