| Literature DB >> 31118091 |
Ole Marten1, Florian Koerber2,3, David Bloom4, Monika Bullinger5, Corinne Buysse6, Hannah Christensen7, Philippe De Wals8, Christian Dohna-Schwake9, Philipp Henneke10, Markus Kirchner2, Markus Knuf11,12, Burkhard Lawrenz13,14, Andrea L Monteiro15,16, Joseph Patrick Sevilla17, Nicolas Van de Velde18, Robert Welte2, Claire Wright19, Wolfgang Greiner20.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Value assessment of vaccination programs against serogroup B invasive meningococcal disease (IMD) is on the agenda of public health authorities. Current evidence on the burden due to IMD is unfit for pinning down the nature and magnitude of the full social and economic costs of IMD for two reasons. First, the concepts and components that need to be studied are not agreed, and second, measures of the concepts that have been studied are weak and inconsistent. Thus, the economic evaluation of the available serogroup B meningococcal (MenB) vaccines is difficult. The aims of this DELPHI study are to: (1) agree on the concepts and components determining the burden of MenB diseases that need to be studied; and (2) seek consensus on appropriate methods and study designs to measure quality of life (QoL) associated with MenB induced long-term sequelae in future studies.Entities:
Keywords: DELPHI; Meningococcal disease; Neisseria meningitidis; Quality of life
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31118091 PMCID: PMC6532178 DOI: 10.1186/s12955-019-1159-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Qual Life Outcomes ISSN: 1477-7525 Impact factor: 3.186
Ranking results from Question 2 – light forms of sequelae
| Age group | 0–5 years | 6–18 years | > 18 years | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Group | Rank sum (group ranking) | Rank sum (group ranking) | Rank sum (group ranking) | |||
| First round | Second round | First round | Second round | First round | Second round | |
| Patients with an IMD history | 22 (1) | 15 (1) | 16 (1) | 14 (1) | 16 (1) | 14 (1) |
| Spouse | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a | 46 (2) | 37 (2) |
| Parents | 28 (2) | 27 (2) | 31 (2) | 28 (2) | 48 (3) | 39 (3) |
| Siblings | 50 (3) | 43 (3) | 51 (3) | 43 (3) | 63 (4) | 55 (4) |
| Peers (e.g. class mates, friends) | 69 (4) | 60 (4) | 63 (4) | 57 (4) | 66 (5) | 60 (5) |
| Teachers | 71 (5) | 66 (5) | 69 (5) | 68 (5) | 88 (6) | 78 (6) |
| Health Care Professionals | 72 (6) | 71 (6) | 78 (6) | 72 (6) | 88 (6) | 79 (7) |
| Kendall’s W | 0.56 | 0.74 | 0.63 | 0.77 | 0.54 | 0.60 |
Ranking results from Question 2 – severe forms of sequelae
| Age group | 0–5 years | 6–18 years | > 18 years | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Group | Rank sum (group ranking) | Rank sum (group ranking) | Rank sum (group ranking) | |||
| First round | Second round | First round | Second round | First round | Second round | |
| Patients with an IMD history | 22 (1) | 14 (1) | 17 (1) | 14 (1) | 16 (1) | 14 (1) |
| Spouse | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a | 42 (2) | 37 (2) |
| Parents | 27 (2) | 28 (2) | 29 (2) | 28 (2) | 44 (3) | 38 (3) |
| Siblings | 49 (3) | 42 (3) | 49 (3) | 42 (3) | 62 (4) | 55 (4) |
| Peers (e.g. class mates, friends) | 68 (4) | 60 (4) | 65 (4) | 57 (4) | 70 (5) | 60 (5) |
| Teachers | 72 (5) | 64 (5) | 67 (5) | 66 (5) | 86 (6) | 79 (6) |
| Health Care Professionals | 73 (6) | 71 (6) | 78 (6) | 72 (6) | 88 (6) | 81 (7) |
| Kendall’s W | 0.37 | 0.73 | 0.39 | 0.75 | 0.57 | 0.64 |
Ranking results to Question 7
| Age group | 8–18 years | > 18 years | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Method | Rank sum (group ranking) | Rank sum (group ranking) | ||
| First round | Second round | First round | Second round | |
| Using an existing generic instrument | 33 (1) | 23 (1) | 45 (1) | 22 (1) |
| Using an existing disease-specific questionnaire | 34 (2) | 34 (2) | 48 (2) | 34 (2) |
| Direct preference elicitation using a Visual Analogue Scale | 44 (3) | 46 (3) | 48 (2) | 50 (3) |
| Using a Discrete Choice Experiment | 59 (5) | 63 (5) | 60 (4) | 59 (5) |
| Direct preference elicitation using the Time trade-off | 74 (7) | 81 (7) | 64 (5) | 83 (7) |
| Direct preference elicitation using the Standard Gamble | 70 (6) | 75 (6) | 65 (6) | 75 (6) |
| Develop a new disease specific questionnaire | 49 (4) | 50 (4) | 66 (7) | 56 (4) |
| Kendall’s W | 0.23 | 0.49 | 0.07 | 0.50 |
First and second round responses to Question 1
| Tier | Frequency | Frequency |
|---|---|---|
| 1st round | 2nd round | |
| 3rd tier | 8 | 13 |
| 2nd tier | 6 | 1 |
| 1st tier | 2 | 0 |
Fig. 1First and second round responses to Question 9. *The distinction between studies using the same or different sample(s) was not considered during the 1st round