With the development of photodynamic therapy and other

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "With the development of photodynamic therapy and other"

Transcription

1 The Impact of Age-Related Macular Degeneration on Health Status Utility Values Mireia Espallargues, 1,2 Carolyn J. Czoski-Murray, 1 Nicholas J. Bansback, 1 Jill Carlton, 3 Grace M. Lewis, 3 Lindsey A. Hughes, 3 Christopher S. Brand, 4 and John E. Brazier 1 PURPOSE. To estimate health status utility values in patients with age-related macular degeneration (ARMD) associated with visual impairments, by using preference-based measures of health. METHOD. This was a cross-sectional study involving patients with unilateral or bilateral ARMD who attended a large teaching hospital. Patients underwent visual tests (near and distant visual acuity [VA] and contrast sensitivity [CS]) and completed health status questionnaires including the Index of Visual Function (VF)-14 and three preference-based measures (the Health Utilities Index Mark III [HUI-3], the EuroQoL Health Questionnaire [EQ-5D], and the Short Form 6D Health Status Questionnaire [SF-6D]) and the time tradeoff (TTO). The mean health status is presented for five groups, defined according to the VA in the better-seeing eye and for four CS groups. RESULTS. Two hundred nine patients were recruited with substantial loss of visual function as obtained by visual tests (mean decimal VA in the better-seeing eye: 0.2) and self-report (mean VF-14 score: 41.5). The mean ( SD) utilities were for HUI-3, for SF-6D, for EQ-5D, and for TTO. The HUI-3 had the highest correlation with VA and CS (0.40 and 0.34), followed by TTO (0.25 and 0.21). Across the VA and CS groups, only HUI3 and TTO had a significant linear trend (P 0.05). In a regression model with CS and VA as explanatory variables, only the coefficient on CS was statistically significant. CONCLUSIONS. ARMD is associated with a substantial impact on patients health status, but this was not reflected in two of the generic preference-based measures used. The HUI-3 seems to be the instrument of choice for use in economic evaluations in which community data are needed. It may be more appropriate to base economic models on CS or some combination of CS and VA rather than on VA alone. (Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci. 2005;46: ) DOI: /iovs From the 1 Health Economics and Decision Science, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, United Kingdom; the 2 Catalan Agency for Health Technology Assessment and Research, Catalan Health Service, Catalan, Spain; and the Departments of 3 Orthoptics and 4 Ophthalmology, Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust, Sheffield, United Kingdom. Supported by Novartis, Basel Switzerland; Grants 2003BE and 2004BE DURSI (ME) from the Government of Catalonia, Spain; and funding from the Medical Research Council Health Services Research Collaboration (JEB). Submitted for publication January 21, 2005; revised May 19, 2005; accepted September 19, Disclosure: M. Espallargues, None; C.J. Czoski-Murray, Novartis (F); N.J. Bansback, None; J. Carlton, None; G.M. Lewis, None; L.A. Hughes, None; C.S. Brand, Novartis (C), Pfizer (C); J.E. Brazier, Novartis (C), Pfizer (C) The publication costs of this article were defrayed in part by page charge payment. This article must therefore be marked advertisement in accordance with 18 U.S.C solely to indicate this fact. Corresponding author: John E. Brazier, Health Economics and Decision Science, ScHARR [School of Health and Related Research], The University of Sheffield, Regent Court, 30 Regent Street, Sheffield S1 4DA, UK; j.e.brazier@sheffield.ac.uk. With the development of photodynamic therapy and other therapies for age-related macular degeneration (ARMD), there has been increasing interest in assessing the impact on quality of life of this condition, to establish the clinical and cost effectiveness of new interventions. There are several wellestablished objective tests of visual function used in clinical trials, but these do not assess quality of life nor do they provide the measures needed to inform cross program resource allocation decisions. During the past two decades, economic evaluation has become increasingly important as a tool to aid decision-makers concerning the allocation of scarce resources within healthcare. Several authoritative guidelines for the conduct of economic evaluations in healthcare have been produced around the world, including the United States, 1 Canada, 2 Australia, 3 The Netherlands, 4 and England and Wales. 5 A central component in all guidelines concerns the use of Quality Adjusted Life Years (QALYs) as the measure of effectiveness. The QALY approach combines the value of health-related quality-of-life (HRQoL) with the value of length of life into a single index. It does this by assigning a value to each state of health, using a scale with 0 for states regarded as bad as being dead, 1 for states of perfect health, and 0 for states regarded as worse than being dead. 6 A person s time profile of health status can be valued and summed to a total number of QALYs. The difference in QALYs with and without an intervention provides a measure of the benefit. Interventions can then be compared in terms of their incremental cost per QALY ratio. A key challenge in ARMD and other ophthalmic diseases is to find a suitable measure for obtaining these health status values. Brown et al., 7 in a seminal study, have estimated utility values for different levels of VA in patients with ARMD. The study recruited 80 white patients with unilateral or bilateral ARMD and visual loss to a minimum of 20/40 in at least one eye. Mean health status values have been published across five levels of VA in the better-seeing eye, using the techniques of time-tradeoff (TTO) and standard-gamble (SG). Aside from the small sample size, one concern with the study by Brown et al. is it obtained data directly from patients. Currently, most public agencies recommend that general population values be used to derive QALYs (Canada, Australia, The Netherlands, and England and Wales), though there are strong arguments for using patient data in cost-effectiveness analysis. 8 Furthermore, the Brown study only examined the effect of visual acuity (VA) on HRQoL. There has been an increasing interest in the relationship between health state values with other visual functioning measures such as contrast sensitivity (CS). In the current study, we sought to assess the impact of visual impairment due to ARMD on three generic preferencebased measures (utility valuation by the EuroQoL Health Questionnaire [EQ-5D], the Health Utilities Index Mark III [HUI-3], and the Short Form 6D Health Status Questionnaire [SF-6D]), along with a patient s own state-of-health valuation (direct elicitation with the TTO), and assessment of visual function using a vision-specific questionnaire of HRQoL (the Index of Visual Function [VF]-14). Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science, November 2005, Vol. 46, No Copyright Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology

2 IOVS, November 2005, Vol. 46, No. 11 Impact of ARMD on Health Status Utility Values 4017 TABLE 1. Sociodemographic and Clinical Characteristics of Participants with ARMD n Mean (SD) or % Range Sociodemographic Woman (%) Age, mean (SD) (7.5) Living alone (%) Currently employed (%) Clinical Months since diagnosis of ARMD, mean (SD) (38.7) Type of lesion (% diffuse or dry) Previous PDT (%) Chronic illness or disability (%) Limits patient s activities (%) Visual Better-seeing eye VA (distant, LogMAR), mean (SD) (0.67) Worse-seeing eye VA (distant, LogMAR), mean (SD) (0.75) Binocular near VA (logmar), mean (SD) (0.88) Binocular contrast sensitivity (log units), mean (SD) 196* 0.69 (0.48) * Eleven patients were unable to score the contrast sensitivity test due to low vision. METHODS Participants and Setting This was a cross-sectional study of patients with unilateral or bilateral ARMD from a large Sheffield Teaching Hospital (UK) who attended either the Ophthalmic Clinic or the Low Vision Training Service (from October 2003 to March 2004). All patients diagnosed with ARMD were eligible, provided they were able and willing to respond to the interview protocol. Both atrophic (dry), characterized by geographic atrophy, and exudative (wet), characterized by choroidal neovascularization, ARMD were considered. Patients known to have other ocular comorbidities (e.g., glaucoma, uveitis, cataract, amblyopia, corneal scarring, vitreous hemorrhage, optic neuropathy, or other eye conditions that could cause visual impairment) were excluded. Data Collection Patients recruited from ophthalmic clinics were asked to attend a special session to undertake additional examination. At the routine clinic visit, patients had slit-lamp biomicroscopy, dilated fundus examination, and fluoroscopy (fluorescein angiography or scanning laser ophthalmoscope [SLO], if required). At the special session, measurements of VA and CS were obtained by two senior orthoptists seconded to the study. No measurements involved dilated fundus examinations. Participants recruited from the low-vision database attended the same special sessions and were not reexamined by an ophthalmologist. The low-vision register comprises most patients previously diagnosed with ARMD at the hospital. Trained interviewers administered the VF-14, a number of preference-based measures (HUI3, EQ-5D, and SF-6D), a visual analog scale (VAS), and TTO by direct elicitation. Sociodemographic data, health, and social services utilization and participation in support groups, were also ascertained. Clinical information including time since diagnosis of ARMD, subtype, previous, or planned photodynamic therapy, previous cataract extraction, training in or use of different low vision aids/techniques for ARMD patients and, the presence of a chronic illness or disability and limitation other than vision problems were obtained as well. The visual tests and questionnaires were administered by a standard protocol. The study was approved by the South Sheffield Research Ethics Committee and followed the tenets of the Declaration of Helsinki. Patients gave informed written consent before taking part in the study. Measures Visual Tests. LogMAR best corrected distance VA in left and right eyes and binocular near VA were measured with a Bailey-Lovie chart by the letter-by-letter scoring method. Counting fingers, hand motion, no light perception, or unable to see were assigned the worst possible value in the logmar (logarithm of the minimum angle of resolution scale: 1 letter at 10 cm is 2.86 logmar or in the decimal scale). CS was measured binocularly with a Pelli-Robson chart (in log units), by the triplet scoring method, 9,10 at 1-meter distance. Those patients unable to score at all on CS were assigned the minimum value on the test (0 log units). Visual Function Index VF-14. The VF-14 is a patient-reported measure of functional disability related to vision based on 14 everyday activities that can be affected by cataracts (e.g., recognizing people, seeing steps and curbs, performing certain manual tasks, filling in forms, cooking, watching TV, engaging in two leisure activities and four reading activities, and driving during the day and night). Only activities that the patient considers relevant to his or her situation are scored (with five possible responses from no difficulty to unable to perform the activity). The final score ranges from 0 (maximum disability) to 100 (no disability). 11 The validity and internal consistency had TABLE 2. Summary Statistics of Patient-Based Health Status and Preference-Based Measures in Patients with ARMD Health Status Measure Possible Range* n Mean (SD) Median Observed Range EQ-5D (0.22) SF-6D (0.14) HUI (0.28) VAS (18.1) TTO (0.31) VF (28.4) * Higher values indicate better health.

