| Literature DB >> 29141645 |
Vanessa Cooper1, Jane Clatworthy2, Richard Harding3, Jennifer Whetham2.
Abstract
AIM: A systematic review of reviews was conducted to identify and appraise brief measures of health-related quality of life (HRQoL) that have been used in peer-reviewed research with people living with HIV.Entities:
Keywords: HIV; Quality of life; Reliability; Systematic review; Validity
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29141645 PMCID: PMC5688651 DOI: 10.1186/s12955-017-0778-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Qual Life Outcomes ISSN: 1477-7525 Impact factor: 3.186
Search Terms
| HIV | Quality of Life | Measurea | Review |
| Human Immunodeficiency Virus | QoL | Inventora | |
| PROM | Scalea | ||
| Antiretrovirala | Patient Reported Outcome | Questionnairea | |
| Self-reporta | |||
| Assessmenta | |||
| Surveya | |||
| Toola | |||
| Indicatora | |||
| Instrumenta |
Notes Terms within columns were combined with ‘OR’, terms between columns were then combined with ‘AND’
aDenotes truncation
Fig. 1PRISMA Flow diagram showing paper selection process
Summary of reviews identified
| Paper | Aim of the review | Dates of search | Databases and other sources | Search terms | Language restriction? | No. papers reviewed | No. HRQoL measures identified | No. generic HRQoL measures | No. HIV-specific measures |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Carabin et al. (2008) [ | To assist clinicians in choosing the most appropriate instrument to measure health related quality of life among people living with HIV. | Not stated | OVID, Pubmed and ERIC English language | Not stated | English and Spanish | Not stated | 17 | 6 | 11 |
| Clayson et al. (2006) [ | To review existing HR-QOL measures reported in the HIV/AIDS literature since 1990 and identify those most worthy of consideration for use in clinical trials. | 1990-not stated | General abstract databases such as MEDLINE, PsycINFO, INSPEC, EMBASE, CINAHL | Not stated | Not stated | Not stated | 34 | 17 | 17 |
| Cochrane Library Database | |||||||||
| Colautti et al. (2006) [ | To review validated questionnaires to assess health related quality of life in HIV/AIDS patients | Not stated | PubMed, Medline and Medscape | “HRQL”, “questionnaire” and “HIV” | None | Not stated | 20 | 9 | 11 |
| Davis & Pathak (2001) [ | To provide a comparative evaluation of psychometric properties of four HIV disease–specific quality-of-life (QoL) instruments. | Not stated | MEDLINE, Health Star, International Pharmacy Abstracts, Social Sciences Citation Index, Current Contents | Not stated | Not stated | Not stated | 4 | 0 | 4 |
| Drewes et al. (2013) [ | To provide a comprehensive summary of the methodological approaches used to study the QOL of people with HIV and AIDS based on published research. | To early 2011 | PubMed and PsycINFO | “HIV/AIDS,” “quality of life,” and related concepts, like “well-being,” “life satisfaction,” and the names of established QOL instruments. | English abstract | 852 | >40 (but only report on the 14 most commonly used QOL measures) | 8 | 6 |
| Gakhar et al. (2013) [ | To provide an overview of the Health Related Quality of Life tools available, the methods used for validation, the impact that ART has had on the HRQOL of HIV-infected people, as well as looking at some of the most important adverse effects of ARVs and co-morbidities. | Not stated | PubMed, Web of Science, Cochrane, MEDLINE and Scopus. | Included “HIV,” “HRQOL Measures,” “quality of life” and “health status.” | English | Not stated | 41 | 23 | 18 |
| Robberstad & Olsen (2010) [ | To review the existing evidence on health related quality of life in HIV/AIDS patients in sub-Saharan Africa and consider how this information is used in the economic evaluation literature. | Not stated | PubMed, Embase and ISI | “HIV OR AIDS”, “Africa south of the Sahara” AND “health related quality of life” | Not stated | 29 | 24 | 6 | 18 (only describe 3) |
| Simpson et al. (2013) [ | To identify and classify PRO instruments used to measure treatment effects in clinical trials evaluating NNRTIs. | March 2003–Feb 2013 | PubMed | Included a combination of MeSH terms for HIV [HIV OR HIV infections], MeSH terms associated with PROs/instruments [questionnaires OR interviews as topic OR quality of life OR patient satisfaction OR self-evaluation programs], Substance Names of NNRTIs [efavirenz OR nevirapine OR delavirdine OR etravirine OR rilpivirine OR efavirenz, emtricitabine, tenofovir disoproxil fumarate drug combination], and clinical trial Publication Types [clinical trial OR clinical trial, phase IV OR clinical trial, phase III OR clinical trial, phase II OR controlled clinical trial OR randomized controlled trial] | English | 26 | 8 | 4 | 4 |
