| Literature DB >> 23709096 |
Yaling Yang1, Louise Longworth, John Brazier.
Abstract
PURPOSE: This review examines psychometric performance of three widely used generic preference-based measures, that is, EuroQol 5 dimensions (EQ-5D), Health Utility Index 3 (HUI3) and Short-form 6 dimensions (SF-6D) in patients with hearing impairments.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23709096 PMCID: PMC3853410 DOI: 10.1007/s11136-013-0417-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Qual Life Res ISSN: 0962-9343 Impact factor: 4.147
Fig. 1Flow diagram showing selection of studies
Characteristics of the 13 studies included in the review
| Author, Year | Country | Hearing disorder | Intervention | Study design | Number of participants | Mean age (SD or range) | Female (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Barton et al. [ | United Kingdom | Hearing impaired | Hearing aid (analogue vs. digital signal processing) | Prospective before–after study | 609 | 68.4 | 43 % |
| Barton et al. [ | United Kingdom | Hearing impaired | Cochlear implant | Cross-sectional | 3,272 | 6 (at CI implantation) | N/R |
| Damen et al. [ | The Netherlands | Post-lingual deaf adults. | Cochlear implant | Prospective before and after. | 37 (G1) 17 (G2) 29 (G3) | 55.1 (SD 16, G1), 50.5 (SD 21.9, G2), 61.5 (SD 13.1, G3) | 54 % (G1), 50 % (G2), 32 % (G3) |
| Gruters et al. [ | The Netherlands | Hearing impaired | Hearing aid | 337 | 69.6 (SD 8.9) | 40 % | |
| Hol et al. [ | The Netherlands | Conductive or mixed hearing loss | Bone-anchored hearing aid | Prospective before–after study | 56 | 52.9 (total, 24–82), 47.9 (ACHA, 24–73), 62 (CBHA, 42–82) | 61 % (total), 67 % (ACHA), 55 % (CBHA) |
| Joore et al. [ | The Netherlands | First-time hearing aid users | Hearing aid | Prospective before–after study | 126 | 69 (29–96) | 50 % |
| Palmer et al. [ | Canada and United States | Severely to profoundly hearing-impaired adults | Cochlear implant | Prospective before–after study | 62 | 56 (CI, SD 15.4), 49 (non-CI, SD 14.5) | 54 % (CI) 84 % (non-CI) |
| Vuorialho et al. [ | Finland | First-time hearing aid user over 60 | Hearing aid | Prospective before–after study | 101 | 77 (Median, 61–87) | 50 % |
| Lee et al. [ | South Korea | Post-lingual deaf adults | Cochlear implant | Retrospective before–after study | 26 | 49.6 (SD 10.9) | 36.4 % |
| Bichey et al. [ | USA | Large vestibular aqueduct syndrome | Cochlear implant vs. hearing aid | Retrospective before–after study | 20 | 44.3 (Median, CI, 9.9–75.6); 22.5 (Median, HA, 8.6–65.1) | N/R |
| Cheng et al. [ | USA | Profoundly deaf | Cochlear implant | Retrospective study | 78 (VAS group), 40 (TTO group), 22(HUI3 group)* 22(HUI3 group)* | 7.5 (VAS), 7.4 (TTO), 10 (HUI3) 38.3 (parents) | 46 % (child), 89 % (parent) |
| Sach and Barton [ | United Kingdom | Hearing-impaired children and their parents | Unilateral cochlear implant | Retrospective before–after study | 222* | 9.26 (SD 3.63) | 49.1 % |
| Lovett et al. [ | United Kingdom | Profoundly deaf. | Cochlear implant (bilateral and unilateral) | Cross-sectional observational study | 50 | 7.2 | 40 % (unilateral) 53 % (bilateral) |
| Smith-Olinde et al. [ | USA | Permanent childhood hearing loss | Cochlear implant | Cross-sectional study | 146 | 7.3 (SD 1.9) | 48.5 % |
SD standard deviation, ACHA used air-conduction hearing aid, CBHA conventional bone-conduction hearing aid, VAS Visual Analogue Scale, TTO Time trade-off, HUI3 Health Utility Index 3, N/R not report
* Involve deaf children and their parents
Measures reported in the papers
| Author, Year | Generic utility measures | Direct valuations | Rating scales | Hearing-specific measures | Clinical indicators | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| EQ-5D | HUI3 | SF-6D | TTO | VAS | – | – | |
| Barton et al. [ | √ | √ | √ | – | – | – | – |
| Barton et al. [ | √ | AHL | |||||
| Gruters et al. [ | √ | √ | – | – | – | – | BEPTA |
| Lee et al. [ | √ | √ | – | √ | √ | – | – |
| Bichey et al. [ | – | √ | – | – | – | – | PTA |
