| Literature DB >> 24339893 |
Robert P Finger1, Eva Fenwick, Christoph W Hirneiss, Arthur Hsueh, Robyn H Guymer, Ecosse L Lamoureux, Jill E Keeffe.
Abstract
PURPOSE: To assess the impact of VA loss on patient reported utilities taking both eyes into account compared to taking only the better or the worse eye into account.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24339893 PMCID: PMC3855212 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0081042
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Characteristics of the sample.
| All n = 1339 | EQ-5D n = 868 | VisQoL n = 837 | ||
| n (%) or mean ± SD | ||||
|
| Germany | 796(60%) | 387(45%) | 606(72%) |
| Australia | 543(40%) | 481(55%) | 231(28%) | |
|
| 62.1±15.0 | 65.7±12.0 | 60.2±15.9 | |
|
| Male | 631(46%) | 471(54%) | 353(42%) |
| Female | 680(50%) | 372(43%) | 459(55%) | |
|
| Patient | 1085(80%) | 868(100%) | 583(70%) |
| Control | 254(20%) | 0 | 254(30%) | |
|
| AMD | 243(23%) | 157(18%) | 170(29%) |
| DR/DME | 730(67%) | 620(71%) | 308(53%) | |
| Other | 109 (10%) | 88(10%) | 102(18%) | |
|
| .24±.32 | .22±.28 | .23±.33 | |
|
| 6/12 or better no VI | 893 (66%) | 558(64%) | 577(69%) |
| <6/12–6/18 mild VI | 209(15%) | 154(18%) | 102(12%) | |
| <6/18 moderate - severe VI | 208(15%) | 137(16%) | 128(15%) | |
AMD = age-related macular degeneration; DR = diabetic retinopathy; DME = diabetic macular oedema; VA = visual acuity; VisQoL = Vision and Quality of Life Index; EQ-5D = Euro Quality of Life Questionnaire; LogMAR = logarithm of the minimum angle of resolution.*data incomplete.
VisQoL utility scores by better or worse eye category and per vision state (by VA category).
| VA categories worse eye | ||||||
| Better eye VA categories | Better eye only | 6/12 or better | <6/12–6/18 | <6/18 | ||
| No VI | Mild VI | Moderate – Severe VI | ||||
| 6/12 or better | No VI | .92±.13* n = 577 |
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|
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| <6/12–6/18 | Mild VI | .84±.18* n = 102 |
|
| ||
| <6/18 | Moderate –Severe VI | .71±.28*n = 128 | .71±.28 | |||
|
| .95±.10*n = 371 | .89±.17*n = 143 | .79±.24*n = 293 | |||
VA = visual acuity, VisQoL = Vision and Quality of Life Index, *indicates significant difference (p≤0.001) between categories using post-hoc Bonferroni testing following ANCOVA. Bolded data correspond to the 6 vision states relating to combined categories of VI in the better and worse seeing eyes.
EQ-5D (NZ VAS weighting) utility scores by better or worse eye category and per vision state (by VA category).
| VA categories worse eye | ||||||
| Better eye VA categories | Better eye only | 6/12 or better | <6/12–6/18 | <6/18 | ||
| No VI | Mild VI | Moderate – Severe VI | ||||
| 6/12 or better | No VI | .71±.23 n = 558 |
|
|
| |
| <6/12–6/18 | Mild VI | .69±.23 n = 154 |
|
| ||
| <6/18 | Moderate –Severe VI | .67±.23 n = 137 |
| |||
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| .70±.22 n = 247 | .70±.24 n = 217 | .70±.23 n = 385 | |||
VA = visual acuity, EQ-5D = Euro Quality of Life Questionnaire, VAS = visual analogue scale, NZ = New Zealand value set. Bolded data correspond to the 6 vision states relating to combined categories of VI in the better and worse seeing eyes.
Figure 1Utility across all six vision states (VS), for the VisQoL and the EQ-5D utility instruments, demonstrating a reduction of visual acuity with worsening vision states for the VisQoL but not the EQ-5D.