| Skevington & O’Connell (2003) [ | To address issues surrounding the measurement of quality of life of people living with HIV and AIDS and discuss the properties of suitable instruments | Jan 1995–May 2000 | EMBASE, MEDLINE, the Web of Science (Version 4.1), PubMed. And Psychlit | ‘quality of life’ with ‘HIV’ and/or ‘AIDS’ | Not stated | Not stated | 21 | 10 | 11 |
| Wu et al. (2013) [ | To examine the responsiveness of two health-related quality of life (HRQL) instruments used in clinical trials involving HIV-infected adults: the HIV-targeted Medical Outcomes Study HIV Health Survey (MOS-HIV), and a generic measure, the EuroQol-5D (EQ-5D). | 2001–2010 | PubMed | Included a combination of MeSH terms for HIV [HIV OR HIV infections], instrument names [Euroqol, EQ-5D, MOS-HIV], and clinical trial Publication Types [clinical trial OR clinical trial, phase IV OR clinical trial, phase III OR clinical trial, phase II OR controlled clinical trial OR randomized controlled trial] | English | 17 | 2 | 1 | 1 |
Quality assessment applied to the identified reviews
| Paper | 1. Is the review based on a focused question that is adequately formulated and described? | 2. Were eligibility criteria for included and excluded studies predefined and specified? | 3. Did the literature search strategy use a comprehensive systematic approach? | 4. Were titles, abstracts, and full-text articles dually and independently reviewed for inclusion and exclusion to minimize bias? | 5. Was the quality of each included study rated independently by two or more reviewers using a standard method to appraise its internal validity? | 6. Were the included studies listed along with important characteristics and results of each study? | 7. Was publication bias assessed | 8. Was heterogeneity assessed? (this question only applies to meta-analyses) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Carabin et al. (2008) [ | N | N | N | NR | N | N | N | NA |
| Clayson et al. (2006) [ | Y | N | NR | NR | N | N | N | NA |
| Colautti et al. (2006) [ | Y | N | N | NR | N | N | N | NA |
| Davis & Pathak (2001) [ | Y | N | NR | N | N | N | N | NA |
| Drewes et al. (2013) [ | Y | Y | N | N | N | N | N | NA |
| Gakhar et al. (2013) [ | Y | N | NR | NR | N | N | N | NA |
| Robberstad & Olsen (2010) [ | Y | Y | N | NR | N | N | N | NA |
| Simpson et al. (2013) [ | Y | Y | N | NR | N | Y | N | NA |
| Skevington & O’Connell (2003) [ | N | N | N | NR | N | N | N | NA |
| Wu et al. (2013) [ | Y | Y | N | NR | N | Y | N | NA |
Y yes; N No; NA not applicable; NR not reported
Fig. 2Flow diagram showing selection of generic measures
Fig. 3Flow diagram showing selection of HIV-specific measures
Qualities and psychometric properties of the selected generic measures extracted from the reviews
| Scale | Domains addressed | Completion time/Number of items | Response format | Accessibility | Validity | Reliability | Responsiveness | Floor/ Ceiling effects | Conclusions/recommendations of the reviews |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| COOP/WONCA [ | Physical fitness, feelings, daily activities, social activities, pain, change in health, overall health, social support and quality of life | <5 mins [ | Five options with pictorial depictions accompanying the text | Available in 20 languages [ | HIV positive women had poorer scores than HIV negative women on six out of nine health dimensions (construct validity) [ | not stated | not stated | not stated | not stated |
| EQ-5D [ | Mobility; self-care, usual activities, pain/discomfort, anxiety/depression, self-reported health | 1 min [ | 5 dimensions of quality of life are rated on either a 3 point scale (no problems/ some or moderate problems/ extreme problems – EQ-5D-3 L) or 5 point scale (no problems/ slight problems/ moderate problems/ severe problems/ extreme problems – EQ-5D-5 L). | Approximately 1 min to complete [ | Correlates with MOS-HIV subscales and discriminates between participants stratified by HIV/AIDS severity based on CD4 count/viral load (construct validity) [ | not stated | Responsive to initiation of ART, the development of opportunistic infections and adverse events [ | Ceiling effects in general population samples [ | Clayson et al. recommend using the EQ-5D alongside a disease-targeted measure, however because of ceiling effects in general population samples they would not recommend the EQ-5D for studies including individuals with early, asymptomatic HIV infection. [ |
