| Literature DB >> 23418844 |
Abstract
Urinary incontinence can cause embarrassment and can impact on daily activities and quality of life. Generic health related quality of life instruments, such as the EQ-5D, are designed to be applicable across a variety of disease areas. However, it is sometimes claimed that they are not applicable to a certain disease area because they are missing a domain which directly captures the impact of that particular disease. For example, none of the domains of the EQ-5D relate directly to incontinence, although the impact of incontinence on quality of life may be expected to be picked up indirectly through changes in domains such as usual activities or anxiety/depression. The objective of this review was to examine the appropriateness of the EQ-5D in people with urinary incontinence by reviewing published evidence relating to the psychometric performance of the EQ-5D. A systematic search was conducted to identify studies reporting data that permitted assessment of the construct validity, responsiveness or reliability of the EQ-5D in people with urinary incontinence. Included papers were those that reported EQ-5D alongside other measures of health related quality of life or clinical measures in patients with urinary incontinence or in a broader population where results were reported for a subgroup of patients with urinary incontinence. Data were extracted and a narrative synthesis was undertaken. Seventeen papers were included in the review. In most of the tests performed, EQ-5D was consistent with clinical or disease specific outcome measures. The EQ-5D demonstrated validity in the majority of 'known group' comparisons, although statistical significance was not always reported. Correlations between the EQ-5D and disease specific outcomes were statistically significant and in the expected direction for most but not all of the disease specific instruments and clinical measures. For responsiveness, there was general agreement between changes in EQ-5D and changes in clinical or disease specific measures. Evidence on reliability was limited to one study. The EQ-5D was generally found to perform well on tests of construct validity, responsiveness and reliability, in people with urinary incontinence although no definitive conclusion can be made on its appropriateness based on these measures alone.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23418844 PMCID: PMC3622573 DOI: 10.1186/1477-7525-11-20
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Qual Life Outcomes ISSN: 1477-7525 Impact factor: 3.186
Figure 1Identification of included articles.
Characteristics of included studies
| Ternent et al, 2009 [ | UK | Stress incontinence | No details | Cross sectional (self-selected sample) | 105 (of 188 approached) |
| Ismail et al, 2009 [ | UK | Urodynamic stress incontinence | Magnetic energy stimulation of pelvic floor muscles | Cohort | 48 |
| Rinne et al, 2008 [ | Finland | Stress UI with indications for surgical treatment | a) Tension-free vaginal tape (TVT) | RCT | 267 (of 273 randomised) |
| b) TVT obturator (TVT-O) | |||||
| Haywood et al, 2008 [ | UK | Stress and/or urge incontinence in women referred for physiotherapy from primary or secondary care. | Physiotherapy | Cohort (RCT with data combined across arms) | 174 |
| Monz et al, 2007 [ | 15 European Countries (UK and Ireland subgroup) | UI of any type in women seeking treatment | At discretion of physician | Cross-sectional data from cohort study | 9487 |
| Kobelt et al, 2006 [ | France, Germany, Italy, Sweden, UK | Stress UI | NASHA/Dx gel | Cohort | 82 of 139 enrolled |
| Dumville et al, 2006 [ | UK | Proven stress UI requiring surgery | Laparoscopic vs open colposuspension | RCT | 291 |
| Currie et al , 2006 [ | UK | Stress and non-stress incontinence in patients identified from sample which had been treated by urology department. | None specified | Cross-sectional | 609 (from 2193 sent survey) |
| Monz et al, 2005 [ | 15 European countries | UI in women seeking treatment | None | Cross-sectional data from a cohort study | 9487 |
| Manca et al, 2003 [ | UK | Stress incontinence with indication for surgical management | Tension-free vaginal tape vs colposuspension | RCT | 344 |
| Kobelt, 1997 [ | Sweden | Mixed or urge incontinence in patients who had previously received therapy from a urotherapist. | None specified | Cross-sectional | 461 (541 sent questionnaire) |
| Hawthorne, 2009 [ | Australia | General population sample with data on presence and severity of UI | None | Cross-sectional | 3015 |
| Tincello et al, 2010 [ | Germany, UK, Sweden & Ireland | Stress UI, with or without urge symptoms, in women seeking treatment | 36.1% receiving conservative management at baseline. 18.0% receiving drug therapy at baseline. | Cross-sectional (baseline data from cohort study) | 3739 of 3762 enrolled |
| Saarni, 2006 [ | Finland | Self-reported UI in general population sample | None | Cross-sectional | 8028 of which 13.0% reported UI |
| Noble et al, 2002 [ | UK | Uncomplicated urinary tract symptoms in men with benign prostatic enlargement | Laser therapy vs Transurethral prostrate resection vs conservative management | RCT | 340 |
| Mihaylova et al, 2010 [ | Multicountry | Stress UI | Duloxetine vs conservative management vs duloxetine plus conservative management vs no treatment | Cohort (non randomised comparison of treatments) | 1510 |
| (Germany, UK & Sweden) | 40% had pure stress incontinence with the rest reporting both stress and urge incontinence | ||||
| Donovan et al, 1997 [ | 12 countries | Outpatients attending urology department with symptoms (not specifically incontinence) and possible benign prostatic obstruction. GP sample (not selected for condition) | None | Cross-sectional | 1271 outpatient sample |
| 423 GP sample (UK) |
GP=General Practice NASHA/Dx =non-animal-stabilized hyaluronic acid/dextranome, RCT=randomised controlled trial, UI=urinary incontinence, UK=United Kingdom.