3 4018 Espallargues et al. IOVS, November 2005, Vol. 46, No. 11 TABLE 3. Pearson s Correlations and Significance Level between CS, VA, VF-14, and the Preference-Based Measures CS* P VA P VF-14 Index P EQ-5D SF-6D HUI VAS TTO * Binocular CS (log units). Better-seeing eye VA (distant, logmar). been assessed in patients with cataract 12,13 and also in patients with ARMD. 14 Preference-Based Measures. Three generic preference-based measures were selected (EQ-5D, SF-6D, and HUI-3), because of their common usage and because they met the requirements for a reference case analysis recommended by the Washington Panel 1 and requested by the National Institute for Clinical Excellence (NICE). 5 They obtain general population values by using a choice-based method of preference elicitation. This was supplemented by the TTO for obtaining patient values and to allow comparison with the study by Brown et al. 7 The EQ-5D has five dimensions: mobility, self-care, usual activities, pain and discomfort, and anxiety and depression, and each dimension has three levels. The values used were obtained from a large-scale survey of the general population undertaken in the United Kingdom. 15 The EQ-5D has become one of the most widely used generic measures of health in Europe and is commonly used in economic evaluation. It is accompanied by a VAS on which the respondent marks an assessment of their overall health between the best imaginable state of health at the top of the scale and the worst imaginable health at the bottom. 16 The SF-6D is derived from the SF-36, a generic measure of health. 17,18 It is composed of six multilevel dimensions of health: physical functioning, role limitation, social functioning, bodily pain, mental health, and vitality. It was constructed from the SF-36 and valued using the SG valuation technique from a sample of the U.K. general population. 18 The resultant algorithm can be used to convert SF-36 data at the individual level to a preference-based index. The HUI3 has eight attributes: hearing, vision, speech, ambulation, dexterity, emotion, cognition, and pain. It has been evaluated by using VAS and SG techniques on a Canadian sample of the general population. 19 Patients own assessment of utility was elicited with the variant of TTO used to value the EQ-5D developed at the University of York, which has been shown to be reliable and consistent. 15 It asks patients how many years they would trade in return for full health (including perfect vision). Patients have to choose between two alternatives: 10 years in their current health or x years in full health (where x is less than or equal to 10) and then death. The value of x is varied until the respondents are indifferent between the alternatives. The health status value is calculated as x/10. 6,20,21 Statistical Analysis Descriptive analyses were used to characterize the sociodemographic, clinical characteristics, and the health status of the sample. Health status values were compared with those of community samples of elderly individuals and others with chronic illnesses. Patients were divided into different groups according to their visual function. The cutoffs were for logmar VA at 2, 1.3, 0.6, and 0.3 and for log CS at 0.30, 0.90, and For the VF-14 categories were defined at 50, 75, and 95 points. 22 The better- and worse-seeing eyes were considered to be that with better and worse distant VA, respectively. The statistical comparisons of means were made with ANOVA, using the F test to check differences between groups and to test for linear trend. Variability in health status scores explained by visual parameters (VA, CS, and VF-14) was assessed by eta 2 as the sum of squares between groups divided by the total sum of squares from ANOVA results multiplied by 100. Pearson s product moment correlation coefficients were calculated to examine the relationship between health status measures. The relative contributions of VA and CS were examined by regression. RESULTS Four hundred fifty-one patients who met the criteria were invited to participate. Of those, 209 completed the visual tests and interviews, and 242 eligible patients declined to partici- TABLE 4. Mean (SD) Scores of Preference-Based Utilities According to VA and CS EQ-5D SF-6D HUI-3 VAS TTO Better-seeing eye VA (distant, logmar) 2.00 ( 0.01 decimal) 0.63 (0.22) 0.63 (0.10) 0.10 (0.18) 59.7 (15.5) 0.47 (0.31) 1.31 to 2.00 ( ) 0.71 (0.21) 0.65 (0.11) 0.27 (0.24) 62.8 (18.6) 0.60 (0.33) 0.61 to 1.30 ( ) 0.75 (0.20) 0.66 (0.14) 0.36 (0.25) 66.4 (18.6) 0.64 (0.30) 0.31 to 0.60 ( ) 0.70 (0.20) 0.67 (0.14) 0.38 (0.25) 62.9 (16.2) 0.67 (0.31) 0.30 ( 0.5) 0.75 (0.27) 0.70 (0.18) 0.50 (0.35) 71.1 (18.2) 0.73 (0.30) Eta * Contrast sensitivity (binocular, log units) (0.20) 0.65 (0.11) 0.25 (0.25) 62.1 (19.0) 0.58 (0.32) 0.30 to (0.24) 0.64 (0.14) 0.30 (0.26) 63.7 (16.1) 0.56 (0.32) 0.91 to (0.16) 0.68 (0.14) 0.42 (0.24) 68.6 (18.1) 0.70 (0.28) (0.28) 0.73 (0.16) 0.53 (0.31) 69.4 (19.4) 0.83 (0.25) Eta * 0.14* * VF-14 Index Very severe ( 50) 0.70 (0.22) 0.64 (0.12) 0.27 (0.24) 62.9 (17.7) 0.58 (0.32) Severe (51 75) 0.72 (0.23) 0.66 (0.14) 0.34 (0.27) 64.7 (18.9) 0.69 (0.28) Moderate (76 95) 0.79 (0.19) 0.75 (0.13) 0.52 (0.25) 72.4 (14.1) 0.73 (0.27) Mild ( 95) 0.80 (0.22) 0.81 (0.15) 0.75 (0.24) 76.9 (18.9) 0.95 (0.06) Eta * 0.25* 0.06* 0.11* Total 0.72 (0.22) 0.66 (0.14) 0.34 (0.28) 65.0 (18.1) 0.64 (0.31) Eta 2, variability in health status score explained by either visual acuity, contrast sensitivity of VF-14 index and calculated as the sum of squares between groups divided by the total sum of squares from ANOVA results. * P 0.05 in ANOVA F test between groups. P 0.05 in ANOVA F test for linear trend.

4 IOVS, November 2005, Vol. 46, No. 11 Impact of ARMD on Health Status Utility Values 4019 FIGURE 1. Box plots and scatterplots between HUI-3 and visual function as measured by visual tests (VA, CS) and self-reported measures (VF-14). pate or did not reply. Item completion rates exceeded 95% in all health measures. Comparison between patients with complete data and those who were excluded because of missing data showed no relevant differences on the rest of the variables in the study. Mean age was 79.6 years (range, 43 96), and 121 (57.9%) patients were women. Only 3.4% were currently employed, the majority (88%) had private households, and almost half (46%) of the sample was living alone. The majority (83%) had a long-standing illness or disability unrelated to their vision, and it limited their activities in 71.6% of the cases (Table 1). On average, ARMD was diagnosed 3.7 years ago, and one fifth had dry ARMD. Less than 10% had received photodynamic therapy (PDT; Table 1). The mean logmar VA in the better- and worse-seeing eyes was 1.0 (0.24 in decimal scale) and 1.68 (0.08 decimal), respectively. Mean CS was also low at 0.7 log units, most of the patients being below 1.3. The mean (SD) utility values were 0.34 (0.28) for HUI-3, 0.66 (0.14) for SF-6D, and 0.72 (0.22) for EQ-5D (Table 2). Direct utility elicitation by means of TTO resulted in a value of 0.64 (0.31) and by VAS was The score ranged from 1.0 at the upper end to between 0.3 and 0.6 at the lower end. The equivalent mean scores in the general population for 75- to 85-year-olds was 0.71 for the EQ-5D 23 and 0.65 for SF-6D. 24 There are no U.K. norms for the HUI-3. The mean (SD) VF-14 score was 41.5 (28.4). The HUI-3 had larger and more significant correlations with tests of visual function and the VF-14 than either of the other preference-based measures (Table 3). There was a similar linear trend of increasing utility and health status values as VA and CS

5 4020 Espallargues et al. IOVS, November 2005, Vol. 46, No. 11 FIGURE 2. Box plots and scatterplots between TTO and visual function as measured by visual tests (VA, CS) and self-reported measures (VF-14). improved (Table 4). The highest percentages of explained variability (eta 2 ) were observed for HUI-3 (VA 13%, CS 14%, VF-14 25%). TTO showed the next highest percentages of variability (VA 4%, CS 9%, VF-14 11%). This was followed by SF-6D and VAS and finally EQ-5D. These relationships were slightly stronger for CS than for VA in terms of variability in health status scores explained by the visual tests (eta 2 ). However, perceived visual disability as assessed by the VF-14 explained the greatest variance in all these measures. Box plots (box-and-whisker charts with the medians, interquartile ranges, and full ranges) and scatterplots are shown for HUI-3 and TTO in Figures 1 and 2, respectively, in relation to tests of visual function (VA and CS) and self-reported visual functioning (VF-14). When we applied the VA categories in Brown et al. 7 to our sample, a different distribution emerged, with more people in the worst VA categories and fewer in the best ones when compared with the data of Brown et al. (Tables 5 and 6). The range of mean TTO scores in the VA group was 0.58 to 0.81 in our study compared to 0.40 to 0.89 in Brown et al. (Table 5). In our study, both mean TTO and HUI-3 utility values across these groups presented some inconsistencies, although there was an overall linear trend of increasing utility values as visual function improved. The cross tabulation of better-seeing eye VA with CS showed that for each VA group there was a range of possible CS scores, but extreme combinations of good CS and poor VA, and vice versa, were rare.

