US valuation of health outcomes measured using the PROMIS-29
Benjamin M Craig, Bryce B Reeve, Paul M Brown, David Cella, Ron D Hays, Joseph Lipscomb, A Simon Pickard, Dennis A Revicki, Benjamin M Craig, Bryce B Reeve, Paul M Brown, David Cella, Ron D Hays, Joseph Lipscomb, A Simon Pickard, Dennis A Revicki
Abstract
Objectives: Health valuation studies enhance economic evaluations of treatments by estimating the value of health-related quality of life (HRQOL). The Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) includes a 29-item short-form HRQOL measure, the PROMIS-29.
Methods: To value PROMIS-29 responses on a quality-adjusted life-year scale, we conducted a national survey (N = 7557) using quota sampling based on the US 2010 Census. Based on 541 paired comparisons with over 350 responses each, pair-specific probabilities were incorporated into a weighted least-squared estimator.
Results: All losses in HRQOL influenced choice; however, respondents valued losses in physical function, anxiety, depression, sleep, and pain more than those in fatigue and social functioning.
Conclusions: This article introduces a novel approach to valuing HRQOL for economic evaluations using paired comparisons and provides a tool to translate PROMIS-29 responses into quality-adjusted life-years.
Keywords: discrete choice experiments; patient-reported outcomes; quality-adjusted life-years.
Copyright © 2014 International Society for Pharmacoeconomics and Outcomes Research (ISPOR). Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Figures
Source: PubMed