- The document discusses health-related quality of life (HRQOL), which refers to how an individual's well-being may be impacted by health or disease. It is measured through patient-reported outcomes.
- HRQOL looks at physical, emotional, and social functioning on a scale of 0-100. It is used to compare treatments and understand the impact of diseases on patients' daily lives.
- The document provides an example study that used HRQOL measures like the Duke Activity Status Index and quality-adjusted life years to determine that routine PCI did not significantly improve outcomes for stable heart attack patients compared to medical therapy alone.
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Nursing-2009-Hays-July 20-HRQOL (1).ppt
1. Health-Related Quality of Life (HRQOL)
Ron D. Hays, Ph.D. (drhays@ucla.edu)
UCLA Division of General Internal Medicine and Health
Services Research, Department of Medicine
UCLA Nursing School Students
Factor Building Room 4145 (July 20, 2009, 10:30-11:30 am)
http://www.gim.med.ucla.edu/FacultyPages/Hays/
2. Recent HRQOL Publications
Urology. 2009 Jul 7. [Epub ahead of print],
Responsiveness of the University of
California-Los Angeles Prostate Cancer
Index. Bergman J, Saigal CS, Kwan L,
Litwin MS.
Arch Intern Med. 2009 Jun 22;169(12):1104-
12. The impact of selecting a high
hemoglobin target level on health-related
quality of life for patients with chronic
kidney disease: a systematic review and
meta-analysis. Clement FM, Klarenbach S,
Tonelli M, Johnson JA, Manns BJ.
3. Recent HRQOL Publications
J Natl Cancer Inst. 2009 Jun 16;101(12):860-8.
Epub 2009 Jun 9. Impact of cancer on health-
related quality of life of older Americans.
Reeve BB, Potosky AL, Smith AW, Han PK,
Hays RD, Davis WW, Arora NK, Haffer SC,
Clauser SB.
N Engl J Med. 2009 Feb 19;360(8):774-83.
Quality of life after late invasive therapy for
occluded arteries. Mark DB, Pan W, Clapp-
Channing NE, Anstrom KJ, Ross JR, Fox RS,
Devlin GP, Martin CE, Adlbrecht C, Cowper
PA, Ray LD, Cohen EA, Lamas GA, Hochman
JS; Occluded Artery Trial Investigators.
5. Process of Care
Technical Quality (expert consensus)
Quality of Care If Then Indicators
% of patients with diabetes with one or more
HbA1c tests annually
Interpersonal Quality (patient reports)
In the last 12 months, how often did your
doctor explain things in a way that was
easy to understand?
6. Health Outcomes
Biological
% of patients with diabetes with most recent
HbA1c level >9.0% ( poor control)
HRQOL
In general, would you say that your health is:
Excellent
Very good
Good
Fair
Poor
9. Health-Related Quality of Life is:
How the person FEELs (well-being)
Emotional well-being
Pain
Energy
What the person can DO (functioning)
Self-care
Role
Social
10. HRQOL is Not
Quality of
environment
Type of housing
Level of income
Social Support
11. Greater % of fair or poor health reported
by older adults (33% for 75+ versus 9% for 18-34)
12. In general, how would you
rate your health?
Poor
Fair
Good
Very Good
Excellent
13. Does your health now limit you
in walking more than a mile?
(If so, how much?)
No, not limited at all
Yes, limited a little
Yes, limited a lot
14. How much of the time during the
past 4 weeks have you been
happy?
None of the time
A little of the time
Some of the time
Most of the time
All of the time
15. X0-100 =
(original score - minimum) *100
0-100 Scoring of HRQOL Scales
(maximum - minimum)
Average or sum all items in the same scale.
0 (worst) to 100 (best) possible range (linear)
transformation
16. The following items are about activities you might
do during a typical day. Does your health now limit
you in these activities? If so, how much?