6 IOVS, November 2005, Vol. 46, No. 11 Impact of ARMD on Health Status Utility Values 4021 TABLE 5. Mean (SD) TTO Values According to VA and CS Groups Better-Seeing Eye VA (Distant, LogMAR)* [Brown s Groups] Contrast Sensitivity (Binocular, Log Units)* < >1.30 Total n (%) (0.32) 0.57 (0.35) 0.63 (0.40) 0.58 (0.33) ( 20/400) [55] [18] [3] [0] [76] (36.5) (0.33) 0.6 (0.29) 0.76 (0.21) 0.64 (0.33) (20/200 20/400) [9] [30] [15] [0] [54] (26.0) (0.27) 0.39 (0.38) 0.66 (0.31) 0.58 (0.34) 0.58 (0.33) (20/60 20/100) [2] [10] [17] [6] [35] (16.8) (0.41) 0.71 (0.32) 0.87 (0.21) 0.76 (0.33) (20/30 20/50) [0] [5] [12] [15] [32] (15.4) (0.14) ( 0.01) 0.81 (0.33) (20/20 20/25) [1] [4] [1] [5] [11] (5.3) Total 0.58 (0.32) 0.57 (0.32) 0.71 (0.28) 0.83 (0.25) 0.64 (0.32) N (%) [67] (32.2%) [67] (32.2) [48] (23.1) [26] (12.5) [208] (100) * P 0.01 in ANOVA F test between groups and linear trend. The combined impact of VA and CS on TTO and HUI-3 scores is shown in Tables 5 and 6 and graphically for the HUI-3 in Figure 3. The relative contribution of CS and VA was also examined by multiple regression where CS and VA were entered as explanatory variables at the same time (Table 7). These analyses showed a significant relationship between HUI-3 and CS (P 0.005) but not with VA in the better-seeing eye (P 0.226). The relationship between TTO and CS just reached significance at the 5% level (P 0.046) and was not near significance for TTO and VA (P 0.686). DISCUSSION ARMD is associated with reductions in patients health status in terms of visual impairment (VA and CS) and patient-reported visual function (VF-14). This impact was not reflected in two of the generic preference-based measures (EQ-5D and SF-6D) nor in the VAS, to any great extent. It was best reflected in the HUI-3, which showed utility values much lower than the other measures and had the strongest relationship with VA, CS, and VF-14. Directly elicited TTO values from patients were significantly related to VA, CS, and VF-14, with the VA result supporting earlier findings of Brown et al. 7 These results have important implications for the estimation of QALYs and the conduct of economic evaluation. This study also provides evidence for the relative importance of CS in people s HRQoL compared with VA. Previous studies have found a stronger relationship between various measures of HRQoL and visual impairment. High levels of disability have been observed in patients with ARMD that were similar to levels in patients with cancer and stroke. 25 There are also studies that show ARMD is associated with significant psychological distress and elevated risks of depression, 29 with scores of generic and specific scales of emotional distress being worse than those observed in a similar-aged population without this disease and comparable to those obtained in patients with other chronic conditions (such as arthritis, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, acquired immunodeficiency, and bone marrow transplantation). 26 Depression has been found to be twice the rate (32.5%) observed in other studies of community-dwelling elderly. 25 These differences with our findings require some explanation. A part of the explanation seems to lie in the descriptive systems of the EQ-5D and the SF-6D (along with the SF-36 from which it is derived). The lack of sensitivity does not seem to have been due to floor effects in either instrument, a problem observed in the SF-6D in heart disease and rheumatoid arthritis, rather the problem seems to be due to the lack of relevance of the descriptive systems. The main effect of ARMD is to reduce the ability of the individual to engage in everyday TABLE 6. Mean (SD) HUI-3 Values According to VA and CS Groups Better-Seeing Eye VA (Distant, LogMAR)* [Brown s Groups] Contrast Sensitivity (Binocular, Log Units)* < >1.30 Total n (%) (0.24) 0.22 (0.21) 0.46 (0.31) 0.23 (0.23) ( 20/400) [55] [18] [3] [0] [76] (36.5) (0.28) 0.33 (0.25) 0.44 (0.16) 0.35 (0.23) (20/200 20/400) [9] [30] [15] [0] [54] (26.0) (0.16) 0.39 (0.31) 0.32 (0.2) 0.38 (0.22) 0.35 (0.23) (20/60 20/100) [2] [10] [17] [6] [35] (16.8) (0.36) 0.50 (0.30) 0.56 (0.31) 0.5 (0.23) (20/30 20/50) [0] [5] [12] [15] [32] (15.4) (0.24) (0.39) 0.38 (0.23) (20/20 20/25) [1] [4] [1] [5] [11] (5.3) Total 0.24 (0.24) 0.3 (0.26) 0.42 (0.24) 0.53 (0.31) 0.33 (0.27) N [%] [67] (32.2) [67] (32.2) [48] (23.1) [26] (12.5) [208] (100) * P 0.01 in ANOVA F test between groups and linear trend.

7 4022 Espallargues et al. IOVS, November 2005, Vol. 46, No. 11 FIGURE 3. Mean utility values (HUI-3) according to VA (better-seeing eye, distant, logmar) and CS (binocular, log units). activities that require clear central vision (such as reading, writing, recognizing people, driving, and watching TV). Peripheral vision is not affected by ARMD. The generic health status measures of EQ-5D and SF-6D seem to fail to capture the impact on activities of daily living that depend on central vision. 33 The HUI-3 is different from the other two generic preference-based measures, in that it includes a vision dimension. Self-reported TTO reflects the impact from a patient s perspective. Most ophthalmologists have relied on measures such as VA and visual field assessment, but other tests such as contrast sensitivity, glare testing, color vision testing, stereoscopic testing, reading speed, and light and dark adaptation, have shown that VA is a descriptor of a single aspect of vision rather than comprehensive assessment of visual function. 34 In our study, CS showed a slightly better relationship and explained more variation in health status than VA. The regression results of CS and VA together seem to support the view that CS better reflects the impact on HRQoL than does VA. Elicitation of utility values in patients with ARMD by Brown et al. 7 resulted in higher mean scores than our study, on the basis of their patients completion of TTO of 0.72 compared with our mean of This must be in part because the patients in our study had worse VA overall. However, the relationship between TTO and VA was weaker in our study than in Brown et al. The mean utility scores in our study were lower in the better VA categories (0.81 vs. 0.89) and higher in the worse VA groups (0.58 vs. 0.40). This difference may have occurred by chance because of the comparatively small numbers in some of the VA groups, particularly in Brown et al. where the number in the group was between 5 and 23. Even in our study with more than twice the number of respondents, this still could be a factor. Another explanation may be the significant degree of CS variation in a given VA group in our study. The best VA category in our study, for example, had 5 of 11 cases in the worst two CS categories with health status values of between 0.3 and Brown et al. did not measure CS, and so we cannot adjust for the likely impact of CS variation. A more recent and larger study by Brown et al. 35 also showed that the worse the VA the greater the impact of ARMD on health status; but, again, CS was not measured. The differences between our study and that of Brown et al. 7 may also have occurred because our patients had had known ARMD on average for a long time. Brown et al. found that the mean TTO values in patients who had had the condition for less than a year was significantly lower than those who had had it for more than a year, with a mean of 0.63 compared with 0.8, respectively. The cohort in Brown et al. had the condition for less time than ours, with 49% having had the condition for less than 1 year, compared with just 24% in our study. Another reason for the difference may be the different variants used in our respective studies. Brown et al. used an open-ended variant of TTO, whereas ours was an interactive variant developed at York University and subsequently used to value the EQ-5D. Another explanation for the differences with Brown et al. could be related to subject selection and participation rates. All patients with diagnosed ARMD who attended a clinic or were on the low-vision register were invited to take part. However, there may have been a degree of bias in the self-selection that is a concern when the response rate is just 50%. Because of TABLE 7. Multiple Linear Regression Results for HUI-3 and TTO against CS and VA HUI-3 TTO Variables B (SE) P B (SE) p Better-seeing eye VA (distant, LogMAR) 0.51 (0.42) (0.05) Binocular CS (log units) 0.16 (0.55) (0.07) R ; F 17.6 (P 0.001) R ; F 6.7 (P 0.002)