| FLZM Questions on life satisfaction [ | Satisfaction with life in general: friends’ free time, general health, financial security, work, life conditions, family life and relationships. Satisfaction with health: physical condition, ability to rest, energy, mobility, freedom from anxiety, freedom from pain, independence | “A few minutes” [ | 5 point scales rating the importance of and satisfaction with each aspect of quality of life. | not stated | not stated | not stated | not stated | not stated | not stated |
| Health Utilities Index (HUI) HUI2; HU13 [ | Vision, ambulation, dexterity, emotion, cognition, hearing, speech and pain | 5–10 mins [59] | 4–6 response options for each question | Available in multiple languages [ | HUI2 and 3 have been associated with disease severity/AIDS related events and plasma viral load (construct validity). [ | not stated | Responsive to change in HIV disease states [ | not stated | Despite less evidence for the HUI than EQ-5D and SF-36, emerging data were positive. [ |
| McGill Quality of life questionnaire (M-QOL) [ | Physical, Psychological, Existential, Support. | 16 items | Two response options for each item (e.g. no problem vs tremendous problem) | not stated | Content/face validity: The existential dimension is particularly relevant to people with advanced disease (CD4 < 100) [ | Factor analysis indicated four reliable subscales plus a single item about physical wellbeing (internal consistency). [ | not stated | not stated | not stated |
| SF-12 [ | Physical functioning, role physical, bodily pain, general health, vitality, social functioning, role emotional, mental health | 2–3 mins [60] | 2–6 response options per item | not stated | not stated | No internal consistency data reported [ | Mixed results in terms of responsiveness to change in treatment [ | Likely to have similar floor and ceiling effects to other MOS measures [ | Clayson et al. recommend the use of the SF-12 where the length of the SF-36 is a problem. [ |
| SF-20 [ | not stated | 3–5 mins [61] | 3–6 response options per item | not stated | No construct validity data [ | Adequate cronbach’s alphas (internal consistency) [ | not stated | Floor and ceiling effects noted in some dimensions [ | not stated |
| SF-36 [ | Physical functioning, role-physical, bodily pain, general health, vitality, social functioning, role-emotional, mental health, reported health transition | 7–10 mins [ | 2–6 response options per item | Has been translated into several different languages [ | Correlates with disease severity, CD4 counts and other measures of QOL.(construct validity) [ | Cronbach’s alpha within acceptable range (internal consistency) [ | Responsive to the initiation of ART and change in CD4 count, viral load and the number of symptoms. [ | Problems with floor and/or ceiling effects for some subscales [ | More evidence for the SF-36 in people with HIV than other recommended generic measures (EQ-5D or HUI) and the SF-12 is a viable alternative if the length is a problem. [ |
| WHOQOL-BREF [ | Physical health, psychological health, social relationships and environment. | <5 mins [ | 5-point scales | Available in 40 languages. Takes <5 min to complete [ | Correlates well with disease severity, patients who had lower CD4 counts had lower HRQOL (construct validity) [ | Cronbach’s alpha coefficients in the acceptable range (internal consistency) [ | not stated | not stated | Developed from the WHOQOL-100 measure, which was developed within an international collaboration of 15 countries using a spoke-wheel methodology to ensure conceptual and semantic equivalence [ |
Qualities and psychometric properties of the selected HIV-specific measures extracted from the reviews