Measures reported in the included studies
| Ternent et al, 2009 [ | EQ-5D | Not stated | None | KHQ | None | None |
| PGI | ||||||
| Ismail et al, 2009 [ | EQ-5D | Not stated | None | KHQ | 1 hr pad test | None |
| Leakage episodes | ||||||
| Pad usage | ||||||
| Rinne et al, 2008 [ | EQ-5D | Not stated | None | UISS | Cough stress test | Satisfaction with operation. |
| DIS | 24-hr pad | |||||
| VAS | ||||||
| IIQ-7 | ||||||
| UDI-6 | ||||||
| Haywood et al, 2008 [ | EQ-5D | States general population utility weights. | None | I-QoL (index and individual domains) | SSI | Subjective treatment benefit assessed by patient. |
| Incontinence episodes per week at baseline | ||||||
| Monz et al, 2007 [ | EQ-5D | Not stated | EQ-VAS | I-QOL | UI severity (Sandvik Index) | Bother (4 point scale) |
| UI subtype (S/UIQ) | ||||||
| Kobelt et al, 2006 [ | EQ-5D | Reference suggests UK tariff used. | None | None | Incontinence grade | |
| Median number of episodes per day | ||||||
| Dumville et al, 2006 [ | EQ-5D | UK tariff | None | None | Objective cure* (negative 1 hr pad test) | Subjective cure* (perfectly happy / pleased) to spend rest of life with current urinary symptoms |
| SF-36 | ||||||
| *(reported in related clinical paper) | ||||||
| Currie et al, 2006 [ | EQ-5D | Not stated | None | None | None | None |
| SF-36 | ||||||
| Monz et al, 2005 [ | EQ-5D | Not stated | None | I-QOL | Sandvik index (severity based on frequency and leakage amount) | Bothersomeness and limitations of daily activities |
| Manca et al, 2003 [ | EQ-5D | UK tariff | | | Objective cure (based on negative pad test and negative cystometry) | |
| SF-36 | ||||||
| Subjective cure (based on BFLUTS) | ||||||
| Kobelt, 1997 [ | EQ-5D | UK tariff. | EQ-VAS [ | | Frequency of micturitions and involuntary urine loss (combined measure) | |
| SF-36 | ||||||
| Hawthorn, 2009 [ | EQ-5D | EQ-5D: UK tariff | | | | |
| SF-6D | ||||||
| AQoL | SF-6D: Not stated | |||||
| AQoL-8 (derived from | ||||||
| AQoL & | ||||||
| AQoL) | AQoL-8: community TTO | |||||
| HUI-3 (deciles) | ||||||
| Tincello et al, 2010 [ | EQ-5D | UK tariff | None | None | Episodes per week | None |
| Saarni, 2006 [ | EQ-5D | EQ-5D: UK tariff | | None | None | None |
| 15-D | ||||||
| 15-D Finnish valuation set | ||||||
| Noble et al, 2002 [ | EQ-5D | Not stated | None | I-PSS which includes a quality of life score. | Maximum flow rate | |
| Post void residual urine | ||||||
| Number of successful procedures (based on I-PSS and maximum urinary flow) | ||||||
| Mihaylova et al, 2010 [ | EQ-5D | UK tariff | | | Number of leaks during 7 days | |
| Donovan et al, 1997 [ | EQ-5D (UK, Denmark and Netherland only, N=359) | Not reported | ICSQol (ICSmale) | |||
| SF-36 (UK only, N=205) | ||||||
AQoL=Assessment of Quality of Life, BFLUTS=Bristol Female Lower Urinary Tract Symptoms Questionnaire, DIS= Detrusor instability scores, EQ-VAS=Visual analogue scale which accompanies the EQ-5D descriptive system, HUI-3=Health Utilities Index Mark 3, ICSQol=International Continence Society – Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia study Quality of Life Instrument, IIQ-7=Incontinence Impact Questionnaire-short form, I-PSS = International Prostate Symptom Score, I-QOL=Incontinence specific Quality of life Questionnaire, KHQ=King’s Health Questionnaire, PGI = Patient Generated Index, SF-36=Medical outcomes study 36-Item Short-Form Health Survey , SF-6D= Classification for describing health derived from a selection of SF-36 items, SSI=Symptom Severity Index, S/UIQ=Stress and Urge Incontinence Questionnaire, UDI-6=Urogenital Distress Inventory-short form, UI=Urinary incontinence, UISS=Urinary Incontinence Severity Score, VAS=Visual Analogue Scale, 15-D=Fifteen dimension generic instrument.