8 IOVS, November 2005, Vol. 46, No. 11 Impact of ARMD on Health Status Utility Values 4023 ethical restrictions it was not possible to compare those who agreed to participate with those who declined or did not respond. Nevertheless, most of the reasons given by refusals in a free text box do not seem to be related to ocular disease but to such impediments as the weather, time of year (Christmas), dark nights, not wanting to leave the dog, being a caregiver, and so forth. These limitations, however, should not invalidate our results regarding the relationship between visual tests, VF-14 score, and generic health status measures. The results suggest that the HUI-3 is a better generic measure than the EQ-5D and SF-6D in this group of patients. This study presents HUI-3 health status utility values for various VA and CS groups that can be used to populate cost-effectiveness models of new interventions in patients with ARMD, for agencies requiring community values. The results also suggest that utility values seem to be more dependent on CS than VA, although perceived visual disability is the parameter that best explains results in preference-based measures. Thus, valuable instruments such as CS and perceived visual function, will be helpful to supplement VA measurement in patients with ARMD, along with the HUI-3 or TTO for those studies seeking to inform economic evaluations. References 1. Gold MR, Siegel JE, Russell LB, Weinstein MC, eds. Cost Effectiveness in Health and Medicine. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press; Canadian Coordinating Office for Health Technology Assessment. Guidelines for Economic Evaluation of Pharmaceuticals. Canada, 2nd ed. Ottawa, Ontario, Canada: Canadian Coordinating Office for Health Technology Assessment (CCOHTA); Commonwealth Department of Health and Ageing. Guidelines for the Pharmaceutical Industry on Preparation of Submissions to the Pharmaceutical Benefits Advisory Committee: Including Major Submissions Involving Economic Analyses. Canberra, Australia: Publications Production Unit Public Affairs PaAB; Ziekenfondraad. Dutch Guidelines for Pharmacoeconomics Research. Amstelveen, The Netherlands: Health Insurance Council (Ziekenfondraad), National Institute for Clinical Excellence (NICE). Guide to the Methods of Technology Appraisal. London: NICE; Drummond MF, O Brien B, Stoddart G, Torrance GW. Methods for the Economic Evaluation of Health Care Programmes. 2nd ed. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press; Brown GC, Sharma S, Brown MM, Kistler J. Utility values and age-related macular degeneration. Arch Ophthalmol. 2000;118: Brazier J, Akehurst R, Brennan A, et al. Should patients have a greater role in economic evaluation? Health Economics and Decision Science Discussion Paper Series no. 05/04, Sheffield, UK: The University of Sheffield; Elliot DB, Bullimore MA, Bailey IL. Improving the reliability of the Pelli-Robson contrast sensitivity test. Clin Vision Sci. 1991;2: Pelli DG, Robson JG, Wilkins AJ. The design of a new letter chart for measuring contrast sensitivity. Clin Vision Sci. 1988;2: Steinberg EP, Tielsch JM, Schein OD, et al. The VF-14. An index of functional impairment in patients with cataract. Arch Ophthalmol. 1994;112: Cassard SD, Patrick DL, Damiano AM, et al. Reproducibility and responsiveness of the VF-14: an index of functional impairment in patients with cataracts. Arch Ophthalmol. 1995;113: Alonso J, Espallargues M, Andersen TF, et al. International applicability of the VF-14: an index of visual function in patients with cataracts. Ophthalmology. 1997;104: Riusala A, Sarna S, Immonen I. Visual function index (VF-14) in exudative age-related macular degeneration of long duration. Am J Ophthalmol. 2003;135: Dolan P, Gudex C, Kind P, Williams A. Valuing health states: a comparison of methods. J Health Econ. 1996;15: The EuroQol Group. EuroQol: a new facility for the measurement of health-related quality of life. Health Policy. 1990;16: Ware JE Jr, Sherbourne CD. The MOS 36-item short-form health survey (SF-36). I. Conceptual framework and item selection. Med Care. 1992;30: Brazier J, Roberts J, Deverill M. The estimation of a preferencebased measure of health from the SF-36. J Health Econ. 2002;21: Feeny D, Furlong W, Torrance GW, et al. Multiattribute and singleattribute utility functions for the health utilities index mark 3 system. Med Care. 2002;40: Brazier J, Deverill M, Green C. A review of the use of health status measures in economic evaluation. J Health Serv Res Policy. 1999; 4: Brazier J, Deverill M, Green C, Harper R, Booth A. A review of the use of health status measures in economic evaluation. Health Technol Assess. 1999;3: Valderas JM, Alonso J, Prieto L, Espallargues M, Castells X. Contentbased interpretation aids for health-related quality of life measures in clinical practice: an example for the visual function index (VF-14). Qual Life Res. 2004;13: Kind P, Dolan P, Gudex C, Williams A. Variations in population health status: results from a United Kingdom national questionnaire survey. BMJ. 1998;316: Walters SJ, Munro JF, Brazier JE. Using the SF-36 with older adults: a cross-sectional community-based survey. Age Ageing. 2001;30: Brody BL, Gamst AC, Williams RA, et al. Depression, visual acuity, comorbidity, and disability associated with age-related macular degeneration. Ophthalmology. 2001;108: Williams RA, Brody BL, Thomas RG, Kaplan RM, Brown SI. The psychosocial impact of macular degeneration. Arch Ophthalmol. 1998;116: Brody BL, Williams RA, Thomas RG, Kaplan RM, Chu RM, Brown SI. Age-related macular degeneration: a randomized clinical trial of a self-management intervention. Ann Behav Med. 1999;21: Porter T, Nesbitt P. Psychosocial implications of clinical trials on patients with age-related macular degeneration and pathologic myopia as seen in the photodynamic therapy trials. Insight. 2001; 26: Oneill C, Jamison J, McCulloch D, Smith D. Age-related macular degeneration: cost-of-illness issues. Drugs Aging. 2001;18: Hatoum HT, Brazier JE, Akhras KS. Comparison of the HUI-3 with the SF-36 preference based SF-6D in a clinical trial setting. Value Health. 2004;7: O Brien BJ, Spath M, Blackhouse G, Severens JL, Dorian P, Brazier J. A view from the bridge: agreement between the SF-6D utility algorithm and the Health Utilities Index. Health Econ. 2003;12: Marra CA, Esdaile JM, Guh D, et al. A comparison of four indirect methods of assessing utility values in rheumatoid arthritis. Med Care. 2004;42: Fletcher A, Gore S, Jones D, Fitzpatrick R, Spiegelhalter D, Cox D. Quality of life measures in health care. II: design, analysis, and interpretation. BMJ. 1992;305: McClure ME, Hart PM, Jackson AJ, Stevenson MR, Chakravarthy U. Macular degeneration: do conventional measurements of impaired visual function equate with visual disability? Br J Ophthalmol. 2000;84: Brown MM, Brown GC, Sharma S, Landy J, Bakal J. Quality of life with visual acuity loss from diabetic retinopathy and age-related macular degeneration. Arch Ophthalmol. 2002;120:

This is a repository copy of Valuing condition specific health states using simulation contact lenses.

This is a repository copy of Valuing condition specific health states using simulation contact lenses. This is a repository copy of Valuing condition specific health states using simulation contact lenses. White Rose Research Online URL for this paper: http://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/11028/ Monograph: Czoski-Murray,

More information

C ataract extraction remains the most commonly performed

C ataract extraction remains the most commonly performed 885 CLINICAL SCIENCE VF-14 item specific responses in patients undergoing first eye cataract surgery: can the length of the VF-14 be reduced? D S Friedman, J M Tielsch, S Vitale, E B Bass, O D Schein,

More information

ORIGINAL ARTICLES Clinical science

ORIGINAL ARTICLES Clinical science Br J Ophthalmol 1998;82:1107 1111 1107 ORIGINAL ARTICLES Clinical science Institute of Public Health, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Copenhagen, J C Norregaard T F Andersen Ophthalmology, Hvidovre

More information

CLINICAL SCIENCES. Utility Values and Age-related Macular Degeneration

CLINICAL SCIENCES. Utility Values and Age-related Macular Degeneration CLINICAL SCIENCES Utility Values and Age-related Macular Degeneration Gary C. Brown, MD, MBA; Sanjay Sharma, MD, MSc(Epid); Melissa M. Brown, MN, MD, MBA; Jonathan Kistler, MD Objective: To ascertain the

More information

Assessment of Health State in Patients With Tinnitus: A Comparison of the EQ-5D and HUI Mark III

Assessment of Health State in Patients With Tinnitus: A Comparison of the EQ-5D and HUI Mark III Assessment of Health State in Patients With Tinnitus: A Comparison of the EQ-5D and HUI Mark III Iris H. L. Maes, 1,2,3 Manuela A. Joore, 1 Rilana F. F. Cima, 2,3 Johannes W. Vlaeyen, 3,4 and Lucien J.

