Back to Search Start Over

Systematic Review: Health-State Utilities in Liver Disease: A Systematic Review

Authors :
John F. Dillon
David J. McLernon
Peter T. Donnan
Source :
Medical Decision Making. 28:582-592
Publication Year :
2008
Publisher :
SAGE Publications, 2008.

Abstract

Objectives. Health-state utilities are essential for cost-utility analysis. Few estimates exist for liver disease in the literature. The authors' aim was to conduct a systematic review of health-state utilities in liver disease, to look at the variation of study designs used, and to pool utilities for some liver disease states. Methods. A search of MED-LINE, EMBASE, and CINAHL from 1966 to September 2006 was conducted including key words related to liver disease and utility measuring tools. Articles were included if health-state utility tools or expert opinion were used. Variance-weighted mean utility estimates were pooled using metaregression adjusting for disease state and utility assessment method. Results. Thirty studies measured utilities of liver diseases/disease states. Half of these estimated utilities for hepatitis viruses: hepatitis A (n = 1), hepatitis B (n = 4), and hepatitis C (n = 10). Others included liver transplant (n= 6) and chronic liver disease (n= 5) populations. Twelve utility methods were used throughout. The EQ-5D (n = 10) was most popular method, followed by visual analogue scale (n = 9), time tradeoff (n = 6), and standard gamble (n = 4). Respondents were patients (n= 16), an expert panel (n = 10), non— liver diseases adults ( n= 2), patient and expert (n = 1), and patient and healthy adult (n = 1). Type of perspective included community (n= 21), patient (n= 4), and both (n = 5). The pooled mean estimates in hepatitis C with moderate disease, compensated cirrhosis, decompensated cirrhosis, and post— liver transplant using the EQ-5D were 0.75, 0.75, 0.67, and 0.71, respectively. The change in these utilities using different methods were - 0.07 (visual analogue scale), - 0.01 (health utilities index version 3), + 0.04 (standard gamble), + 0.08 (health utilities index version 2), + 0.12 (time tradeoff), and + 0.15 (standard gamble— transformed visual analogue scale). Conclusions. The authors have created a valuable liver disease— based utility resource from which researchers and policy makers can easily view all available utility estimates from the literature. They have also estimated health-state utilities for major states of hepatitis C.

Details

ISSN :
1552681X and 0272989X
Volume :
28
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Medical Decision Making
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........38d1f4aff127d47a8c5d4452ab46e72c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/0272989x08315240