Results of ‘known group’ comparisons
| Haywood et al, 2008 [ | Number of episodes at baseline: | | | |
| EQ-5D | Yes‡ | No at p=0.01 | ||
| Not at all | SSI | Yes | Yes, p<0.01 | |
| A few days | I-QoL index | Yes | Yes, p<0.01 | |
| Half the week | I-QoL domains | Mixed† | Yes, p<0.01 | |
| Most days | | | | |
| Every day | | | | |
| Tincello et al, 2010 [ | Episode frequency: | | | |
| <=7 per week | EQ-5D | Yes | Yes, p<0.0001 | |
| 7 to 13 per week | ||||
| >=14 per week | ||||
| Monz et al, 2005 [ | Severity (reported for each subtype) | | | |
| Slight | EQ-5D | Yes | Not reported | |
| Moderate | EQ-VAS | Yes | Not reported | |
| Severe | Mean I-QoL | Yes | Not reported | |
| Very severe | I-QoL domains | Yes | Not reported | |
| Hawthorne, 2009 [ | Continence status: | | | |
| a) None | EQ-5D | Yes | Yes, p<0.0001 | |
| b) Slight/mild | SF-6D | Yes | Yes, p<0.0001 | |
| c) Moderate | AQoL | Yes | Yes, p<0.0001 | |
| d) Severe | AQoL-8 | Yes | Yes, p<0.0001 | |
| Currie et al, 2006 [ | Type of incontinence: | | | |
| General | EQ-5D | Stress<general<none* | Not reported | |
| Stress | SF-36 | As for EQ-5D | As for EQ-5D | |
| None | | | | |
| Monz et al, 2005 [ | Subtype (reported for each severity category): | | | |
| EQ-5D | Stress>urge>mixed* | Not reported | ||
| EQ-VAS | As for EQ-5D (except when severity slight) | Not reported | ||
| Stress | ||||
| Mean I-QoL | As for EQ-5D | Not reported | ||
| Urge | I-QoL domains | No consistent pattern across all domains | Not reported | |
| Mixed | ||||
| Tincello et al, 2010 [ | UI subtype: | | | |
| Mixed | EQ-5D | Stress>urge>mixed* | Yes, p<0.0001 | |
| Pure stress | ||||
| Pure urge |
†Yes for 2/3 domains, ‡Same mean for two least severe domains, *Unclear which type of incontinence is expected to have lower utility. VAS=visual analogue scale, I-QOL=Incontinence specific Quality of life Questionnaire, SSI= symptom severity index, SF-36=Medical outcomes study 36-Item Short-Form Health Survey, SF-6D= Classification for describing health derived from a selection of SF-36 items, AQoL= Assessment of Quality of Life.