More information

LIHS Mini Master Class

LIHS Mini Master Class Alexandru Nicusor Matei 2013 CC BY-NC-ND 2.0 Measurement and valuation of health using QALYS John O Dwyer Academic Unit of Health Economics John O Dwyer University of Leeds 2015. This work is made available

More information

To what extent do people prefer health states with higher values? A note on evidence from the EQ-5D valuation set

To what extent do people prefer health states with higher values? A note on evidence from the EQ-5D valuation set HEALTH ECONOMICS HEALTH ECONOMICS LETTERS Health Econ. 13: 733 737 (2004) Published online 15 December 2003 in Wiley InterScience (www.interscience.wiley.com). DOI:10.1002/hec.875 To what extent do people

More information

Note: This is an outcome measure and will be calculated solely using registry data.

Note: This is an outcome measure and will be calculated solely using registry data. Quality ID #303 (NQF 1536): Cataracts: Improvement in Patient s Visual Function within 90 Days Following Cataract Surgery National Quality Strategy Domain: Person and Caregiver-Centered Experience and

More information

Patients preferences in treatment for neovascular age-related macular degeneration in clinical routine

Patients preferences in treatment for neovascular age-related macular degeneration in clinical routine Patients preferences in treatment for neovascular age-related macular degeneration in clinical routine Robert Finger, 1,2 Andrea E Hoffmann, 3 Eva K Fenwick, 1 Armin Wolf, 3 Anselm Kampik, 3 Marcus Kernt,

More information

Note: This is an outcome measure and will be calculated solely using registry data.

Note: This is an outcome measure and will be calculated solely using registry data. Measure #303 (NQF 1536): Cataracts: Improvement in Patient s Visual Function within 90 Days Following Cataract Surgery National Quality Strategy Domain: Person and Caregiver-Centered Experience and Outcomes

More information

Health state utilities in patients with diabetic retinopathy, diabetic macular oedema and age-related macular degeneration: a systematic review

Health state utilities in patients with diabetic retinopathy, diabetic macular oedema and age-related macular degeneration: a systematic review Poku et al. BMC Ophthalmology 2013, 13:74 RESEARCH ARTICLE Open Access Health state utilities in patients with diabetic retinopathy, diabetic macular oedema and age-related macular degeneration: a systematic

More information

The EuroQol and Medical Outcome Survey 36-item shortform

The EuroQol and Medical Outcome Survey 36-item shortform How Do Scores on the EuroQol Relate to Scores on the SF-36 After Stroke? Paul J. Dorman, MD, MRCP; Martin Dennis, MD, FRCP; Peter Sandercock, MD, FRCP; on behalf of the United Kingdom Collaborators in

More information

Comparing outcomes of cataract surgery: challenges and opportunities

Comparing outcomes of cataract surgery: challenges and opportunities Journal of Public Health VoI. 27, No. 4, pp. 348 352 doi:10.1093/pubmed/fdi057 Advance Access Publication 18 October 2005 Comparing outcomes of cataract surgery: challenges and opportunities Martin McKee,

More information

HEDS Discussion Paper 05/05

HEDS Discussion Paper 05/05 HEDS Discussion Paper 05/05 Disclaimer: This is a Discussion Paper produced and published by the Health Economics and Decision Science (HEDS) Section at the School of Health and Related Research (ScHARR),

More information

Reliability and Validity of the National Eye Institute Visual Function Questionnaire-25 in Patients with Age-Related Macular Degeneration

Reliability and Validity of the National Eye Institute Visual Function Questionnaire-25 in Patients with Age-Related Macular Degeneration Clinical and Epidemiologic Research Reliability and Validity of the National Eye Institute Visual Function Questionnaire-25 in Patients with Age-Related Macular Degeneration Dennis A. Revicki, 1 Anne M.

More information

Effects of Mode and Order of Administration on Generic Health-Related Quality of Life Scoresvhe_

Effects of Mode and Order of Administration on Generic Health-Related Quality of Life Scoresvhe_ Volume 12 Number 6 2009 VALUE IN HEALTH Effects of Mode and Order of Administration on Generic Health-Related Quality of Life Scoresvhe_566 1035..1039 Ron D. Hays, PhD, 1 Seongeun Kim, MA, 2 Karen L. Spritzer,

More information

Impact of Chronic Liver Disease and Cirrhosis on Health Utilities Using SF-6D and the Health Utility Index

Impact of Chronic Liver Disease and Cirrhosis on Health Utilities Using SF-6D and the Health Utility Index LIVER TRANSPLANTATION 14:321-326, 2008 ORIGINAL ARTICLE Impact of Chronic Liver Disease and Cirrhosis on Health Utilities Using SF-6D and the Health Utility Index Amy A. Dan, 1,2 Jillian B. Kallman, 1,2

More information

IT HAS LONG BEEN RECOGNIZED THAT EMOTIONAL

IT HAS LONG BEEN RECOGNIZED THAT EMOTIONAL Emotional Distress in Patients With Retinal Disease INGRID U. SCOTT, MD, MPH, OLIVER D. SCHEIN, MD, MPH, WILLIAM J. FEUER, MS, MARSHAL F. FOLSTEIN, MD, AND KAREN BANDEEN-ROCHE, PHD Accepted for publication

More information

Mapping the EORTC QLQ C-30 onto the EQ-5D Instrument: The Potential to Estimate QALYs without Generic Preference Data

Mapping the EORTC QLQ C-30 onto the EQ-5D Instrument: The Potential to Estimate QALYs without Generic Preference Data Volume 12 Number 1 2009 VALUE IN HEALTH Mapping the EORTC QLQ C-30 onto the EQ-5D Instrument: The Potential to Estimate QALYs without Generic Preference Data Lynda McKenzie, MSc, Marjon van der Pol, PhD

More information

VERTEPORFIN IN PHOTODYNAMIC THERAPY STUDY GROUP

VERTEPORFIN IN PHOTODYNAMIC THERAPY STUDY GROUP Verteporfin Therapy of Subfoveal Choroidal Neovascularization in Age-related Macular Degeneration: Two-year Results of a Randomized Clinical Trial Including Lesions With Occult With No Classic Choroidal

More information

NICE DSU TECHNICAL SUPPORT DOCUMENT 8: AN INTRODUCTION TO THE MEASUREMENT AND VALUATION OF HEALTH FOR NICE SUBMISSIONS

NICE DSU TECHNICAL SUPPORT DOCUMENT 8: AN INTRODUCTION TO THE MEASUREMENT AND VALUATION OF HEALTH FOR NICE SUBMISSIONS NICE DSU TECHNICAL SUPPORT DOCUMENT 8: AN INTRODUCTION TO THE MEASUREMENT AND VALUATION OF HEALTH FOR NICE SUBMISSIONS REPORT BY THE DECISION SUPPORT UNIT August 2011 John Brazier 1 and Louise Longworth

More information

Is cataract surgery justified in patients with age related macular degeneration? A visual function and quality of life assessment

Is cataract surgery justified in patients with age related macular degeneration? A visual function and quality of life assessment Br J Ophthalmol 2000;84:1343 1348 1343 Princess Alexandra Eye Pavilion, The Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH3 9HA, UK A M Armbrecht C Findlay P Aspinall B Dhillon The Oxford Eye Hospital, Oxford,

More information

EuroQol Working Paper Series

EuroQol Working Paper Series EuroQol Working Paper Series Number 15001 June 2015 ORIGINAL RESEARCH An empirical study of two alternative comparators for use in time trade-off studies Koonal K. Shah 1 Brendan Mulhern 2 Louise Longworth

More information

Valuing health using visual analogue scales and rank data: does the visual analogue scale contain cardinal information?

Valuing health using visual analogue scales and rank data: does the visual analogue scale contain cardinal information? Academic Unit of Health Economics LEEDS INSTITUTE OF HEALTH SCIENCES Working Paper Series No. 09_01 Valuing health using visual analogue scales and rank data: does the visual analogue scale contain cardinal

More information

Age-related maculopathy and cataract surgery outcomes: visual acuity and healthrelated. life CLINICAL STUDY

Age-related maculopathy and cataract surgery outcomes: visual acuity and healthrelated. life CLINICAL STUDY (2007) 21, 324 330 & 2007 Nature Publishing Group All rights reserved 0950-222X/07 $30.00 www.nature.com/eye CLINICAL STUDY Age-related maculopathy and cataract surgery outcomes: visual acuity and healthrelated

More information

Contrast Sensitivity and Reading: Assessment and Reliability with the Reading Explorer (REX) Test

Contrast Sensitivity and Reading: Assessment and Reliability with the Reading Explorer (REX) Test Contrast Sensitivity and Reading: Assessment and Reliability with the Reading Explorer (REX) Test Giacomelli G 1, Volpe R, Virgili G 1, Farini A 2, Arrighi R 2,Barbieri C, Menchini U 1 1. Department of

More information

Using HAQ-DI to estimate HUI-3 and EQ-5D utility values for patients with rheumatoid arthritis in Spain

Using HAQ-DI to estimate HUI-3 and EQ-5D utility values for patients with rheumatoid arthritis in Spain available at www.sciencedirect.com journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/jval Using HAQ-DI to estimate HUI-3 and EQ-5D utility values for patients with rheumatoid arthritis in Spain Agata Carreño,

More information

Binocular Visual Acuity Summation and Inhibition in an Ocular Epidemiological Study: The Los Angeles Latino Eye Study MATERIALS AND METHODS

Binocular Visual Acuity Summation and Inhibition in an Ocular Epidemiological Study: The Los Angeles Latino Eye Study MATERIALS AND METHODS Binocular Visual Acuity Summation and Inhibition in an Ocular Epidemiological Study: The Los Angeles Latino Eye Study Stanley P. Azen, 1,2 Rohit Varma, 1,3 Susan Preston-Martin, 2 Mei Ying-Lai, 2 Denise

More information

DATASET OVERVIEW. The National Health Measurement Study (NHMS) University of Wisconsin-Madison Department of Population Health Sciences.