| Cheng et al. [ | – | √ | √ | √ | – | – | |
| Damen et al. [ | – | √ | – | – | – | NCIQ | NVA and AN test |
| Lovett et al. [ | – | √ | – | – | √ | SSQ | – |
| Palmer et al. [ | – | √ | – | – | – | – | NU-6; Audiologic mean score for CID sentence recognition. |
| Smith-Olinde et al. [ | – | √ | – | – | – | – | BEPTA |
| Hol et al. [ | √ | – | – | – | EQ-VAS | HHDI | – |
| Joore et al. [ | Index and responses | – | – | – | VAS and EQ-VAS | ADPI | – |
| Joore et al. [ | Index and responses | – | – | – | VAS and EQ-VAS | – | – |
| Vuorialho et al. [ | Index and responses | – | – | – | √ | HHIE-S | BEHL, SRT, WRS |
| Joore et al. [ | √ | – | – | – | √ and EQ-VAS | – | – |
| Joore et al. [ | √ | – | – | – | √ and EQ-VAS | HHIE-S and hearing aid satisfaction/use | – |
| Sach and Barton [ | √ | – | – | – | EQ-VAS and quality of life VAS | – | – |
| Vuorialho et al. [ | √ | – | – | – | EQ-VAS | HHIE-S, hearing aid satisfaction | – |
EQ-5D EuroQol 5 dimensions, HUI3 Health Utility Index 3, SF-6D Short-form 6 dimensions, TTO Time trade-off, VAS Visual Analogue Scale, AHL average of pure-tone air-conduction thresholds at the frequencies 0.5, 1, 2 and 4 kHz in the better hearing ear, BEPTA (better ear pure-tone average hearing loss for the frequencies 1,000, 2,000 and 4,000 Hz, PTA ear-specific and bilateral four-frequency pure-tone averages, NCIQ the Nijmegen cochlear implant questionnaire, NVA test (an open speech recognition test), AN test (assess suprasegmental identification, a closed-set spondee identification test and a closed-set number of syllables test), SSQ speech, spatial and qualities of hearing scale for parents, NU-6 Northwestern University 6 word test, CID central institute for the deaf, EQ-VAS euroqol Visual Analogue Scale, HHDI Hearing Handicap and Disability Index, ADPI Audiological Disabilities Preference Index, HHIS-S Hearing Handicap Inventory for the elderly, BEHL better ear hearing levels over the frequencies 0.5–4 kHz, SRT speech reception thresholds, WRS word reception scores (%), APHAB abbreviated profile of hearing aid benefit
* Parents were proxies
Summary of validity of EQ–5D, HUI3 in hearing impairments
| Study | Instrument | Assessment | Methods | Summary of results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Barton et al. [ | HUI3/EQ-5D/SF-6D | Convergence | Correlations between measures | Moderate to strong correlations were found between HUI3, EQ-5D and SF-6D. |
| Barton et al. [ | HUI3 | Known groups(severity) Convergence | HUI3 scores and severity groups defined by AHL level | HUI3 mean scores were different between moderate, severe, profound1, profound2 and implanted groups (significance not reported) CI (grouped by age at implantation and duration of use), AHL, gender were significant predictor of HUI3 ( |
| Bichey et al. [ | HUI3 | Known groups (severity) | HUI3 scores and PTA (presented by CI and HA group | HUI3 mean scores: 0.82 (CI) versus. 0.62 (HA) Consistent with PTA. No statistical test reported. |
| Damen et al. [ | HUI3 | Convergence | Spearman rho correlations between mean score of different measures at the follow-up | Correlation coefficients: 0.33 (HUI3 and AN test, 0.39 (HUI3 and NVA test, 0.48 (NCIQ and AN test, 0.32 (NCIQ and NVA test, |
| Lovett et al. [ | HUI3 | Known groups (severity) | HUI3 index scores and SSQ, VAS scores presented by unilateral and bilateral implantation groups | A significant difference ( No significant ( |
| Palmer et al. [ | HUI3 | Known groups (severity) | HUI3 index scores presented by CI and non-CI implant groups at enrolment, 6 months and 12 months after CI implant. | Difference between CI and non-CI groups by HUI3: Not significant (baseline) and significant ( |
| Smith-Olinde et al. [ | HUI3 | Known groups (severity) | HUI3 utility index presented by 4 groups defined by the degree of hearing loss | Both HUI3 and QWB scores declined with the degree of hearing loss where a greater extent for HUI3 than QWB. No statistical significance was presented |
