Methodological Issues of Patient Utility Measurement Experience From Two Clinical Trials

This article explores various methodological issues of patient utility measurement in two randomized controlled clinical trials involving 85 patients with fibromyalgia and 144 with ankylosing spondylitis. In both trials one baseline and two follow-up measurements of the patients' preferences for their own health state and several hypothetical states were performed using the rating scale and the standard gamble methods.It was confirmed that standard gamble scores are consistently higher than rating scale scores for both the experienced and the hypothetical states. The 3-month test-retest reliability for hypothetical states measured by intraclass correlation coefficients ranged from 0.24 to 0.33 for the rating scale and from 0.43 to 0.70 for the standard gamble. Although the reproducibility is not high, the group mean scores are fairly stable over time. Mean standard gamble scores tend to differ depending on the way the measurements are undertaken. Utilities elicited with chained gambles were significantly higher than utilities elicited with basic reference gambles. At the individual level some inconsistent responses occurred. However, more than 70% of these fell within the bounds of the measurement error, which ranged from 0.11 to 0.13 on the standard gamble (0–1 scale) and from 8 to 10 on the rating scale (0–100 scale). The large number of negative utilities for the severe hypothetical state, which was used as an anchor point in the chained gambles, and the magnitude of these negative utilities (down to −19) calls for intensified research efforts to handle these responses in utility calculations.

[1]  G. Torrance Measurement of health state utilities for economic appraisal. , 1986, Journal of health economics.

[2]  George W. Torrance,et al.  Methodologic challenges in the development of utility measures of health-related quality of life in rheumatoid arthritis. , 1991, Controlled clinical trials.

[3]  J. Christensen-Szalanski Discount Functions and the Measurement of Patients' Values , 1984, Medical decision making : an international journal of the Society for Medical Decision Making.

[4]  Haig Th,et al.  The rational zero point for an illness index with ratio properties. , 1986 .

[5]  R L Kane,et al.  Methodology for measuring health-state preferences--IV: Progress and a research agenda. , 1989, Journal of clinical epidemiology.

[6]  A. Tversky,et al.  The framing of decisions and the psychology of choice. , 1981, Science.

[7]  A. Mulley,et al.  Assessing Patients' Utilities: Can the Ends Justify the Means? , 1989, Medical care.

[8]  C. Bombardier,et al.  Auranofin therapy and quality of life in patients with rheumatoid arthritis. Results of a multicenter trial. , 1986, The American journal of medicine.

[9]  K. Gerard Cost-utility in practice: a policy maker's guide to the state of the art. , 1992, Health policy.

[10]  E. van Doorslaer,et al.  Health related utility measurement in rheumatology: an introduction. , 1993, Patient education and counseling.

[11]  D A Redelmeier,et al.  Variability among methods to assess patients' well-being and consequent effect on a cost-effectiveness analysis. , 1992, Journal of clinical epidemiology.

[12]  R. Tibshirani,et al.  The Measurement of Patients' Values in Medicine , 1982, Medical decision making : an international journal of the Society for Medical Decision Making.

[13]  P. Kind,et al.  A scale of valuations of states of illness: is there a social consensus? , 1978, International journal of epidemiology.

[14]  R A Deyo,et al.  Reproducibility and responsiveness of health status measures. Statistics and strategies for evaluation. , 1991, Controlled clinical trials.

[15]  F. Hellinger Expected Utility Theory and Risky Choices with Health Outcomes , 1989, Medical care.

[16]  George W. Torrance,et al.  Social preferences for health states: An empirical evaluation of three measurement techniques , 1976 .

[17]  R L Kane,et al.  Methodology for measuring health-state preferences--I: Measurement strategies. , 1989, Journal of clinical epidemiology.

[18]  E. Nord,et al.  The validity of a visual analogue scale in determining social utility weights for health states. , 1991, The International journal of health planning and management.

[19]  R. Sugden,et al.  Some implications of a more general form of regret theory , 1987 .

[20]  A Calin,et al.  Willingness to accept risk in the treatment of rheumatic disease. , 1990, Journal of epidemiology and community health.

[21]  R. Kane,et al.  Methodology for measuring health-state preferences--II: Scaling methods. , 1989, Journal of clinical epidemiology.

[22]  A. Tversky,et al.  Prospect Theory : An Analysis of Decision under Risk Author ( s ) : , 2007 .

[23]  A. Mehrez,et al.  Quality-adjusted Life Years, Utility Theory, and Healthy-years Equivalents , 1989, Medical decision making : an international journal of the Society for Medical Decision Making.

[24]  P. Tugwell,et al.  Measurement of functional status, quality of life, and utility in rheumatoid arthritis. , 1990, Arthritis and rheumatism.

[25]  M. Weinstein,et al.  Clinical Decision Analysis , 1980 .

[26]  A. Cats,et al.  Evaluation of diagnostic criteria for ankylosing spondylitis. A proposal for modification of the New York criteria. , 1984, Arthritis and rheumatism.

[27]  J. Neumann,et al.  Theory of games and economic behavior , 1945, 100 Years of Math Milestones.

[28]  R. Sugden,et al.  Regret Theory: An alternative theory of rational choice under uncertainty Review of Economic Studies , 1982 .

[29]  H. Fineberg,et al.  Preferences for Health Outcomes , 1984, Medical decision making : an international journal of the Society for Medical Decision Making.

[30]  D. Streiner,et al.  Health Measurement Scales: A practical guide to thier development and use , 1989 .

[31]  A S Detsky,et al.  How attractive does a new technology have to be to warrant adoption and utilization? Tentative guidelines for using clinical and economic evaluations. , 1992, CMAJ : Canadian Medical Association journal = journal de l'Association medicale canadienne.

[32]  Robert Sugden,et al.  OBSERVING VIOLATIONS OF TRANSITIVITY BY EXPERIMENTAL METHODS , 1991 .

[33]  R M Kaplan,et al.  Health status: types of validity and the index of well-being. , 1976, Health services research.

[34]  R L Kane,et al.  Methodology for measuring health-state preferences--III: Population and context effects. , 1989, Journal of clinical epidemiology.

[35]  H. C. Hutchings,et al.  The cost effectiveness of auranofin: results of a randomized clinical trial. , 1988, The Journal of rheumatology.

[36]  George W. Torrance,et al.  Application of Multi-Attribute Utility Theory to Measure Social Preferences for Health States , 1982, Oper. Res..

[37]  D. Feeny,et al.  Utilities and Quality-Adjusted Life Years , 1989, International Journal of Technology Assessment in Health Care.

[38]  P. Tugwell,et al.  The American College of Rheumatology 1990 Criteria for the Classification of Fibromyalgia. Report of the Multicenter Criteria Committee. , 1990, Arthritis and rheumatism.

[39]  R M Kaplan,et al.  Health Status Index: Category Rating versus Magnitude Estimation for Measuring Levels of Well-Being , 1979, Medical care.