| Literature DB >> 29776337 |
Henock G Yebyo1,2, Hélène E Aschmann1, Tsung Yu3, Milo A Puhan4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Patient preferences are key parameters to evaluate benefit-harm balance of statins for primary prevention but they are not readily available to guideline developers and decision makers. Our study aimed to elicit patient preferences for benefit and harm outcomes related to use of statins for primary cardiovascular disease prevention and to examine how the preferences differ across economically and socio-culturally different environments.Entities:
Keywords: Benefit harm outcomes; Cardiovascular disease; Clinical guidelines; Preferences; Primary prevention; Statins
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29776337 PMCID: PMC5960214 DOI: 10.1186/s12872-018-0838-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cardiovasc Disord ISSN: 1471-2261 Impact factor: 2.298
Characteristics of participants involved in the preference eliciting study
| Characteristics | Pooled ( | Ethiopia ( | Switzerland ( |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sex | |||
| Male, n(%) | 111 (50.4) | 54 (54.0) | 57 (47.5) |
| Female | 109 (49.6) | 46 (46.0) | 63 (52.5) |
| Age | |||
| Mean (SD) | 52.9 (0.6) | 49.7 (0.7) | 55.6 (0.8) |
| 40–64 | 195 (88.6) | 96 (96.0) | 99 (82.5) |
| ≥ 65–81 | 25 (11.4) | 4 (4.0) | 21 (17.5) |
| Education | |||
| Mean in years (SD) | 10.12 (0.4) | 6.55 (0.6) | 13.1 (0.4) |
| None | 25 (11.4) | 25 (25.0) | 0 |
| Primary | 46 (20.9) | 42 (42.0) | 4 (3.3) |
| Secondary | 70 (31.8) | 16 (16.0) | 54 (45.0) |
| Higher | 79 (35.9) | 17 (17.0) | 62 (51.7) |
| Job | |||
| Salaried | 107 (48.2) | 35 (35.0) | 71 (59.2) |
| Own business | 46 (20.9) | 24 (24.0) | 22 (18.3) |
| Pensioned | 28 (12.7) | 4 (4.0) | 24 (20.0) |
| No job | 39 (18.2) | 37 (37.0) | 3 (2.5) |
| Current or previous statin users | 20 (9.1) | 8(8.0) | 12(10.0) |
| Co-living person | |||
| Alone | 48 (21.8) | 11 (11.0) | 37 (30.8) |
| Family | 171 (78.2) | 89 (89.0) | 83 (69.2) |
| Respondents understand the content and procedure of the questionnaire | |||
| Strongly agree | 83 (37.7) | 7 (7.0) | 76 (63.4) |
| Agree | 116 (52.7) | 77 (77.0) | 39 (32.5) |
| Neither | 20 (9.1) | 16 (16.0) | 4 (3.3) |
| Disagree | 1 (0.5) | 0 | 1 (0.8) |
| Morbidity | |||
| None | 149 (67.7) | 81 (81.0) | 68 (56.7) |
| Yes a | 71 (32.3) | 19 (19.0) | 52 (43.3) |
aHypertension, type 2 diabetes, join/muscle disease, cancer, psychiatric disease were most frequently reported
Fig. 1Heat maps indicating consistency of responses. The heat maps show the probability of being selected as most worrisome of each comparison for the 13 × 13 possible combinations of the outcomes. Each cell indicates the probability that the respondents selected the first comparator in a pair as most worrisome. The matrix of the probability is arranged from zero to one, which corresponds to yellow and orange colors, respectively. Except few randomly assorted colors, the visually smooth transition from yellow at the right lower corner to orange at the left upper corner of the maps indicates a small amount of measurement error and high internal consistency. The white patches indicate there were no actual responses corresponding to the pairs; note that this doesn’t mean non-response