DATASET OVERVIEW. The National Health Measurement Study (NHMS) University of Wisconsin-Madison Department of Population Health Sciences. DATASET OVERVIEW The National Health Measurement Study (NHMS) University of Wisconsin-Madison Department of Population Health Sciences Madison, WI July 2008 The National Health Measurement Study is one

More information

Choice of EQ 5D 3L for Economic Evaluation of Community Paramedicine Programs Project

Choice of EQ 5D 3L for Economic Evaluation of Community Paramedicine Programs Project As articulated in the project Charter and PICOT Statement, the Economic Value of Community Paramedicine Programs Study (EV-CP) will seek to determine: The economic value of community paramedicine programs

More information

Estimating EQ-5D values from the Neck Disability Index and numeric rating scales for neck and arm pain

Estimating EQ-5D values from the Neck Disability Index and numeric rating scales for neck and arm pain J Neurosurg Spine 21:394 399, 2014 AANS, 2014 Estimating EQ-5D values from the Neck Disability Index and numeric rating scales for neck and arm pain Clinical article Leah Y. Carreon, M.D., M.Sc., Kelly

More information

This is a repository copy of A comparison of the EQ-5D and the SF-6D across seven patient groups.

This is a repository copy of A comparison of the EQ-5D and the SF-6D across seven patient groups. This is a repository copy of A comparison of the EQ-5D and the SF-6D across seven patient groups. White Rose Research Online URL for this paper: http://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/279/ Article: Brazier, J.E.,

More information

Humber. Cataract Surgery Commissioning Policy

Humber. Cataract Surgery Commissioning Policy Intervention Elective Eye Surgery for the treatment of Cataracts in adults OPCS codes C62 Incision of iris C621 Iridosclerotomy C622 Surgical iridotomy C623 Laser iridotomy C624 Correction iridodialysis

More information

CLINICAL SCIENCES. Consistency Between Visual Acuity Scores Obtained at Different Test Distances

CLINICAL SCIENCES. Consistency Between Visual Acuity Scores Obtained at Different Test Distances CLINICAL SCIENCES Consistency Between Visual Acuity Scores Obtained at Different Test Distances Theory vs Observations in Multiple Studies Li Ming Dong, PhD; Barbara S. Hawkins, PhD; Marta J. Marsh, MS

More information

EPIDEMIOLOGY. with vision loss caused by age-related macular degeneration

EPIDEMIOLOGY. with vision loss caused by age-related macular degeneration EPIDEMIOLOGY Relative Contributions of Reduced Vision and General Health to NEI-VFQ Scores in Patients With Neovascular Age-Related Macular Degeneration Päivi H. Miskala, PhD; Neil M. Bressler, MD; Curtis

More information

CDEC FINAL RECOMMENDATION

CDEC FINAL RECOMMENDATION CDEC FINAL RECOMMENDATION RANIBIZUMAB (Lucentis Novartis Pharmaceuticals Canada Inc.) New Indication: Macular Edema Secondary to Retinal Vein Occlusion Recommendation: The Canadian Drug Expert Committee

More information

Common Causes of Vision Loss

Common Causes of Vision Loss Common Causes of Vision Loss Learning Objectives To identify the most common causes of vision loss in the United States To differentiate the most common forms of agerelated macular degeneration and diabetic

More information

Correlation between vision- and health-related quality of life scores

Correlation between vision- and health-related quality of life scores Correlation between - and -related quality of life s Brighu N. Swamy, 1 Ee-Munn Chia, 1 Jie Jin Wang, 1,2 Elena Rochtchina 1 and Paul Mitchell 1 1 Centre for Vision Research, Department of Ophthalmology

More information

Carol M. Mangione, MD NEI VFQ-25 Scoring Algorithm August 2000

Carol M. Mangione, MD NEI VFQ-25 Scoring Algorithm August 2000 Version 000 The National Eye Institute 5-Item Visual Function Questionnaire (VFQ-5) Version 000 This final version of the VFQ-5 differs from the previous version in that it includes an extra driving item

More information

Clinical Policy: Implantable Miniature Telescope for Age Related Macular Degeneration Reference Number: CP.MP.517

Clinical Policy: Implantable Miniature Telescope for Age Related Macular Degeneration Reference Number: CP.MP.517 Clinical Policy: Implantable Miniature Telescope for Age Related Macular Reference Number: CP.MP.517 Effective Date: 11/16 Last Review Date: 11/17 See Important Reminder at the end of this policy for important

More information

Economic evaluation of end stage renal disease treatment Ardine de Wit G, Ramsteijn P G, de Charro F T

Economic evaluation of end stage renal disease treatment Ardine de Wit G, Ramsteijn P G, de Charro F T Economic evaluation of end stage renal disease treatment Ardine de Wit G, Ramsteijn P G, de Charro F T Record Status This is a critical abstract of an economic evaluation that meets the criteria for inclusion

More information

Ophthalmology Macular Pathways

Ophthalmology Macular Pathways Ophthalmology Macular Pathways Age related Macular Degeneration Diabetic Macular Oedema Macular Oedema secondary to Central Retinal Macular Oedema secondary to Branch Retinal CNV associated with pathological

More information

LOW VISION VISD241. MODULE LEADER: DR G WALSH B.Sc. OPHTHALMIC DISPENSING

LOW VISION VISD241. MODULE LEADER: DR G WALSH B.Sc. OPHTHALMIC DISPENSING DIVISION OF VISION SCIENCES SESSION: 2006/2007 DIET: 1 ST LOW VISION VISD241 LEVEL: TWO MODULE LEADER: DR G WALSH B.Sc. OPHTHALMIC DISPENSING MAY 2007 DURATION: 2 HOURS CANDIDATES SHOULD ATTEMPT FOUR QUESTIONS

More information

Computerized Model of Cost-Utility Analysis for Treatment of Age-Related Macular Degeneration

Computerized Model of Cost-Utility Analysis for Treatment of Age-Related Macular Degeneration Computerized Model of Cost-Utility Analysis for Treatment of Age-Related Macular Degeneration E. C. Fletcher, MRCOphth, 1 R. J. Lade, PhD, MBA, 2 T. Adewoyin, MRCOphth, 1 N. V. Chong, FRCOphth, MD 1 Purpose:

More information

2018 OPTIONS FOR INDIVIDUAL MEASURES: REGISTRY ONLY. MEASURE TYPE: Process

2018 OPTIONS FOR INDIVIDUAL MEASURES: REGISTRY ONLY. MEASURE TYPE: Process Quality ID #14 (NQF 0087): Age-Related Macular Degeneration (AMD): Dilated Macular Examination National Quality Strategy Domain: Effective Clinical Care 2018 OPTIONS FOR INDIVIDUAL MEASURES: REGISTRY ONLY

More information

Course Instructors: Mark S. Roberts, MD, MPP Ken Smith, MD, MS Stanley Kuo, MS

Course Instructors: Mark S. Roberts, MD, MPP Ken Smith, MD, MS Stanley Kuo, MS CLRES 2120/HSADM 2220 Cost Effectiveness Analysis 9/3 10/01 2009 (M, Th 3:00 5:00) PKVL 305A Phone contact: 692 4826 Course Instructors: Mark S. Roberts, MD, MPP Ken Smith, MD, MS Stanley Kuo, MS Email

More information

Ranibizumab and pegaptanib for the treatment of agerelated macular degeneration

Ranibizumab and pegaptanib for the treatment of agerelated macular degeneration Ranibizumab and pegaptanib for the treatment of agerelated Issued: August 2008 last modified: May 2012 guidance.nice.org.uk/ta155 NHS Evidence has accredited the process used by the Centre for Health Technology

More information

Visual acuity versus letter contrast sensitivity in early cataract

Visual acuity versus letter contrast sensitivity in early cataract Vision Research 38 (1998) 2047 2052 Visual acuity versus letter contrast sensitivity in early cataract David B. Elliott a, *, Ping Situ b a Department of Optometry, Uni ersity of Bradford, Bradford BD7

More information

Each copy of any part of a JSTOR transmission must contain the same copyright notice that appears on the screen or printed page of such transmission.

