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      Estimation of utilities for chronic hepatitis C from SF-36 scores.

      The American Journal of Gastroenterology
      Adult, Comorbidity, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Hepatitis C, Chronic, diagnosis, drug therapy, economics, physiopathology, Humans, Interferons, therapeutic use, Middle Aged, Quality of Life, Treatment Outcome

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          Abstract

          Utilities are the recommended health-related quality of life (HRQOL) measure for cost-effectiveness studies. The aim of this study was to estimate utilities for chronic hepatitis C health states from published studies reporting Short Form-36 (SF-36) quality-of-life scores. A systematic review of published studies was undertaken. Articles were eligible for review if direct HRQOL assessment using the SF-36 in a chronic hepatitis C population was reported. SF-36 data were grouped according to hepatitis C virus (HCV) treatment status at baseline, stage of liver disease, association with comorbidity, and HCV treatment response. The SF-36 scores were then transformed into utilities using three different methods. Using Nichol's method, the estimated SF-36 mean utilities were 0.87 for sustained virological response (SVR) to interferon-based treatment, 0.82 for untreated chronic hepatitis C, 0.81 for precirrhosis, 0.76 for compensated cirrhosis, 0.69 for decompensated cirrhosis, 0.67 for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), and 0.77 for liver transplant. Other methods showed differences across comparison groups (e.g., treated vs untreated) but absolute scores differed substantially by translation method. SF-36 utilities for different stages of liver disease varied considerably from expert estimates but comparable to direct patient-elicited utilities. Application of SF-36 translation methods facilitate use of large existing datasets to generate community-weighted utilities for cost-effectiveness analyses, an important consideration in the absence of large studies of direct patient-elicited utilities in chronic hepatitis C.

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          Deriving a preference-based single index from the UK SF-36 Health Survey.

          This article presents the results of a study to derive a preference-based single index from the SF-36. The study was an attempt to reconcile a profile health status measure, the SF-36, with the "quality adjusted life years" approach. The study undertook a parsimonious restructuring of the SF-36 using explicit criteria to form the SF-6D health state classification. A sample of multidimensional health states defined by this classification were valued by a convenience sample of health professionals, managers, and patients, who responded to a set of visual analogue scale ratings and standard gamble questions, with highly complete and consistent answers. Statistical models were estimated to predict single index scores for all 9000 health states defined by the new classification. The resultant algorithms can be applied to existing SF-36 data sets and used in the assessment of the cost-effectiveness of health technologies. This preliminary work forms the basis of a larger study currently being undertaken in the UK.
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            Health-state utilities and quality of life in hepatitis C patients.

            Health-state utilities are global measurements of quality of life on a scale from 0 (death) to 1 (full health). Utilities are used to evaluate health outcomes and are the preferred outcome measure for policy models that determine the cost-effectiveness of treatments. Currently, utilities for hepatitis C virus (HCV)-infected patients have been estimated using expert judgments. The purpose of this study was to elicit HCV utilities directly from patients. We assessed the utilities of 193 outpatients at various stages of chronic HCV progression by using a visual analog scale, the standard gamble technique, the Health Utilities Index Mark 3 survey, and the EuroQol Index survey. We also incorporated the nonutility-based Short Form-36v2 survey, which provides a detailed profile of health status. The mean standard gamble utilities were: 0.78 for patients without a recent liver biopsy and no signs of cirrhosis; 0.79 for mild to moderate chronic HCV infection; 0.80 for compensated cirrhosis; 0.60 for decompensated cirrhosis; 0.72 for hepatocellular carcinoma; 0.73 for transplant; and 0.86 for sustained virological responders to interferon +/- ribavirin treatment. The Health Utilities Index Mark 3 survey and the EuroQol Index survey utilities were lower than Canadian population norms (p < 0.001). Patient-elicited utilities were lower than previous expert estimates for mild/moderate chronic infection and sustained virological responders, but higher for decompensated cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma. The Short Form-36v2 survey scores revealed several significant health impairments (p < 0.005) when compared with U.S. population norms. These findings 1) suggest that quality of life (QOL) differences across the HCV clinical spectrum are smaller than previously believed; 2) support other evidence suggesting that QOL is significantly diminished in HCV patients; and 3) provide utility values derived directly from HCV patients.
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              Chronic hepatitis C virus infection causes a significant reduction in quality of life in the absence of cirrhosis.

              The effects of chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection, in the absence of cirrhosis, on patients' quality of life was assessed using the short form 36 (SF36) symptomatology questionnaire. Patients with chronic hepatitis C were polysymptomatic and had significant reductions in their SF36 scores for all of the modalities tested. Patients with chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection showed a reduction in the SF36 scores that assessed mental functions, but they had no decrease in the scores that measured physical symptoms, indicating that the symptoms associated with chronic HCV infection are qualitatively different from those associated with chronic HBV infection. Patients with chronic HCV infection who had used intravenous drugs in the past had the greatest impairment in quality-of-life scores, but the reduction in quality-of-life scores was still found in patients who had never used drugs. The reduction in quality of life could not be attributed to the degree of liver inflammation or to the mode of acquisition of the infection. Hence, chronic infection with HCV per se gives rise to physical symptoms that reduce the quality of life of infected patients.
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