Health-related quality-of-life and health-utility reporting in critical care.
Critical care
Health-utility
Kaplan-Meier curves
Morbidity
Mortality
Quality-adjusted life-years
health-related quality of life
Journal
World journal of critical care medicine
ISSN: 2220-3141
Titre abrégé: World J Crit Care Med
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 101622182
Informations de publication
Date de publication:
09 Jul 2022
09 Jul 2022
Historique:
received:
03
02
2022
revised:
16
04
2022
accepted:
28
05
2022
entrez:
2
9
2022
pubmed:
3
9
2022
medline:
3
9
2022
Statut:
epublish
Résumé
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.
Identifiants
pubmed: 36051941
doi: 10.5492/wjccm.v11.i4.236
pmc: PMC9305682
doi:
Types de publication
Journal Article
Review
Langues
eng
Pagination
236-245Informations de copyright
©The Author(s) 2022. Published by Baishideng Publishing Group Inc. All rights reserved.
Déclaration de conflit d'intérêts
Conflict-of-interest statement: Drs. Lau, Xie and Johnson have received funding from EuroQoL Foundation. All other authors declare that they have no conflict of interest.
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