Each copy of any part of a JSTOR transmission must contain the same copyright notice that appears on the screen or printed page of such transmission. Reliability of an Arabic Version of the RAND-36 Health Survey and Its Equivalence to the US- English Version Author(s): Stephen Joel Coons, Saud Abdulaziz Alabdulmohsin, JoLaine R. Draugalis, Ron D. Hays

More information

Assessing the Impact of Visual Acuity on Quality of Life in Individuals With Type 2 Diabetes Using the Short Form-36

Assessing the Impact of Visual Acuity on Quality of Life in Individuals With Type 2 Diabetes Using the Short Form-36 Epidemiology/Health Services/Psychosocial Research O R I G I N A L A R T I C L E Assessing the Impact of Visual Acuity on Quality of Life in Individuals With Type 2 Diabetes Using the Short Form-36 PHILIP

More information

A ge related macular degeneration (ARMD) is one of the

A ge related macular degeneration (ARMD) is one of the 8 VALUE BASED OPHTHALMOLOGY Quality of life with macular degeneration: perceptions of patients, clinicians, and community members J D Stein, M M Brown, G C Brown, H Hollands, S Sharma... Series editors:

More information

A new method of measuring how much anterior tooth alignment means to adolescents

A new method of measuring how much anterior tooth alignment means to adolescents European Journal of Orthodontics 21 (1999) 299 305 1999 European Orthodontic Society A new method of measuring how much anterior tooth alignment means to adolescents D. Fox, E. J. Kay and K. O Brien Department

More information

Disparities in Vison Loss and Eye Health

Disparities in Vison Loss and Eye Health Disparities in Vison Loss and Eye Health Xinzhi Zhang, MD, PhD, FACE, FRSM National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities National Institutes of Health Disclaimer The findings and conclusions

More information

THE LONG TERM PSYCHOLOGICAL EFFECTS OF DAILY SEDATIVE INTERRUPTION IN CRITICALLY ILL PATIENTS

THE LONG TERM PSYCHOLOGICAL EFFECTS OF DAILY SEDATIVE INTERRUPTION IN CRITICALLY ILL PATIENTS THE LONG TERM PSYCHOLOGICAL EFFECTS OF DAILY SEDATIVE INTERRUPTION IN CRITICALLY ILL PATIENTS John P. Kress, MD, Brian Gehlbach, MD, Maureen Lacy, PhD, Neil Pliskin, PhD, Anne S. Pohlman, RN, MSN, and

More information

UCLA UCLA Previously Published Works

UCLA UCLA Previously Published Works UCLA UCLA Previously Published Works Title Selection of key health domains from PROMISA (R) for a generic preference-based scoring system Permalink https://escholarship.org/uc/item/162490mf Journal QUALITY

More information

The field of quality-of-life (QOL) measurement has a relatively

The field of quality-of-life (QOL) measurement has a relatively REPORTS The Future of Outcomes Measurement in Rheumatology Robert M. Kaplan, PhD Abstract Quality-of-life (QOL) measurement has a rich history in rheumatology, and although the study of health measurements

More information

This is a repository copy of The estimation of a preference-based measure of health from the SF-36.

This is a repository copy of The estimation of a preference-based measure of health from the SF-36. This is a repository copy of The estimation of a preference-based measure of health from the SF-36. White Rose Research Online URL for this paper: http://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/474/ Article: Brazier,

More information

Original Research Article Pain Quality of Life as Measured by Utilities

Original Research Article Pain Quality of Life as Measured by Utilities bs_bs_banner Pain Medicine 2014; 15: 865 870 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. REHABILITATION SECTION Original Research Article Pain Quality of Life as Measured by Utilities Sarah Wetherington, BS,* Laura Delong,

More information

15D: Strengths, weaknesses and future development

15D: Strengths, weaknesses and future development 15D: Strengths, weaknesses and future development Harri Sintonen University of Helsinki and FinOHTA Definition of health-related quality of life HRQoL instruments usually try, as does the 15D, to cover

More information

CRITICALLY APPRAISED PAPER (CAP)

CRITICALLY APPRAISED PAPER (CAP) CRITICALLY APPRAISED PAPER (CAP) Desrosiers, J., Noreau, L., Rochette, A., Carbonneau, H., Fontaine, L., Viscogliosi, C., & Bravo, G. (2007). Effect of a home leisure education program after stroke: A

More information

How is the most severe health state being valued by the general population?

How is the most severe health state being valued by the general population? Gandhi et al. Health and Quality of Life Outcomes 2014, 12:161 RESEARCH Open Access How is the most severe health state being valued by the general population? Mihir Gandhi 1,2,3*, Julian Thumboo 4,5,

More information

1.1 Definition of intervention

1.1 Definition of intervention 1.1 Definition of intervention In Australia vision loss is predominantly a problem of ageing, the presence of which can significantly impact on the quality of life of older Australians. The prevalence

More information

Technology appraisal guidance Published: 27 August 2008 nice.org.uk/guidance/ta155

Technology appraisal guidance Published: 27 August 2008 nice.org.uk/guidance/ta155 Ranibizumab and pegaptanib for the treatment of age-related macular degeneration Technology appraisal guidance Published: 27 August 2008 nice.org.uk/guidance/ta155 NICE 2018. All rights reserved. Subject

More information

Valuation of the SF-6D Health States Is Feasible, Acceptable, Reliable, and Valid in a Chinese Population

Valuation of the SF-6D Health States Is Feasible, Acceptable, Reliable, and Valid in a Chinese Population Volume 11 Number 2 2008 VALUE IN HEALTH Valuation of the SF-6D Health States Is Feasible, Acceptable, Reliable, and Valid in a Chinese Population Cindy L. K. Lam, MBBS, MD, FRCGP, FHKAM (Family Medicine),

More information

2018 OPTIONS FOR INDIVIDUAL MEASURES: CLAIMS ONLY. MEASURE TYPE: Process

2018 OPTIONS FOR INDIVIDUAL MEASURES: CLAIMS ONLY. MEASURE TYPE: Process Quality ID #14 (NQF 0087): Age-Related Macular Degeneration (AMD): Dilated Macular Examination National Quality Strategy Domain: Effective Clinical Care 2018 OPTIONS FOR INDIVIDUAL MEASURES: CLAIMS ONLY

More information

Amblyopia: is visual loss permanent?

Amblyopia: is visual loss permanent? 952 Ophthalmology and Vision Science, Queen s University, Royal Victoria Hospital, Belfast BT 12 6BA M K El Mallah U Chakravarthy P M Hart Corrrespondence to: Usha Chakravarthy u.chakravarthy@qub.ac.uk

More information

Visual acuity in a national sample of 10 year old children

Visual acuity in a national sample of 10 year old children Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, 1985, 39, 107-112 Visual acuity in a national sample of 10 year old children SARAH STEWART-BROWN AND NEVILLE BUTLER From the Department of Child Health, University

More information

Vision, quality of life and depressive symptoms after first eye cataract surgery

Vision, quality of life and depressive symptoms after first eye cataract surgery bs_bs_banner doi:10.1111/psyg.12028 PSYCHOGERIATRICS 2013; 13: 237 243 ORIGINAL ARTICLE Vision, quality of life and depressive symptoms after first eye cataract surgery Michelle L. FRASER, 1 Lynn B. MEULENERS,

More information

Vision-Related Quality of Life Assessment Using the NEI-VFQ-25 in Adolescents and Young Adults With a History of Congenital Cataract

Vision-Related Quality of Life Assessment Using the NEI-VFQ-25 in Adolescents and Young Adults With a History of Congenital Cataract Vision-Related Quality of Life Assessment Using the NEI-VFQ-25 in Adolescents and Young Adults With a History of Congenital Cataract Caitriona Kirwan, MRCOphth; Bernadette Lanigan, MBA; Michael O Keefe,

More information

AGE-RELATED EYE DISEASE

AGE-RELATED EYE DISEASE CLINICAL SCIENC Responsiveness of the National Eye Institute Visual Function Questionnaire to Progression to Advanced Age-Related Macular Degeneration, Vision Loss, and Lens Opacity AREDS Report No. 14

More information

Comparing Generic and Condition-Specific Preference-Based Measures in Epilepsy: EQ-5D-3L and NEWQOL-6D

Comparing Generic and Condition-Specific Preference-Based Measures in Epilepsy: EQ-5D-3L and NEWQOL-6D VALUE IN HEALTH 20 (2017) 687 693 Available online at www.sciencedirect.com journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/jval Comparing Generic and Condition-Specific Preference-Based Measures in Epilepsy:

More information

Setting The setting was a hospital. The economic study was conducted in the USA.

Setting The setting was a hospital. The economic study was conducted in the USA. Incremental cost-effectiveness of laser therapy for visual loss secondary to branch retinal vein occlusion Brown G C, Brown M M, Sharma S, Busbee B, Brown H Record Status This is a critical abstract of

More information

Measuring the evectiveness of cataract surgery: the reliability and validity of a visual function outcomes instrument

Measuring the evectiveness of cataract surgery: the reliability and validity of a visual function outcomes instrument 66 Br J Ophthalmol 1999;83:66 70 Measuring the evectiveness of cataract surgery: the reliability and validity of a visual function outcomes instrument D J Lawrence, C Brogan, L Benjamin, D Pickard, S Stewart-Brown

More information

The limited number of currently approved

The limited number of currently approved CLINICAL TRIALS OF VERTEPORFIN AND PEGAPTANIB: WHAT ARE THE RESULTS? * William F. Mieler, MD ABSTRACT Currently available treatment options for the management of choroidal neovascularization (CNV) in age-related

More information

Measuring visual symptoms in British cataract patients: the cataract symptom scale

Measuring visual symptoms in British cataract patients: the cataract symptom scale Br J Ophthalmol 1999;83:519 523 519 Department of Geriatric Medicine, University of Newcastle, Sunderland Royal Hospital, Kayll Road Sunderland, Tyne and Wear, SR4 7TP H L Crabtree A J Hildreth J E O Connell