Relative preference values and preference weights of the pooled and separate surveys
| Pooled data | Ethiopia | Switzerland | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Benefit or harm outcomes related to statins | Coefficient (95% CI) Pairs = 34,320 | Preference weight (95% CI) | Coefficient (95% CI (Pairs = 15,600) | Preference weight (95% CI) | Coefficient (95% CI) (Pairs = 18,720) | Preference weight (95% CI) |
| Severe stroke | 6.1 (5.8–6.4) | 1.00 (0.997–1.00)b | 5.3 (4.9–5.7) | 0.999 (0.996–1.00) b | 7.4 (6.9–7.9) | 1.00 (0.997–1.00)b |
| Severe MI | 4.6 (4.3–4.8) | 0.913 (0.889–0.942) | 4.0 (3.7–4.3) | 0.903 (0.864–0.941) | 5.6 (5.2–6.0) | 0.869 (0.848–0.921) |
| Cancera | 3.9 (3.7–4.1) | 0.846 (0.829–0.855) | 3.6 (3.3–3.9) | 0.848 (0.821–0.862) | 4.4 (4.0–4.7) | 0.859 (0.843–0.880) |
| Moderate stroke | 3.1 (2.9–3.3) | 0.735 (0.671–0.802) | 2.7 (2.4–3.0) | 0.686 (0.600–0.783) | 3.8 (3.4–4.6) | 0.766 (0.644–0.818) |
| Moderate MI | 2.6 (2.4–2.8) | 0.664 (0.611–0.715) | 2.1 (1.8–2.4) | 0.589 (0.517–0.661) | 3.2 (2.9–3.5) | 0.645 (0.553–0.692) |
| Heart failure | 2.3 (2.1–2.5) | 0.591 (0.534–0.647) | 2.5 (2.3–2.8) | 0.642 (0.593–0.775) | 2.2 (1.9–2.5) | 0.576 (0.513–0.655) |
| Type 2 idabetesa | 1.7 (1.5–1.9) | 0.470 (0.452–0.501) | 1.9 (1.6–2.2) | 0.557 (0.537–0.608) | 1.5 (1.3–1.8) | 0.378 (0.347–0.424) |
| Liver injurya | 1.4 (1.2–1.5) | 0.431 (0.345–0.475) | 1.3 (1.0–1.5) | 0.382 (0.300–0.489) | 1.4 (1.2–1.7) | 0.461 (0.350–0.531) |
| Unstable angina | 1.0 (0.8–1.2) | 0.236 (0.205–0.257) | 0.8 (0.6–1.1) | 0.255 (0.230–0.302) | 1.3 (1.0–1.5) | 0.285 (0.247–0.323) |
| Acute kidney failurea | 0.9 (0.7–1.1) | 0.236 (0.215–0.252) | 1.2 (0.9–1.4) | 0.283 (0.239–0.296) | 0.7 (0.4–0.9) | 0.262 (0.242–0.293) |
| Myopathya | 0.6 (0.4–0.8) | 0.230 (0.228–0.238) | 0.6 (0.4–0.8) | 0.256 (0.254–0.258) | 0.6 (0.4–0.8) | 0.255 (0.253–0.256) |
| Nausea/headachea | 0.2 (0.0–0.4) | 0.060 (0.034–0.094) | 0.2 (−0.1–0.5) | 0.093 (0.060–0.139) | 0.2 (0.0–0.5) | 0.065 (0.035–0.105) |
| Treatment discontinuationa,c | 0.0 | 0.090 (0.023–0.123) | 0.00 | 0.020 (0.00–0.090) | 0.0 | 0.085 (0.002–0.141) |
aHarms related to statins
bOne-sided test since 1 is the ceiling values for a probability scale
cThere could be more harms that are associated with taking statins, including cognitive or sleep disorders problems, which were not reported in our study. Unless stated distinctly by their names, these harms are included in our study with a collective term ‘side effects’ in the BWS procedure for the sake of clarity to the participants, but reported as ‘treatment discontinuation due to side-effects’ here up in the table and throughout the article
Coefficient Log-scaled coefficients from conditional logit model
Fig. 2Relationships of preference measurement methods. The smoothed line and increase in circle size portray the relationship between the preference measures
Fig. 3Measurement agreement and consistency of results between the pooled data and specific surveys. Plots (a), (b) and (c) show observed and smoothed uncertainty interval of measurements between surveys. Plot d shows correlation between VAS and preference weight. The dots represent the benefit and harm outcomes specified in Fig. 2