EQ-5D responsiveness results
| Ismail et al, 2009 [ | Change over time | No significant change on any measure (KHQ,1 hr pad test, pad use, leakage episodes) | No significant change | NA | Yes |
| Rinnie et al, 2008 [ | Change over time | 24 hr pad test significantly improved in both arms | Significant improvement in both arms | Yes | Yes |
| All condition specific measures (UISS, DIS, VAS, IIQ-7, UDI-6) significantly improved in both treatment groups | | | | ||
| EQ-VAS significantly improved in both treatment groups | |||||
| Difference between treatment arms | No significant difference in objective cure, leakage, complication rate, UISS, DIS, VAS, IIQ-7, UDI-6. | No significant difference in EQ-5D | Agreement with some clinical outcomes and not others. | Yes | |
| Haywood et al 2008 [ | Comparison of means for responders and non-responders | 6 week data: | 6 week data: | 6 week data: | 6 week data: |
| SSI and I-QoL index had difference in expected direction but not statistically significant (at p=0.01). Two of the I-QoL domains had significant difference. | EQ-5D had difference in expected direction but not statistically significant (at p=0.01). | Yes | Not consistent with all | ||
| | | | |||
| | | | |||
| 5 mth data: | 5 mth data: | 5 mth data: | 5 mth data: | ||
| As for 6 weeks except only one of the I-QoL domains had significant (p<0.01) difference. | EQ-5D had difference in expected direction and statistically significant (p=0.01). | Yes | Not consistent with all. | ||
| | | | |||
| Mean change scores for patients reporting improvement | 6 week data: | 6 week data: | 6 week data: | 6 week data: | |
| Expected direction and significant (at p=0.05) for SSI, I-QoL index, I-QoL domains | Expected direction but p>0.05 | Yes | No | ||
| 5 mth data: | 5 mth data: | 5 mth data: | 5 mth data: | ||
| As for 6 weeks but larger changes. | Expected direction and p<0.05. | Yes | Yes | ||
| MSRM for patients reporting improvement | 6 week data: | 6 week data: | 6 week data: | 6 week data: | |
| SSI, 0.70 | 0.07 | Yes | No | ||
| I-QoL index, 1.01 | | | | ||
| I-Qol domains, 0.40 to 0.94 | | | | ||
| 5 mth data: | 5 mth data: | 5 mth data: | 5 mth data: | ||
| SSI, 0.67 | 0.26 | Yes | Yes | ||
| I-QoL index, 1.17 | | | | ||
| I-Qol domains, 0.80 to 1.25 | |||||
| Kobelt et al, 2006 [ | Median incontinence episodes per day for clinical outcome but change from baseline for EQ-5D | All patients: | All patients: | All patients | All patients |
| 3.0 at baseline, 0.7 at 3mths and 0.9 at 12 mths (p<0.0001 and p<0.001 for differences) | 3 mths: 0.048 (p<0.001)6 mths: 0.014 (not significant) | 3 mths: Yes | 3 mths: Yes | ||
| | | ||||
| 12 mths: “gain remained evident” | 12 mths: Yes | 12 mths: Yes | |||
| | | | |||
| Patients with utility<1 at baseline: | Patients with utility <1 at baseline: | Patients with utility <1 at baseline: | |||
| 3 mths: 0.099 (p<0.01) | |||||
| 6 mths: 0.065 (p<0.001) | | | |||
| 12 mths: “significant improvements” | As for all patients | As for all patients | |||
| Dumville et al, 2006 [ | Difference between treatment arms: | Objective and subjective cure rates and SF-36 scores showed no significant difference | QALY gain based on EQ-5D utility scores showed no significant difference (CrI crossed zero) | No change in either clinical, generic HRQoL or utility | Yes |
| Manca et al, 2003 [ | Differences from baseline to 6mths | Pad weight decreased significantly for both groups. | Utility increased in both arms (significance not reported) | Yes | Not reported |
| Significant reduction in leakage episodes in both groups (P<0.0001) | |||||
| Significant reduction in 21/30 symptoms (BFLUTS) in both groups (P<0.0001) | |||||
| Differences between trial arms: | No significant difference in objective or subjective cure rate between trial arms | QALY difference between arms based on EQ-5D scores non significant at p=0.05 | Agreement with clinical outcomes but didn’t detect differences between arms in some SF-36 domains | Yes for clinical outcomes, no for some SF-36 domains | |
| SF-36 scores had significantly smaller improvement/ greater decline lower for colposuspension group vs TVT in four domains at 6 weeks and four domains (three same and one different) at 6 mths. | | ||||
| Noble et al, 2002 [ | Change from baseline: | Improvements in I-PSS, maximum urine flow, and residual volume were significant (p=0.05) for laser and resection but not conservative. | Means increased for laser and resection but not conservative (p values not reported) | Yes | Not reported |
| Improvements in I-PSS QoL were significant for all three interventions. | |||||
| Differences between trial arms: | Resection vs conservative and laser vs conservative showed significant difference in all four outcomes. | Gains were greater for resection than laser therapy (p values not reported) | Yes | Not reported | |
| Laser vs resection showed significant difference in only one outcome which was in favour of resection (maximum flow) | |||||
| Mihaylova et al, 2010 [ | Comparison between active treatment arms and no treatment: | Number of leaks avoided per week was significantly (p<0.01) better for Duloxetine alone, conservative alone and duloxetine plus conservative (all relative to no treatment). | QALY gains based on EQ-5D utility were significant for Duloxetine alone (p<0.01) and duloxetine plus conservative treatment (p<0.05) but conservative alone was not significant and was negative (all compared to no treatment) | Yes for two of three comparisons against no treatment | Yes for two of three comparisons against no treatment |
| Comparison between the three active treatment arms: | No significant reduction in number of leaks for 3 comparisons between active treatment arms. | Significant (p<0.05) QALY gains for 2 of 3 comparisons between active treatment arms. | Yes for 2 of 3 comparisons between active treatment arms. | No for 2 of 3 comparisons between active treatment arms. |
MSRM=modified standardised response mean.