| Gruters et al. [ | EQ-5D (UK and Dutch tariff), HUI3 | Known groups (age gender and severity) Convergence | Utility scores compared between age, gender (EQ-5D) and clinically distinctive groups (HUI3) Agreements between utility scores by Kendall’s Tau correlation and ICC | Significant differences detected: Age and gender (by EQ-5D); Clinical groups (by HUI3). Kendall’s Tau correlations: 0.36–0.41 (between EQ-5D with UK or Dutch tariff and HUI2, HUI3) ICC: 0.44–0.51 (between utility measures) |
| Sach and Barton [ | EQ-5D | Known groups (through regressions) | Multiple linear regression was estimated between the child’s EQ-5D scores and CAP, as well as other variables) | Statistically significant coefficients ( Non-statistical significant coefficients ( |
HUI3 Health Utility Index 3, AHL average of pure-tone air-conduction thresholds at the frequencies 0.5, 1, 2 and 4 kHz in the better hearing ear, PTA pure-tone average, CI cochlear implant, HA hearing aid, NCIQ the Nijmegen cochlear implant questionnaire, SSQ speech, spatial and qualities of hearing scale for parents, VAS Visual Analogue Scale, QWB Quality of well-being scale, EQ-5D euroqol 5 dimensions, ICC intraclass correlation, CAP categories of auditory perception
Summary of responsiveness for EQ-5D, HUI3 and SF-6D in hearing impairments
| Study | Instruments | Methods | Results | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean change | SD | ES | SRM | ||||
| Gruters et al. [ | EQ-5D (UK and Dutch tariff), HUI2 and HUI3 | Mean change of scores after hearing aid fitting, ES and SRM | EQ-5D United Kingdom | 0.01 | 0.13 | 0.05 | 0.05 |
| EQ-5D Dutch | 0.00, | 0.12 | 0.03 | 0.02 | |||
| HUI2 | 0.07** | 0.13 | 0.64 | 0.55 | |||
| HUI3 | 0.12** | 0.18 | 0.57 | 0.66 | |||
EQ-5D euro qol 5 dimension, HUI2 Health Utility Index 2, HUI3 Health Utility Index 3, ES effect size, SRM standard response mean, CI cochlear implant, VAS Visual Analogue Scale, HHDI Hearing Handicap and Disability Index, SF-36 Short-form 36, BAHA bone-anchored hearing aid, ACHA used air-conduction hearing aid, CBHA conventional bone-conduction hearing aid, NCIQ the Nijmegen cochlear implant questionnaire, ADPI Audiological Disabilities Preference Index, HHIS-S hearing handicap inventory for the elderly, SSQ speech, spatial and qualities of hearing scale for parents, NVA test an open speech recognition test, AN test assess suprasegmental identification, a closed-set spondee identification test and a closed-set number of syllables test, DEPTA better ear pure-tone average hearing loss for the frequencies 1,000, 2,000 and 4,000 Hz, NU-6, Northwestern University 6 word test, BEHL better ear hearing levels over the frequencies 0.5–4 kHz, SRT speech reception thresholds, WRS word reception scores (%), PTA ear-specific and bilateral four-frequency pure-tone averages, APHAB abbreviated profile of hearing aid benefit
* p < 0.05, ** p < 0.01
Overall performances of EQ-5D, HUI3 and SF-6D in hearing impairment
| Known group (Severity) | Known group (case–control) | Known group (other) | Correlation | Responsive (change) | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cons | Sig | Cons | Sig | Cons | Sig | Cons | Sig | ||
|
| |||||||||
| Grutters et al. [ | √ | √ | Moderate | × | × | ||||
| Sach and Barton [ | Severe √ Mild × | √× | √ | √ | |||||
| Lee et al. [ | √ | √ | |||||||
| Hol et al. [ | × | × | |||||||
| Joore et al. [ | ? | × | |||||||
| Vuorialho et al. [ | × | × | |||||||
|
| |||||||||
| Barton et al. [ | √ | N/R | |||||||
| Bichey et al. [ | √ | N/R | |||||||
| Grutters et al. [ | √ | √ | Moderate | √ | √ | ||||
| Palmer et al. [ | √ | √ | |||||||
| Smith-Olinde et al. [ | √ | N/R | |||||||
| Lee et al. [ | √ | √ | |||||||
| Cheng et al. [ | √ | √ | |||||||
| Damen et al. [ | Moderate (sig) | √ | √ | ||||||
| Lovett et al. [ | √ | × | √ | × | |||||
|
| |||||||||
| Barton et al. [ | Moderate to strong | ||||||||
Cons consistent with other measures, sig statistically significant
√: Yes ?: Mixed evidence ×: No N/R: no report