| Scale | Domains addressed | Completion time/No. items | Response format | Accessibility | Validity | Reliability | Responsiveness | Floor/ Ceiling effects | Conclusions/recommendations of the reviews |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ACTG SF-21 [ | Physical functioning, energy/fatigue, social functioning, role functioning, cognition, pain, health perception and emotional well-being. | 4–5 mins [ | 3–6 response options per item plus a visual analogue scale | Available in 2 languages [ | No validity data available [ | No internal consistency reported [ | not stated | Likely to have similar floor and ceiling effects to other MOS measures [ | not stated |
| HIV-QL31 [ | Sex life, pain, psychological aspects, relationships, limitations caused by HIV, symptoms, impact of treatment and care | 31 items | Yes/No | Available in English and French [ | Discriminates between groups with different severity levels (construct validity) [ | High internal consistency [ | not stated | not stated | QL-31 is a relatively sound and useful instrument where attention has been paid to the breadth of the concept as a result of listening to the concerns of patients. However it is culture-specific in the ways it has been designed [ |
| MQOL-HIV [ | Mental health, physical health, physical functioning, social functioning, social support, cognitive functioning, financial status, partner intimacy, sexual functioning, perceived access to medical care | 10 mins [ | Likert scale (never – always) | In a study comparing the MQOL-HIV with the MOS-HIV there were more missing data/incomplete responses on the MQOL-HIV [ | Discriminates between patients based on symptom severity, inpatient care and stage of illness [ | Good internal consistency (Cronbach’s alpha >0.70) for 8 of the 10 domains [ | Somewhat responsive to change in the number of symptoms, viral load and CD4 count over a 3-month period [ | Floor and/or ceiling effects were reported in some dimensions [ | The MQoL-HIV was not one of the reviewed measures recommended by Clayson et al. [ |
| PROQOL-HIV [ | 8 scored domains: Physical health and symptoms, treatment impact, emotional distress, health concerns, body change, intimate relationships, social relationships, stigma and 4 additional items addressing religious beliefs, finance, having children and satisfaction with care. | 7 mins [ | Rated on a 5-point scale ranging from 0 = ‘never’ to 4 = “always” | not stated | not stated | not stated | not stated | not stated | No information reported in the reviews |
| MOS-HIV [ | Two summary scores—the physical health score and mental health score and 10 domains: physical functioning, pain, social functioning, role functioning, emotional well-being, energy/fatigue, cognitive functioning, health distress, health transition, general health and overall quality of life | 10 mins [ | 2–6 response options per item | Translated into at least 14 languages, largely designed for industrialised world [ | Mixed reports regarding construct validity with some suggesting poor construct validity [ | Moderate /good internal consistency generally reported [ | Responsiveness has been established in a wide variety of contexts including adverse events, increased symptoms, opportunistic infections and AIDS-defining events, initiation of ART [ | Floor and ceiling effects have been reported [ | Well established reliability/validity and widely used but concerns that as one of the earliest HIV-specific measures to be developed it may not have continued relevance for PLWH. They question whether there is a true advantage to using the MOS-HIV over the SF-36. Would be unwise to administer alongside another MOS measure such as the SF-36 because of shared items [ |
| WHOQOL-HIV BREF [ | Physical, psychological, level of independence, social, environmental, and spiritual QoL | 31 items | 5 point likert scale | not stated | not stated | not stated | not stated | not stated | not stated |
| Symptom Quality of Life Adherence (HIV-SQUAD) [ | HRQOL items include physical and psychological domains. The measure also includes symptoms and a visual analogue scale for adherence | 24 items | 5 point likert scales, dichotomous items and a visual analogue scale | not stated | The measure discriminated between patients at different CD4 counts and with/without hepatitis co-infection (construct validity) [ | Cronbach’s alpha was acceptable for the physical component but <0.7 for the psychological component (internal consistency) [ | Responsive to change in HIV viral load [ | not stated | not stated |