1. Yes, limited a lot ------> 0
2. Yes, limited a little ----> 50
3. No, not limited at all -->100
1. Vigorous activities, such as running, lifting heavy objects,
participating in strenuous sports
2. Moderate activities, such as moving a table, pushing a
vacuum cleaner, bowling, or playing golf
3. Lifting or carrying groceries
4. Climbing several flights of stairs
5. Climbing one flight of stairs
6. Bending, kneeling, or stooping
7. Walking more than a mile
8. Walking several blocks
9. Walking one block
10. Bathing or dressing yourself
17. Change in Physical Function
My score today = 100
Event #1:
- Hit by Rock results in being limited a little in vigorous
activities
- Post-intervention score: 95 ( - 0.25 SD)
Event #2:
- Hit by Bike results in me being:
- limited a lot in vigorous activities and in climbing several flights
of stairs
- limited a little in moderate activities
- Post-intervention score: 75 (- 1.25 SD)
Mean = 87 (SD = 20)
75th percentile = 100 (U.S. males)
18. 6
2
17
5
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
16
18
<35 35-44 45-54 >55
%
Dead
(n=676) (n=754) (n=1181) (n=609)
SF-36 Physical Health Component Score (PCS)T score
Ware et al. (1994). SF-36 Physical and Mental Health Summary Scales: A Users Manual.
Self-Reported Physical Health
Predictive of 5-Year Mortality
19. Is New Treatment (X) Better
Than Standard Care (O)?
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
X
0
X
0
Physical
Function
X > 0
Mental
Health
0 > X
0
X
Social Health
0 > X
20. Medicine Use Diminishes HRQOL?
1 No dead
2 No dead
3 No 50
4 No 75
5 No 100
6 Yes 0
7 Yes 25
8 Yes 50
9 Yes 75
10 Yes 100
Medication
Person Use HRQOL (0-100 scale)
No Medicine 3 75
Yes Medicine 5 50
Group n HRQOL
21. Perfect Health
Bad as being dead
Preference-based HRQOL Measure Yields Summary Score
23. Quality of Life after Late Invasive
Therapy for Occluded Arteries
Patients with totally occluded infarct-
related artery 3-28 days after MI
Randomized to:
Medical therapy alone (n = 474)
Percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI)
plus stenting (n = 477)
Primary outcomecomposite of death,
reinfarction, or hospital treatment for
class IV heart failure
24. Health-Related Quality of Life
Outcome Measures (baseline,
4, 12 & 24 months)
Duke Activity Status Index (DASI)
Medical Outcomes Study 36-Item Short-
Form (SF-36) Mental Health Scale (MHI-5)
Time tradeoff (TTO)
25. DASI
Self-administered questionnaire
measuring physical functioning (designed
to estimate peak oxygen uptake).
Can you run a short distance?
Can you do yard work like raking leaves
weeding or pushing a power mower?
0-58 score range (higher is better),
>=4 is clinically significant
26. MHI-5
How much of the time during the past 4
weeks:
Have you been a very nervous person?
Have you felt so down in the dumps that
nothing could cheer you up?
Have you felt calm and peaceful?
Have you felt down-hearted and blue?
Have you been a happy person?
0-100 score range (higher is better),
>=5 is clinically significant
27. Cardiac Symptoms
Rose
Angina questionnaire (7 questions)
Chest pain and whether provoked by walking
and relieved by rest
Dyspnea questionnaire (4 questions)
28. Choice #1: Your present state
Life Expectancy: 10 years
Choice #2: Excellent health
How many years (x) would you give up in your
current state to be able to have complete
mobility?
[ 1 - X = QALY ]
10
TTO
29. How many years (x) would you give up in your
current state to be able to have excellent health?
X = 0 QALY = 1
X = 1 -> QALY = 0.9
X = 5 -> QALY = 0.5
X = 10 -> QALY = 0
[ 1 - X = QALY ]
10
TTO Estimates
30. Results & Conclusions
2-year net cost was $7,089 for PCI
DAI at 4 months
PCI (37) versus Medical therapy (33)
2-year QALYs
1.42 vs.1.45 for PCI and Medical therapy
Does not support common practice of routine
PCI in patients in stable condition after MI
with occluded infarct-related artery.