More information

Assessment of visual function in chronic progressive external ophthalmoplegia

Assessment of visual function in chronic progressive external ophthalmoplegia (2006) 20, 564 568 & 2006 Nature Publishing Group All rights reserved 0950-222X/06 $30.00 www.nature.com/eye CLINICAL STUDY Assessment of visual function in chronic progressive external ophthalmoplegia

More information

Manuscript type: Research letter

Manuscript type: Research letter TITLE PAGE Chronic breathlessness associated with poorer physical and mental health-related quality of life (SF-12) across all adult age groups. Authors Currow DC, 1,2,3 Dal Grande E, 4 Ferreira D, 1 Johnson

More information

Falls before and after cataract surgery: a prospective cohort study evaluating determinants of risk

Falls before and after cataract surgery: a prospective cohort study evaluating determinants of risk Falls before and after cataract surgery: a prospective cohort study evaluating determinants of risk Lisa Keay 1, Anna Palagyi 1, Kris Rogers 1, Lynn Meuleners 2, Peter McCluskey 3, Andrew White 3,4, Ecosse

More information

Chapter V Depression and Women with Spinal Cord Injury

Chapter V Depression and Women with Spinal Cord Injury 1 Chapter V Depression and Women with Spinal Cord Injury L ike all women with disabilities, women with spinal cord injury (SCI) may be at an elevated risk for depression due to the double jeopardy of being

More information

Choosing between measures: comparison of EQ-5D, HUI2 and HUI3 in persons with hearing complaints

Choosing between measures: comparison of EQ-5D, HUI2 and HUI3 in persons with hearing complaints Qual Life Res (2007) 16:1439 1449 DOI 10.1007/s11136-007-9237-x Choosing between measures: comparison of EQ-5D, and in persons with hearing complaints Janneke P. C. Grutters Æ Manuela A. Joore Æ Frans

More information

Clinical Study Choroidal Thickness in Eyes with Unilateral Ocular Ischemic Syndrome

Clinical Study Choroidal Thickness in Eyes with Unilateral Ocular Ischemic Syndrome Hindawi Publishing Corporation Journal of Ophthalmology Volume 215, Article ID 62372, 5 pages http://dx.doi.org/1.1155/215/62372 Clinical Study Choroidal Thickness in Eyes with Unilateral Ocular Ischemic

More information

Diabetologia. Coping with Type 11 diabetes: the patient's perspective. Abstract

Diabetologia. Coping with Type 11 diabetes: the patient's perspective. Abstract Diabetologia (2002) 45:S 18-S22 DOI 1O.1007/s00125-002-0861-2 Diabetologia Coping with Type 11 diabetes: the patient's perspective M. Koopmanschap* Institute for Medical Technology Assessment, Erasmus

More information

measure of your overall performance. An isolated glucose test is helpful to let you know what your sugar level is at one moment, but it doesn t tell you whether or not your diabetes is under adequate control

More information

Retinal Nerve Fiber Layer Measurements in Myopia Using Optical Coherence Tomography

Retinal Nerve Fiber Layer Measurements in Myopia Using Optical Coherence Tomography Original Article Philippine Journal of OPHTHALMOLOGY Retinal Nerve Fiber Layer Measurements in Myopia Using Optical Coherence Tomography Dennis L. del Rosario, MD and Mario M. Yatco, MD University of Santo

More information

Executive Summary: A systematic review of literature evaluating eccentric viewing and steady eye training

Executive Summary: A systematic review of literature evaluating eccentric viewing and steady eye training Executive Summary: A systematic review of literature evaluating eccentric viewing and steady eye training Prepared for the Macular Society August 2012 Allannah Gaffney, Tom Margrain, Alison Binns, Cardiff

More information

B. Summary of cost-effectiveness of ranibizumab under alternative scenarios

B. Summary of cost-effectiveness of ranibizumab under alternative scenarios B. Summary of cost-effectiveness of ranibizumab under alternative scenarios In response to the Committee s concerns, a number of assumptions in the model base case have been revised (section 1): Mortality

More information

Clinical Study Synopsis

Clinical Study Synopsis Clinical Study Synopsis This Clinical Study Synopsis is provided for patients and healthcare professionals to increase the transparency of Bayer's clinical research. This document is not intended to replace

More information

In its initial report, the Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy. A Severity Scale for Diabetic Macular Edema Developed from ETDRS Data

In its initial report, the Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy. A Severity Scale for Diabetic Macular Edema Developed from ETDRS Data A Severity Scale for Diabetic Macular Edema Developed from ETDRS Data Ronald E. Gangnon, 1,2 Matthew D. Davis, 3 Larry D. Hubbard, 3 Lloyd M. Aiello, 4 Emily Y. Chew, 5 Frederick L. Ferris III, 5 Marian

More information

Although photocoagulation and photodynamic PROCEEDINGS PEGAPTANIB SODIUM FOR THE TREATMENT OF AGE-RELATED MACULAR DEGENERATION *

Although photocoagulation and photodynamic PROCEEDINGS PEGAPTANIB SODIUM FOR THE TREATMENT OF AGE-RELATED MACULAR DEGENERATION * PEGAPTANIB SODIUM FOR THE TREATMENT OF AGE-RELATED MACULAR DEGENERATION Evangelos S. Gragoudas, MD ABSTRACT In December 24, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved pegaptanib sodium. Pegaptanib

More information

Reduced vision in older adults with age related macular degeneration interferes with ability to care for self and impairs role as carer

Reduced vision in older adults with age related macular degeneration interferes with ability to care for self and impairs role as carer 1125 SCIENTIFIC REPORT Reduced vision in older adults with age related macular degeneration interferes with ability to care for self and impairs role as carer M R Stevenson, P M Hart, A-M Montgomery, D

More information

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION Contents METHODS... 2 Inclusion and exclusion criteria... 2 Supplementary table S1... 2 Assessment of abnormal ocular signs and symptoms... 3 Supplementary table S2... 3 Ocular

More information

London Medicines Evaluation Network Review

London Medicines Evaluation Network Review London Medicines Evaluation Network Review Evidence for initiating intravitreal bevacizumab for the management of wet age-related macular degeneration (wet-amd) in eyes with vision better than 6/12 November

More information

Manual. Manual Welsh Eye Care Initiative. A Welsh Eye Care Initiative. Protocol. The Assessment and Management of Age-related Macular Degeneration

Manual. Manual Welsh Eye Care Initiative. A Welsh Eye Care Initiative. Protocol. The Assessment and Management of Age-related Macular Degeneration A Protocol 1.0 Definitions The following terms are important in this text: Wet Macular Degeneration Condition caused by the growth of abnormal blood vessels under the retina. Symptoms appear suddenly and

More information

Although it is critical to assess the function of each eye. Correlation of the Binocular Visual Field with Patient Assessment of Vision

Although it is critical to assess the function of each eye. Correlation of the Binocular Visual Field with Patient Assessment of Vision Correlation of the Binocular Visual Field with Patient Assessment of Vision Henry D. Jampel, David S. Friedman, Harry Quigley, and Rhonda Miller PURPOSE. To determine which measures of the binocular visual

More information

SWINDON PCT CATARACT DIRECT REFERRAL SCHEME SERVICE LEVEL AGREEMENT

SWINDON PCT CATARACT DIRECT REFERRAL SCHEME SERVICE LEVEL AGREEMENT SWINDON PCT CATARACT DIRECT REFERRAL SCHEME SERVICE LEVEL AGREEMENT PROTOCOL This document sets out the details of the administrative protocol for the direct referral by Optometrists/OMPs of cataract patients.

More information

Kelvin Chan Feb 10, 2015

Kelvin Chan Feb 10, 2015 Underestimation of Variance of Predicted Mean Health Utilities Derived from Multi- Attribute Utility Instruments: The Use of Multiple Imputation as a Potential Solution. Kelvin Chan Feb 10, 2015 Outline

More information

Meeting the UK driving vision standards with reduced contrast sensitivity

Meeting the UK driving vision standards with reduced contrast sensitivity (2016) 30, 89 94 2016 Macmillan Publishers Limited All rights reserved 0950-222X/16 www.nature.com/eye Meeting the UK driving vision standards with reduced contrast sensitivity S Rae 1,2, K Latham 1,2

More information

Cover Page. The handle holds various files of this Leiden University dissertation

Cover Page. The handle   holds various files of this Leiden University dissertation Cover Page The handle http://hdl.handle.net/1887/28958 holds various files of this Leiden University dissertation Author: Keurentjes, Johan Christiaan Title: Predictors of clinical outcome in total hip

More information

UK National Screening Committee. Vision Screening in Children aged 4-5 years - an evidence review. Consultation comments pro-forma

UK National Screening Committee. Vision Screening in Children aged 4-5 years - an evidence review. Consultation comments pro-forma UK National Screening Committee Vision Screening in Children aged 4-5 years - an evidence review Consultation comments pro-forma Organisation: College of Optometrists (jointly with the Optical Confederation,

More information

Time to tweak the TTO: results from a comparison of alternative specifications of the TTO

Time to tweak the TTO: results from a comparison of alternative specifications of the TTO Eur J Health Econ (2013) 14 (Suppl 1):S43 S51 DOI 10.1007/s10198-013-0507-y ORIGINAL PAPER Time to tweak the TTO: results from a comparison of alternative specifications of the TTO Matthijs M. Versteegh

More information